Defending Against the Allied Bombing Campaign: Air Raid Shelters
and Gas Protection in Germany, 1939-1945
Part 1
by Samuel Crowell
In Memoriam!"
RECENTLY THE ARGUMENT has been advanced that each of the crematoria
at Birkenau was equipped with a gas-tight bomb shelter. The argument
was first made in the Summer of 1996 by Arthur R. Butz, with respect
to Crematoria II and III in his
Vergasungskeller
article. [1] In the Spring of 1997 the concept was extended to cover
all of the crematoria in Birkenau in my article
Technique and Operation of German Anti-Gas
Shelters in World War Two [hereinafter, Technique]. [2]
Although the identification of these spaces as gas-tight bomb
shelters was corroborated in Technique by extensive reference
to contemporary German civil defense literature, public acceptance of
the thesis has been slow. Part of the reason, no doubt, is that the
"Bomb Shelter Thesis" contradicts the work of Jean Claude Pressac and
others, notably, Robert Jan van Pelt. [3] In addition we must recognize
that the thesis, in either the Butz or Crowell variant, seems at first
glance both unusual and even extraordinary.
But the argument for bomb shelters in the Birkenau crematoria
seems extraordinary only because the scope of the German civil defense
program is so little known. Hence, when the crematoria are identified
as having had gas tight bomb shelters the first reaction of the skeptic
will be, why would there be alterations for the crematoria to serve
as air raid shelters? Why not other buildings? without recognizing that
similar shelters were quite common in Germany, and, we believe it possible
to show, also in the concentration camp system and Auschwitz-Birkenau
in particular. So it should be clear that the argument for gas-tight
bomb shelters in the Birkenau crematoria is strengthened to the extent
that analogous structures can be shown to have existed both in the concentration
camp system as well as in German cities.
The present article is an attempt to carry the argument for
comparison and corroboration forward, in this case by supplementing
the contemporary civil defense literature cited in Technique
with secondary studies of German civil defense in World War Two, comprising
both recent German studies as well as US government studies prepared
in the immediate postwar period. The result will be the broader realization,
widely recognized in the secondary literature, that gas tight bomb shelters
were a common feature on the wartime German civilian and concentration
camp landscape.
We will begin by reviewing the rules and recommendations for
German civil defense, and will find that the precautions the Germans
took for bomb and gas attacks were extensive. A review of the actual
types of structures will show a wide array of constructions, including
adaptations of natural geologic formations, existing structures for
secondary bomb shelter use, covered trenches for concentration camp
internees, and a particular emphasis on above ground structures, all
of which were designed to defend against both bombs and gas attacks.
Provisions for gas-tight doors, including those that would lock from
the outside, reinforced concrete roofs, including those with brick ventilation
shafts, and gas-filtering ventilation systems will be shown to have
been quite common, according to both the documentary evidence and the
oral testimony of the men, women, and children who took part in the
large civil defense network. In addition, we will note the particular
emphasis placed on chemical decontamination facilities, which would
usually be sited in only a few dual-purpose locations in a city, and
which, along with the specially trained decontamination crews, would
also be used to combat vermin and the spread of infectious diseases,
including typhus.
In the course of such a review we cannot pass by the opportunity
to describe some of the circumstances whereby the Germans used this
civil defense apparatus to maximum advantage, overcoming terror, destruction,
and massive casualties to survive and endure. For if the story of the
civil defense precautions in the concentration camp system is little
known, so too has the German people's battle for survival in the Allied
bombing campaign been largely ignored.
