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Willi Herold

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Willie Herold
Born11 September 1925
Lunzenau, Saxony, Weimar Republic
Died14 November 1946 (aged 21)
Wolfenbüttel Prison, Allied-occupied Germany
Cause of deathExecution by guillotine
Allegiance Nazi Germany
Service/branchBalkenkreuz (Iron Cross) Luftwaffe
Reich Labour Service
Years of service1943-1945
RankObergefreiter
Unit6. Fallschirmjäger-Division
Known forExecuting 200 prisoners, bluffing to be a Luftwaffe captain
AwardsParachutist Badge
Silver Close Combat Clasp
Silver Wound Badge

Willi Herold (11 September 1925 – 14 November 1946), also known as the Executioner of Emsland, was a Nazi German war criminal. Near the end of the Second World War in Europe, Herold deserted from the German Army and, posing as a Luftwaffe captain, organized the mass execution of German deserters held at a prison camp.[1][2] He was arrested by British forces and executed for war crimes on 14 November 1946 at Wolfenbüttel Prison.[3]

Early life[edit]

Willi Herold was born in Lunzenau, a small village in Saxony, on September 11, 1925. He joined the Deutsches Jungvolk, a section of the Hitler Youth, when he was ten years old; he was expelled the following year for skipping service and trying to organize his own "pack" of boys, both of which were against the organisation's regulations. Herold then joined the Hitler Youth proper at the age of fourteen, and for a time he was enamored with the group's benefits, including long nature excursions.

After completing his elementary education, at the age of 15, Herold began an apprenticeship as a chimney sweep in the neighboring village of Waldheim. However, he eventually ran away from the village with a friend because he didn't feel like working and wanted to emigrate to the United States. He was apprehended by the Gestapo and sent back to Lunzenau, where he completed his apprenticeship in 1943.

Between June and September 1943, Herold served his Reich Labour Service on the Atlantic Wall in German-occupied France. Three weeks after turning eighteen, he joined the German Army and was deployed to Tangermünde.

Second World War[edit]

c. 1943–1944[edit]

On 30 September 1943, Herold entered military service. He was trained as a paratrooper (Fallschirmjäger) in Tangermünde because of his above-average physical fitness. His division was the last to undergo near-full paratrooper training, with three months of infantry training and a sixteen-day parachute course. Herold was promoted to lance corporal after participating in the battles of Nettuno and Monte Cassino in early 1944. He claimed he was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd Class (for supposedly destroying two British tanks on the beaches of Salerno), the Silver Close Combat Clasp, the Silver Wound Badge, the Parachutist Badge and the Infantry Badge. Records of him ever receiving these medals have so far not been found.

Spring 1945[edit]

In March 1945, Herold's unit retreated from the Netherlands to Nazi Germany. In the chaos of the retreat, Herold became separated from his unit in late March 1945 and was left to travel by himself on the lengthy route between Gronau and Bad Bentheim. In a shot-up Wehrmacht automobile that was lying in a ditch on the side of the road, he found the uniform of a highly decorated Luftwaffe captain and assumed the fictional identity of "Captain Herold of the Sixth Parachute Division." After convincing a major he met at a control point in Ochtrup, Herold received four soldiers under his command. Although he had a core group of twelve people, roughly sixty more would occasionally join him and depart when it was convenient for them. Herold was remarkably only required to provide identification twice despite claiming to be on a special mission from Adolf Hitler.

Along with numerous scouting missions, Herold also made numerous attempts to engage the enemy, culminating in him and his men joining the unit stationed close to the village of Lathen, which was occupied by the Allies. However, this effort failed, and Herold ordered a retreat when he lost too many men to enemy tank fire. Herold started to consider ways to recruit more soldiers as he grew frustrated that he lacked the men and equipment necessary to truly impact the enemy. He encountered local garrison commander Jann Budde in the village of Surwold, who informed him that hundreds of former Wehrmacht soldiers were waiting for the war to conclude in the Aschendorfermoor II penal camp. Herold discovered a chance to address his personnel issue and made his way to the camp.

On 11 April, Herold's group arrived at Aschendorfermoor II, a part of the Emslandlager camp complex which housed German inmates. There, he was asked by one of the camp supervisors, Karl Schütte, to judge a group of thirty inmates who had escaped during a forced march to Collinghorst and been recaptured. Herold ordered five of the men to be shot. He was eventually stopped by the judicial official Friedrich Hansen, who asked Herold to obtain permission from Dr. Richard Thiel, the head of the central administration of the Emslandlager camps. Having failed to obtain permission from Thiel after a lengthy visit, Herold visited Nazi district leader Gerhard Buscher, who got the Gestapo involved. Through Buscher, the Gestapo granted Herold permission to execute the thirty escaped inmates. Over the next two weeks, Herold ordered the execution of the inmates, as well as a large number of political prisoners from a list of 400 names compiled by Thiel.

