The Last Battle

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The Last Battle Page 30

by Stephen Harding


  255

  8. Ibid.

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  256

  9. As it happened, Kramers’s small force was not the only 103rd ID unit operating in the 36th ID’s area. A small element of the division’s 103rd Reconnaissance Troop under the command of Lieutenant Herbert had reached the outskirts of Wörgl on the afternoon of May 4, spent the night, and was making its way back toward Innsbruck even as Kramers was arguing with the division’s chief of staff. The recon troops did not know about the French VIPs at Itter; the GIs’ only mission was to establish contact with the lead elements of the 36th ID and then return to Innsbruck to report that contact. How the two groups failed to encounter each other on the road along the Inn River remains a mystery. See Regimental History, 409th Infantry Regiment, 1–10 May 1945, 68–71.

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  257

  10. Levin, “We Liberated Who’ss Who,” 96.

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  258

  11. Operations in Germany, 1–10 May 1945, 70.

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  259

  12. According to the account of the action in Resistance and Persecution in Austria, 1938–1945 (597), the weapon was a 2cm Flak 30.

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  260

  13. Operations in Germany, 1–10 May 1945, 70.

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  261

  14. Ibid.

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  262

  15. Paul Reynaud, in his In the Thick of the Fight (655), says that after the event he was informed by General Émile Antoine Béthouart, then commander of the French 1st Army Corps and postwar French high commissioner in Austria, that the Waffen-SS soldiers were there specifically to kill the French VIPs.

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  263

  16. Resistance and Persecution in Austria, 1938–1945, 598.

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  264

  17. Cailliau de Gaulle, Souvenirs personnels, 101.

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  265

  18. Interview with Arthur P. Pollock.

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  266

  19. Ibid.

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  267

  20. Fortunately for all concerned, Besotten Jenny’s “wet” storage kept its 76mm main-gun ammunition from detonating.

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  268

  21. Schrader, “Erinnerungen, Gedanken, Erkenntnisse.”

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  269

  22. Ibid., and Léon-Jouhaux, Prison pour hommes d’Etat, 154.

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  270

  23. Reynaud is using “tommy-gun” in the generic sense, to mean any type of submachine gun. The weapon he wielded during the fight for the castle was actually a German MP-40 machine pistol.

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  271

  24. Reynaud, In the Thick of the Fight, 655.

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  272

  25. Cailliau de Gaulle, Souvenirs personnels, 101.

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  273

  26. Interview with Edward J. Seiner.

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  274

  27. Interview with Pollock.

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  275

  28. Reynaud, In the Thick of the Fight, 655.

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  276

  29. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  277

  30. Ibid.

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  278

  31. Ibid.

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  279

  32. Gill was himself a bona fide hero; just over two weeks earlier he’d personally led an attack on an enemy position that ultimately resulted in his being decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation’s second-highest military award for valor.

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  280

  33. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  281

  34. Ibid.

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  282

  35. Operations in Germany and Austria, 1–10 May 1945, 2. Mühltal, as mentioned earlier in this volume, is about a mile northeast of Schloss Itter, on the road from Wörgl east to Söll.

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  283

  36. Unit Journal, 1–10 May 1945, 53.

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  284

  37. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  285

  38. Ibid.

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  286

  39. Ibid.

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  287

  40. Ibid.

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  288

  41. Indeed, the Brixentaler Ache is still a popular destination for whitewater kayakers.

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  289

  42. He was also the postwar founder of the separatist Parti Québécois and a prime mover in his province’s attempts to gain political independence from the Canadian Confederation.

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  290

  43. Lévesque, Memoires, 96–99.

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  291

  44. Ibid., 98.

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  292

  45. Léon-Jouhaux, Prison pour hommes d’Etat, 156. See also Smyth, Jean Borotra, the Bounding Basque, 157–158.

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  293

  46. Léon-Jouhaux, Prison pour hommes d’Etat, 157.

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  294

  47. Operations in Germany and Austria, 1–10 May 1945.

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  295

  48. Ibid.

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  296

  49. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  297

  50. Daladier, Prison Journal, 338.

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  298

  51. Ibid.

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  299

  1. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  300

  2. Schrader, “Erinnerungen, Gedanken, Erkenntnisse,” 36. The reason for Čučković’s outburst is unclear; he almost certainly would have encountered Schrader—both in civilian clothes and in uniform—during the latter’s earlier visits to Schloss Itter. We can only assume that the now-free Čučković felt that he could display his true feelings about the man wearing the death’s-head collar insignia that was the symbol of so much horror and tragedy throughout Europe.

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  301

  3. Levin, “We Liberated Who’s Who,” 98.

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  302

  4. Lévesque, Memoires, 98–99.

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  303

  5. A nickname given to the solidly built Daladier years earlier by the Parisian press.

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  304

  6. Lévesque, Memoires, 98–99.

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  305

  7. Ibid.

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  306

  8. Operations in Germany and Austria, 1–10 May 1945, 3.

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  307

  9. Cailliau de Gaulle, Souvenirs personnels, 102–105, and Daladier, Prison Journal, 340–341.

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  308

  10. Čučković, “Zwei Jahren auf Schloss Itter,” 68–69.

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  309

  11. Late in 1945 Schloss Itter was purchased by Wilhelm Woldrich, an Innsbruck hotelier who completely refurbished the castle and added an outdoor swimming pool and a larger garage. In 1964 the Hotel Schloss Itter was sold to a Frau Bettina McDuff, who in 1972 sold it to a Lichtenstein-based company, which, according to some sources, was owned at least in part by one-time Austrian Formula 1 race driver Niki Lauda. In the late 1980s the castle was purchased by Dr. Ernst Bosin, an Austrian attorney with offices in Kufstein, Wörgl, and Orlando, Florida. The hotel ceased operation about that time and has been closed to the public sinc
e then.

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  310

  12. The DSC is awarded for extreme gallantry and risk of life in combat; it is second in order of precedence only to the Medal of Honor. The Silver Star is the third-highest U.S. military decoration for valor in combat.

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  311

  13. General Order 212. I am indebted to Robert Lee for providing the original document.

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  312

  14. The other being Carnets de captivité.

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  313

  15. I am indebted to Mr. Reynaud’s daughter, Evelyne Demey Paul-Reynaud, for information on her mother’s later life.

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  314

  16. Daladier, Prison Journal, 244.

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  315

  17. Léon-Jouhaux, Prison pour hommes d’Etat, 149.

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  316

  18. The letter is quoted in Schrader, “Erinnerungen, Gedanken, Erkenntnisse,” 40.

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  317

  19. Lee remained in the inactive reserve until his honorable discharge on December 20, 1952.

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  318

  20. It has proven impossible to determine the child’s name or birth date, or to discover what ultimately happened to him and his mother. Jack Lee apparently never saw either of them again.

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  319

  21. I am indebted to James Dunne, Norwich sports writer and local historian, for details on Jack Lee’s later life.

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