Part 1: Civil Defense in Germany
1.1 Regulations
It was generally accepted after World War One that aerial bombardment
would be a feature of any future war, and that civilian populations
would be targets. "Strategic" bombing in this sense was a kind of indirect
warfare, meant to rupture the enemy's economy or demoralize its population
so that the enemy army would be forced to capitulate. [4] Such indirect
warfare is a classic feature of siege warfare as well as naval blockade,
the last circumstance may explain why Great Britain became the leading
practitioner of strategic area bombing in World War Two. A famous expression
of Britain's point of view was made by Stanley Baldwin in the House
of Commons on November 10, 1932:
I think it is well for the man in the street to realize
that there is no power on earth that can protect him from being
bombed. Whatever people may tell him, the bomber will always get
through. The only defense is in offense, which means that you have
to kill more women and children more quickly than the enemy if you
want to save yourselves. [H43f, S12]
Recognizing such a position, Germany made attempts to protect
itself passively from future air attack even in the 1920's, even though
active defense -- searchlights, flak guns, and so on -- were forbidden
by the Treaty of Versailles. [S11] Already in 1931 the Ministry of the
Interior was issuing guidelines for civil defense, and in 1932 the first
issue of the Vorläufige Ortsanweisung für den Luftschutz der Zivilbevölkerung
was issued, which, by war's end would comprise 12 chapters with numerous
comprehensive attachments. [S12]
After Hitler took power Germany began preparing mobilization
plans, and these included provision for the defense of cities. The mobilization
plans of the Luftwaffe included a special attachment breaking down the
cities of Germany into Civil Defense Areas (Luftschutzorten)
of Class I, II, and III. [S14] The difference in classes was primarily
a matter of local control, inspection, and preparedness. The controls
would be in the hands of the Luftschutzleiter (civil defense
leader) usually the mayor or sometimes the local Nazi gauleiter. The
104 cities in Class I (or LSO-I) included all cities with large
populations, and other cities that were considered vital for war industries.
Thus Hamburg, Berlin, Munich, and Dresden were naturally LSO-I:
but so was Siegen, with a population of 60,000. Siegen's inclusion was
based on its location near the Ruhr, its status as a garrison city,
and its war important industries.[S16]
It would be tedious to go over the voluminous regulations
governing the civil defense establishment in Germany from 1933 forwards,
but there are two documents that deserve special attention: The Code
of Practice for Building Shelters [Bestimmungen für den Bau von
Luftschutz Bunkern] and the orders pertaining to the Luftschutz
Führer Sofort Programm, that is, the Fuhrer's Emergency Air Raid
Program, usually referred to as the LS-Führerprogramm.
The United States, in its postwar surveys, stressed the detailed
nature of the Code and its provisions.[CD152f] In fact, the
Code also laid down basic guidelines in which civil defense had
to be viewed. The basic concepts turned on the collective nature of
the enterprise: any program was to cover the whole city, and the program
had to be worked into any urban development programs. The Code
gave preference to above ground shelters, because underground shelters
were costlier. In addition, it specified various details, such as the
number of gas-locks for entry (preferably, two), the width of entries,
the size of the staircases, the need for washrooms, first aid rooms,
and so on. [CD153]
If the Code underlay Germany's civil defense approach,
the LS-Führerprogramm of November, 1940, stressed the same points
with greater detail and greater urgency. By the time of its issuance,
Germany was reconciled to a long air war, therefore the details of the
program were meant to be comprehensive and prescriptive, as a listing
of some of its provisions show:
1. For buildings (municipal buildings, dwellings, lots) in which
there are up to now none or inadequate air raid shelters, do it
yourself air raid measures will be adopted.
2. Existing or newly constructed streets or transportation paths
(e.g., subways and tunnels) are to be adapted for the construction
of underground and bombproof air raid shelters.
3. The openings to the outside in existing air raid shelters
are to be removed and at the same time connections are to be made
[to other shelters] with collapsible fire walls.
4. New public air raid shelters are to be constructed, and existing
air raid shelters are to be made, as bombproof as possible.
5. All new constructions, particularly in buildings for the armaments
industry, are henceforth to be equipped with bombproof air raid
shelters. Such shelters are to have the same priority as the structure
being built itself. [S23f, N327ff]
1. Für Wohngebiete (städtische Gebiete, Siedlungen, Laubenkolonien),
in denen bisher keine oder unzureichende Luftschutzräume vohanden
sind, sind behelfsmaßige Luftschutzmaßnahmen zu treffen.
2. Vorhandene oder neu zu bauende Verkehrsstraßen oder Verkehrsanlagen
(z.B. Untergrundbahnen und Tunnelbauten) sind für den Bau unterirdischer,
bombensicherer Luftschutzräume auszunutzen.
3. Die in Luftschutzräumen vorhandenen Öffnungen in den Außenwanden
des Gebäudes sind zu beseitigen unter gleichzeitiger beschleunigter
Durchführung der gesetzlich geordneten Brandmauerdurchbruche.
4. Neu zu errichtende öffentliche Luftschutzräume sind bombensicher
zu bauen, die vorhandenen öffentlichen Luftschutzräume sind -- soweit
möglich -- auf Bombensicherheit zu verstärken.