Herold also chose a large number of inmates, equipped them with uniforms and weapons and dispatched them to the town of Leer to join the Wehrmacht. However, this plan was ultimately unsuccessful since the troops quickly surrendered to advancing Polish forces. On 19 April, British bomber planes attacked a nearby antiaircraft battery, and a few bombs hit Aschendorfermoor II, destroying the camp completely.

Herold recruited twelve prisoners and converted them into his bodyguards. They traveled north, terrifying the populace as they went from town to town. The band executed five Dutchmen accused of espionage after removing them from a nearby prison, making them dig their own graves, and hanging a farmer who had flown a white flag. He and his men were taken into custody in an Aurich hotel on 30 April by the Feldgendarmerie, hours before Hitler's suicide. Herold was put on trial by the authorities on 3 May, but the trial was interrupted and he was conditionally released, thanks to the combined efforts of the Kriegsmarine Chief Justice for the East Frisian region Horst Franke and Admiral Kurt Weyher. Herold was brought to a special unit, where he was warmly welcomed, but he swiftly left under the cover of darkness and traveled to the port city of Wilhelmshaven. Under his true name, he assembled a soldier's paybook and discharge documents before resuming work as a chimney sweep.

Arrest, trial and execution[edit]

Herold was arrested by Royal Navy personnel on 23 May for the theft of a loaf of bread and was sent to CIC Esterwegen. During the summer of 1945, the British investigated Herold's crimes, laboring under the initial impression that his victims had been citizens of Allied countries. On 1 February 1946, Herold and fifty other inmates from CIC Esterwegen were forced by the British to dig up the remains of the inmates murdered at Aschendorfermoor II.[citation needed] A total of 195 bodies were excavated.

In August 1946, Herold and twelve others were tried in Oldenburg by the British, overseen by Colonel Herbert Bown. Herold was notable for his apparently relaxed demeanor and lack of remorse. On 29 August, Herold and six other co-defendants: Karl Hagewald, Bernhard Meyer, Karl Schütte, Josef Euler, Hermann Brandt and Otto Paeller, were sentenced to death; Herold in particular was held responsible for the murder of 111 people. On 14 November 1946, Herold and the five other defendants were executed by guillotining by Friedrich Hehr[who?] in Wolfenbüttel prison.[1][4][5]

In popular culture[edit]

The massacre at the Aschendorfermoor camp and other aspects of Herold’s impersonation is depicted in the 2017 German film Der Hauptmann (The Captain). Max Hubacher plays Herold in the film.

Bibliography[edit]

Books[edit]

  • Kurt Buck: In Search of the Moor Soldier. Emslandlager 1933-1945 and the historical places today. 6th, extended edition. Documentation and Information Center Emslandlager, Papenburg 2008, ISBN 978-3926277169.
  • TXH Pantcheff: The Executioner of the Emsland. Willi Herold, 19 years old. A German lesson . Bund-Verlag, Cologne 1987, ISBN 3-7663-3061-6 . (2nd edition as: The Executioner of Emsland: Documentation of a barbarism at the end of the war 1945. Schuster, Leer 1995, ISBN 3-7963-0324-2).
  • Heinrich and Inge Peters: Pattjackenblut. Dying to die - in line with 5 members. The "Herold Massacre in the Emsland camp II Aschendorfermoor in April 1945". Books on Demand, Norderstedt 2014, ISBN 978-3-7357-6297-9.

Film[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Raim, Edith (2014). Nazi Crimes against Jews and German Post-War Justice: The West German Judicial System During Allied Occupation (1945–1949). Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 122. ISBN 9783110300666.
  2. ^ Brody, Richard (2018-07-24). "Two Films About Nazis Show the Difference Between Engaging with History and Exploiting It". ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
  3. ^ Berlin, Allan Hall (14 October 2017). "Massacre by Nazi impostor Willi Herold to be retold in film Der Hauptmann (The Captain)". Thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  4. ^ Pfaffenzeller, Martin (2017-08-14). "'Der Henker vom Emsland': Kleider machen Mörder" (in German). Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  5. ^ Wöste, Hans-Christian (2015-04-26). "In falscher Uniform vom Schornsteinfeger zum Henker" (in German). Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  6. ^ "'The Captain': Film Review - TIFF 2017". Hollywoodreporter.com. 20 September 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2018.