5. Bei allen Neubauten, insbesondere bei den Bauten der Rüstungsindustrie,
sind von vorneherein bomensichere Luftschutzräume auszuführen. Sie
sind in die gleiche Dringlichkeitsstufe wie die Bauvorhaben selbst
aufzunehmen.
A few clarifications to the program are necessary. The openings
to the outside that needed to be closed has to do with the demonstrated
insecurity for some emergency exits; this would lead eventually to the
filling in of emergency exit passages with sand, or boxes of gravel,
or even the filling in with a narrow wall. Second, the Brandmauerdurchbruch,
or collapsible fire wall, was meant to connect a series of buildings,
such as one would find in large cities. Such an expedient would of course
be useless in situations where a building was isolated. The most striking
thing about the LS-Führerprogramm, aside from the extensive construction
that followed after it was issued, is the fact that it was global: all
buildings, new or old, were to be equipped with bomb shelters.
1.2 Organization of Civil Defense in Cities
The organization for Civil Defense in Germany was extremely
widespread. The Reichsluftschutzbund (hereinafter, RLB)
[5] numbered 12 million members by 1939 [B13], and it is only reasonable
to assume that its numbers swelled as the war continued. Each city had
a complicated hierarchy of positions and departments whose functions
were clearly marked out.
The basic structure was the Sicherheits- und Hilfsdienst
(SHD, Recue and Repair Service), which was further subdivided. The
Sicherheitsdienst (S-Dienst) functioned as security and
police in the event of air raids, the Feuerlöschdienst (F-Dienst)
were the firefighting crews, the Instandsetsungsdienst (I-Dienst)
were charged with technical and emergency repairs, including bomb disposal
and the rescue of bombing victims, and the Sanitatdienst (San-Dienst)
worked closely with the Red Cross and the municipal health authorities
in handling all problems of health, emergency care, and hygiene that
grew out of the bombing raids. There was even a special department devoted
to veterinary care, with emergency stations for the care of draft animals
and pets. [N46-143]
The final division of the civil defense forces was the
Entgiftungsdienst or the Decontamination Service. The decontamination
workers were normally attached to the firefighters, and indeed in Nuremberg
they were amalgamated with the firefighters in 1940, so that the gas
protection function of the E-Dienst became auxiliary [N77]. Already
by 1939, Nuremberg, with a population of about 450,000, had 15 decontamination
squads with 15 NCOs and 300 men, in addition, there were 56 gas testers
(Gasspürer) attached to the central authority. [N48] The role
of the gas testers were to follow up on any suspicions of gas usage
and take samples to one of 25 gas testing labs. Other fixed sites related
to the work of the Decontamination Service included five decontamination
centers with 5 NCOs and 20 men, and five centers for the decontamination
of materials (Sachenentgiftungsanstalten) also divided among
25 personnel. The location of these stations is difficult to establish
today but it is clear that they made use of existing locations that
featured laundries and public bathing facilities [N78, CD164]. It seems
probable also that the municipal disinfection center (several German
cities possessed these) was earmarked for dual purpose [6]. The example
in the city of Nuremberg can safely be extrapolated to Germany at large,
not least because of the global nature of the US Strategic Bombing Survey's
report which covers German gas protection measures in detail.[CD164f].
Graphic 1-2: A group
of Nuremberg firefighters and decontamination workers
The members of the Decontamination Service throughout Germany
were issued special protective clothing, including rubberized suits
and boots, and, like other important personnel in the Civil Defense
Program, had higher quality gas masks (some 12 million gas masks in
all were distributed). [CD153,CD164] The US Strategic Survey Final Report
considered it significant that the production of this anti-gas warfare
gear continued until the end of the war.[CD164] In addition, the members
of the decontamination squads received special training: of the 150
hours of instruction for these auxiliary firefighters, no less than
25 1/2 hours were devoted to chemical warfare.[N78] On the other hand,
in order to reduce anxiety, the average citizen received only about
a half hour of chemical warfare instruction. [CD165]
In addition to the decontamination squads, gas testers, the
various fixed sites and their work crews, gas protection also included
trucks and even ships equipped with cleansing apparatus, and chemicals
and decontamination equipment, including trucks and supplies held in
reserve to be sent to afflicted areas.[CD164f]
As to the application of gas protection features to air raid
shelters, it was a given that bombproof also meant gasproof, as one
author remarks: "Particular attention had to be given to the entrances
to the bunkers. Each bunker had to have at least two entrances and each
entrance had to be equipped with a gaslock. It was understood that bombproof
meant proof against gas bombs!" [S40] and the US Strategic Bombing Survey
stated "All buildings and public shelters constructed or modified to
house air-raid protection activities were gas proof." [CD164] Further
evidence of the pervasive nature of gas protection in Germany can be
found in Technique.
1.3 Types of Shelters and Equipment
Secondary sources pertaining to the civil defense procedures of individual
cities are a good source of information on the types of shelters erected.
But an extremely useful summary of such structures can also be found
in an essentially contemporary publication of the US government, the
Civil Defense Division Final Report, issued in its second edition
in January, 1947.
The most basic shelter was the home shelter, or do it yourself
shelter (Behelfmässige Luftschutzraum) such as one would find
in private homes or apartment buildings. Since some 22 million Germans
lived in 58 cities of 100,000 or more [H128], and there were 104 cities
with priority civil defense classification (i.e., Luftschutzort I)
[S15], we can imagine that there must have been literally hundreds of
thousands of cellars that were fitted out with at least minimal bomb
and gas protection. Here, the numerous "how-to" articles in periodicals
such as Gasschutz und Luftschutz indicate the extent of the preparation.
According the the US Strategic Bombing Survey, such shelters were subject
to inspection and approval by the local authorities [CD155] and had
to meet the following specifications:
(1) at least rudimentary gas-proofing,
(2) at least one emergency exit (usually to an adjoining cellar
through a Brandmauerdurchbruch,or collapsible fire wall),
(3) the sealing of all other openings to the outside, and (4) in
some cases rudimentary struts of wooden beams or brick. [CD155]
The costs for such private shelters was frequently subsidized
by the government [CD155] : a wise move, since during the heavy raids
the line between private and public shelters was frequently erased.
As can be imagined such basic basement shelters provided only marginal
support in the heaviest raids, but the insistence on gas proofing is
certainly significant in evaluating the importance and pervasiveness
of anti-gas measures.
Graphic 1-3: Plans for
a basement bomb shelter
A secondary category involved semi-public shelters which included
schools and other municipal buildings. These were probably the most
numerous of the various dual purpose shelters that served a public function;
the US Strategic Bombing Survey specifies that they were equipped with
gas-tight steel doors.[CD156] The problem with such converted shelters
is that in some parts of the country, notably in the East and South,
the building of communal shelters was delayed until late in the war,
precisely at the point when building materials were most difficult to
obtain. For example, Bavaria was long called the "Air Raid Shelter of
Germany" on the understanding that it would not be bombed because of
its distance from Britain. This assumption also led to the "Kinder
Land Verschickung" a program in which children were evacuated from
the North and West to the South. [US214] But from 1943 onwards all parts
of the country would be bombed, and this probably explains the variability
in the children's death toll, ranging from 10% in places like Hamburg
and Nuremberg to 30% in cities like Darmstadt (see discussion below)
because the children in the latter locations would not have been evacuated.
Acceptable bomb and gas protection seem to have been widely available
in converted shelters, as we shall see, but given the nature of the
firestorm raids from 1943 onwards these would be of little help; cities
like Munich, Augburg, and Dresden, were seriously affected by a lack
of preparedness.
Of the dedicated public shelters, there were several types.
Probably the most numerous of these were the trench shelters, such as
one would find in the labor camps and concentration camps, these will
be discussed in more detail later. Stollen were also found, and
were essentially semicircular tunnels bored into a hillside, although
often downtown underground bunkers would mimic the structure of Stollen.
Since the vertical protection would depend on the height of the hill
being bored into, we can imagine that they were quite secure, the main
problem with such shelters could only be built where the lay of the
land would support them. And there were occasional design lapses: one
Stollen in Stuttgart, designed to hold 1,000, was notorious for
lacking any restrooms. [S99]
Another common shelter, particularly in the cities, were large
Luftschutzbunkern. Sometimes these involved the expansion of
existing basements, or the digging of sub-basements. The floor plans
for some of these shelters are mind-boggling in size, one that was inspected
could hold 10,000 people. [CD157] Although priority was given to above
ground shelters, the Germans ended up building many underground because
of the lack of space, particularly in the centers of cities. [CD157]
These were usually long, flat structures with flat roofs of reinforced
concrete. Forced ventilation was standard, with standard Schutzraumbelüfter
which were operated by electricity or by hand. Air intakes (Entlüftungsrohren)
would usually be equipped with a gas-tight flap, as drawings indicate,
[S77] sometimes the air intake would have a large and heavily sloped
brick chimney, which, due to the slope, would occupy a mass many times
greater than the aperture. [N569] It was apparently not unusual to use
vent pipes for camouflage purposes. [CD162]
Graphic 1-4:
A Hochbunker, or above
ground bomb shelter
The large Hochbunker or above ground bunker was a German
innovation that had no counterpart among the Allies. They were usually
large concrete blocks built above ground and designed, like the Luftschutz
bunkern, for multiple use: for people, important documents, artworks.
Eventual peace-time use was envisioned for the Hochbunkern: indeed,
in Hamburg many of these would be converted to office blocks after the
war. [G69] They could be classed in various categories, including those
that were provided with false roofs and painted-on windows that looked
like gigantic chateaux, others that resembled squat skyscrapers with
bricked in windows, still others that were round and faced with brick
like the keep of a castle, and still others that looked like tapered
towers. [S26ff, CD157f]
Graphic 1-5: Bomb shelter
design, perhaps an attempt at disguising the purpose.
Although above ground shelters would seem particularly vulnerable
because they were exposed, in practice they seem to have worked quite
well. Since they were of concrete, they were not set ablaze, and since
they were detached from other buildings they were not as directly affected
by other burning buildings; hence the effects of heat or gases would
not be as great. In the Hamburg raids of late July 1943, the second
to last of which created the famous firestorm, only 100 people in above
ground shelters perished, largely as a result of two direct hits on
smaller structures. Considering that more than 50,000 people were killed
that night and that over eleven hundred tons of high explosives were
expended that seems a remarkably low total.
Perhaps one of the most unusual public air raid shelters was
the Parkhöhle in Weimar. The Parkhöhle is a long jagged
series of caves that underlay the city, several hundred meters in length,
caused by water cutting through the rock formations. Long a tourist
attraction, the Parkhöhle was converted to bomb shelter use late
in the war, with some brick strutting done, as well as the provision
of some other equipment. Because of its size, it was not felt necessary
to ventilate its long corridors. The caves were also the site of extensive
archaeological work by Johann Wolfgang Goethe and his son: the ethnographic
museums of Weimar today still display their finds of ancient bones and
other materials from the Old Stone Age. [P19ff,49]
As the discussion in Technique has already noted, ventilation
in the air raid shelters was a problem insofar as it had to provide
sufficient air per person (11 cubic feet per minute), had to provide
temperatures in the acceptable range (24 C to 17C), and provide for
humidity control. [CD158] In addition, the more secure shelters would
be flooded with refugees in the event of severe raids. Overcrowding
was always a problem.
It is difficult to reconstruct the number of shelters or the
types of shelters built before and during the war, but various indications
from the secondary literature provides a number of clues. It is known,
for example, that Hamburg had over 2,000 public shelters for about 500,000
persons out of a population of over 1 million. [G69] Wuppertal, with
a population of 400,000, built or converted over 100 shelters. [S98]
Since Hamburg was one of the better prepared cities in the Reich, it
is a safe inference that the rest of the residents were distributed
in smaller home shelters and LS-Kellern, the colloquial name
for the cellars of apartment buildings adapted for bomb shelter use.
[N442] Dresden, on the other hand, had no dedicated public shelters,
and only a few converted public shelters, yet home and apartment protection
appears to have been up to standard. [D166f]
A detailed study of the city of Siegen provides information
that we could extrapolate to the rest of the Reich. Under the LS-Führerprogramm,
over 10 million RM was spent in the construction of 17 large public
shelters, another 6 million for 8 Stollen, and close to another
million in the conversion of 100 or so existing buildings to semi-public
shelters. For a total outlay of over 17 million Reichsmarks, Siegen
was able to provide adequate public shelter for about 20% of its population
of 60,000, the rest falling back on home and cellar shelters. [S86]
There is also the case of Nuremberg. Early in the course of
the LS-Führerprogramm, four shelters were designed for a cost
of 3.6 million RM, even though the city began the war with dozens of
public shelters. [N385] In 1943, the budget called for 52 new public
shelters, the improvement of 294 old shelters, and the strutting and
splinterproofing of of 3,600 home shelters for a cost of one and a half
million RM.[N450] But neither in Nuremberg, nor in any other city, was
funding, principally by the government, ever lacking -- "Geld war
genug da" -- the money was always there. [N385] Further data on
Nuremberg indicates that in 1942 there were 13,500 Kelleräume,
that is, shelters for home and apartment dwellers. [N446]
Graphic 1-6: A bunker
for the storage of artworks in Nuremberg
Considering that there were over 12 million in the Luftschutzbund
in 1939, that over 22 million Germans lived in 58 cities highly vulnerable
to air attack (over 75 cities were essentially leveled by the RAF alone)
[H374f] we can easily arrive at the conclusion that the program built
thousands of dedicated public shelters, tens of thousands of semi-public
conversions, and hundreds of thousands of home and cellar shelters at
a total cost of billions of Marks.
1.4 German Civil Defense in Practice
The test for the German civil defense system came when the bombs
started to fall. In spite of the careful planning, many precautions
would not function in firestorm conditions. Then survival became a matter
of luck, desperate courage, or strong leadership among the RLB
Feldwebeln (sergeant majors), and fire wardens.
Under normal conditions the system seemed to operate well
enough, with the usual precautions functioning normally. Thus one man
would recall his boyhood experiences:
I was a Hitler Youth messenger. As such, I was stationed
at an air raid shelter bunker built both above ground and underground.
When an air raid alarm sounded, we had to be there on time and open
the bunker with the "block leader", a party official who was responsible
for the street. We had to care for the children, give them milk,
and so on, if the alarm lasted a long time. [...] The block leader
or the women from the Nazi's women's organization sent around and
handed out toys to the children and light sedatives to the adults.
And the louder the attack got outside, the quieter it got in the
bunker.
The underground shelters were more like "tube bunkers."
When you came through the steel door, fitted with rubber around
the edges to make it airtight, you entered a diagonal hallway. This
hallway was joined by three or four tube-like hallways perpendicular
to it. Each of these, in turn, was a separate bunker. Air was pumped
through each tube by machines which we Hitler Youth operated. That
was one of our jobs. My duties also involved running messages from
one bunker to another if the telephones went dead. We were outfitted
with gas masks, steel helmets, etc. We had to go out at all times,
even when the bombs were falling. I was 13 years old at the time.
[V211]
Graphic 1-6: A messenger
boy in Hamburg who didn't make it through the firestorm. Very little
remains of his body except a partial skeleton.
The above not only indicates the ordinariness of underground
shelters, gas tight steel doors, and hand-cranked ventilators but also
the integral role that women and children played in civil defense. One
woman, in Dresden, describes surviving the American daylight raid after
the famous firestorm:
Normally, there were only 20 to 25 of us down in the cellar.
But now, with many people off the street, including those who'd
stopped over at our house, there were about 100 of us. Nevertheless,
no on panicked -- we were too numb and demoralized from the night
before. We just sat there. The attack rolled closer, and then a
bomb hit. It was like a bowling ball that bounced, or jumped perhaps,
and at that moment the lights went out. The whole basement filled
with dust. When the bomb carpet reached us, I crouched in a squatting
position, my head between my legs. The air pressure was immense,
but only for a moment. The rubber seals on the windows and the steel
doors probably helped to absorb some of the impact. Someone screamed,
and then it was quiet. Then a voice shouted, "It's all right, nothing's
happened." It was the shelter warden. [V231]
The above quote is informative in a couple of ways. It describes
the typical gas tight seals on steel doors and windows. Such fixtures
appear to have been common, even in Dresden, where virtually no large
public shelters were especially built. [S99f,D166f] In addition, the
role of the shelter warden in maintaining calm in the shelters is suggested.
Indeed, it appears in several cases that the survival of thousands if
not tens of thousands depended on the leadership and resource of the
Feldwebeln (Sergeant Majors) Branddirektors (Fire Wardens)
and the roving rescue squads of the SHD. The experiences of Sergeant
Major Schäfer and Fire Warden Bey of the Hamburg RLB, as related
to Gordon Musgrove for his Operation Gomorrah, are both typical
and extraordinary. [G71f,73f,91f]
Graphic 1-7: A gas tight
door for an air-raid shelter at Nuremberg
Schäfer was bombed out of his own apartment the day before
the firestorm and had moved down the street to take up residence. When
the firestorm raid began, he withdrew to the shelter of his new building,
along with about 400 others. Over the course of the next half hour or
so, he was led to make several trips out of the shelter into the flames,
in order to determine the extent of the damage, from which he determined
very early on the need for immediate evacuation. And here we encounter
a common theme in shelter rescues: the need for forceful and even brutal
leadership to save lives.
In Schäfer's case, his shouted demand for evacuation was greeted
with fear and apathy; a reaction often cited in the air war literature.
Schäfer's response was immediate: he grabbed the first two people near
the exit by the scruff of their necks, dragged them up and out into
the flaming street, and took them down to the corner to point out the
way to safety in a nearby park. He repeated this exercise several more
times, leading out by force a number of women and their children, which
in turn brought everyone else out. When everyone had exited the shelter,
he followed behind. On the way, he broke into a building that was not
yet in flames, rescuing another party there, then made several dashes
into the street to save women whose clothing had caught fire, passed
out and was revived by some his people, retreated to the park with them,
found temporary relief from a water tower, and finally, after several
hours, was rescued with his full complement several blocks further away.
There seems little doubt that without Schäfer's energetic leadership
his party would not have survived, for the building from which they
escaped collapsed minutes after his departure. What makes his self-control
and presence of mind even more remarkable is that the last person to
leave his shelter was his wife, and and as she did so she handed him
their three month old child.
At this point it is necessary to pause and understand why
there would be so much reluctance to leave the shelters. Most of the
city raids were fire-raisers and several culminated in firestorms. Outside
one had to contend with exploding bombs (including delayed action bombs),
bomb splinters, falling masonry or entire buildings, and wooden roofing
and construction beams that would fly around in the storm winds like
matchsticks. In addition, all commentators make reference to a kind
of continual shower of sparks, using metaphors like "swarms of fiery
bumblebees", or "blizzards of red snow": these sparks could not only
burn and blind but could also set one's clothes on fire. Finally, there
was the heat, the gusting winds that would whipsaw back and forth and
create clouds of sparks and debris at intersections, and which would
reduce many trying to escape to crawling on all fours. Under these circumstances
the difficulty in breathing was terrible, oftentimes one finds the comment
"the air just wouldn't come" and similar sentiments. [US22] One warden,
standing outside his shelter, was seized with a terrifying premonition
of his own death, and not long after, suddenly passed out. Mercifully,
he was right outside of a Hochbunker, and was dragged back in
to safety. [G98] Another survivor describes falling to the ground and
being forced to breathe off the pavement during the firestorm, burning
his lips and mouth in the process. After an hour and a half the crisis
had passed. Dead people were laying all around him. [G111f] In the Dresden
raid, a survivor described a group of young girls who finally took the
risk to dash across a courtyard and open a gate that would allow them
to escape from the fires. Yet, as they were struggling with the gate,
a building nearby collapsed, killing all of them. [D170] Seeing or hearing
of such situations no doubt led many, and particularly women, women
with children, and the elderly, to forsake the frightening uncertainty
outside for what they believed would be the comparative security of
the bunker. And these people rarely survived.
The leadership and professionalism of the air raid crews were
of particular importance during firestorms, for here the elaborate systems
of precaution frequently broke down. Collective protector ventilation
systems might start bellowing smoke; emergency exits and shutters might
crash in from the impact of bombs and offer no more protection; fire
walls might be broken down in an effort to escape only to bring in lethal
fire and smoke. Here again the human element made the difference between
life and death.
Fire Warden Bey was another air raid leader in Hamburg. When
the firestorm raid on Hamburg began, he was walking around the block,
gathering up stragglers, but he too was soon forced to retreat to his
shelter. Within a matter of minutes the street was ablaze and the shelter
was becoming overcrowded with people from outside or from other shelters
that had failed, some of whose clothes were already smoldering, others
who had ripped them off to avoid the flames. The ventilation system
soon broke down and the lighting soon failed; and, while he had no real
hopes of fixing it, Bey made a shrewd display of instructing a few men
to work on it, hoping that that would placate his anxious crowd and
give them hope. Meanwhile, Bey and one of his NCO's went out on a number
of patrols looking for help or safety. No clear escape route was found,
nor did they find any emergency squads, who were roaming the blazing
city in trucks, but they did find some water which they carried back
to the bunker, which by now was extremely overcrowded. A series of cracks
made in the connecting walls with other cellars did not lead to safety
either, but brought even more dazed survivors into the shelter.
Going out into the street one more time, Bey finally flagged
down a Major of the SHD with a rescue party and organized an
evacuation. Returning to his shelter, Bey found that his people had
given up all hope, but finally he was able to coax a few to follow him
out so that he could explain the plan. No sooner had he stepped onto
the street to encourage the others to join him, when two adjoining buildings
collapsed, knocking him down and covering him with dust and debris.
Meanwhile, his observers panicked and dashed back to safety. Bey got
to his feet and returned to the shelter, and finally succeeded in goading
and hectoring his people into the street. One by one the people from
the shelter stepped out, encouraged by an exhausted Bey, forming a human
chain down two streets and into a park. After inspecting the shelter
one last time, he followed behind where he found all of his people in
safety. Clearly the tenacity and perseverance of Fire Warden Bey was
instrumental in their survival, but so too were the roving squads of
the SHD, who abandoned their role of fire monitoring and fire
fighting early on in order to save as many lives as possible. In this
particular case, the lives of more than 700 were spared.
A particularly harrowing example of rescue concerns the city
of Brunswick, which was bombed on October 15, 1944. Here the breakdown
concerned what in retrospect would seem both foolish and tragic: the
tendency of some shelter doors to be locked and bolted from the outside
to prevent panicked civilians from rushing outside prematurely. The
raid began at 2:30 in the morning and had developed a minor firestorm
in the city center within 45 minutes. But this same area contained eight
large bunkers and public shelters which housed 23,000 people. It was
impossible to get through because of the firestorm, thus the rescue
of these people depended solely on the ingenuity of the firefighters.
By 5 AM they were ready. Hoses were leapfrogged forward group
by group, throwing up a "water alley" of protection for the next group
that would detach its hoses, move forward, reattach, and create the
next segment of the alley. Overcoming numerous complexities and failures,
the firefighters finally got through to the bunkers at 7 o'clock the
next morning, and "As the doors were unbarred and unlocked the rescuers
heard the sound of 'many people talking quietly but nervously under
their breath.'"[D64f] Then the survivors were led back to safety in
an enormous human chain under the canopy of water.
There is a tendency when discussing war to expect the greatest
demonstrations of leadership on the battlefield, and to view civilian
victims as mere passive statistics, whose numbers are then manipulated
for political purposes. Yet the narratives that have been recounted
here remind us otherwise. The leadership, courage, and devotion to duty
demonstrated by Sergeant Major Schäfer, Fire Warden Bey, and the Brunswick
firefighters -- along with many others -- were in the finest traditions
of any military organization. They were charged with saving as many
lives as possible. At great personal risk, they accomplished that mission.
1.5 The Total Number of Victims
Yet it must be said that hundreds of thousands died. A usual figure
for dead German civilians in the air war is about 593,000 -- most round
up to 600,000, others tend to argue for a lower figure, 300,000 to 400,000.
[H11,DD171n] Rudolf Höß, the commandant of Auschwitz, insisted in his
memoirs that "the total number of victims of the air war will probably
never be found. In my estimation there were probably several million.
The casualty figures were never made public. They were top secret."
[DD171] But the value of Höß' estimation is only a problem for those
who consider him reliable in other areas.
Graphic 1-8: Some of
the tens of thousands of victims at Hamburg
The 593,000-600,000 figure, in turn, accepts a low estimate
for Dresden, about 35,000. But it is doubtful that the figures for Dresden
were so low. Hamburg, with a population of 1.2 million, suffered about
50,000 in the firestorm of July 29, 1943. But this was during the third
of several attacks, and we should expect that many had fled from the
city by the time of the third attack (the overall reduction in Hamburg's
population was 43%). [G162] We know that the population of several cities
was reduced as a result of air raids: Nuremberg, with a population of
about a half million, had been halved by late in the war. [N445] In
addition, Hamburg suffered its terrific casualties even though it was
well equipped with thousands of shelters.
On the other hand, Dresden, with a pre-war population of 600,000,
had been swelled with hundreds of thousands of refugees from the East,
fleeing the Soviet army: its population at the time of the raid was
probably comparable to Hamburg's at that city's zenith. Dresden was
also struck by a firestorm: but it lacked almost all of the safeguards
present in Hamburg. There were no large Hochbunkern in Dresden
where people could wait out the storm. Death from asphyxiation would
seem to be guaranteed.
Additionally, the hundreds of thousands of refugees in the
city would have no way of orienting themselves or knowing how to escape:
we can assume panic among many of them, and desperate retreat into overcrowded
underground converted public shelters that would ultimately become death
traps. Moreover, since Dresden had never before been seriously bombed,
the population had neither fled, nor reduced in number, nor were they
likely well versed in procedures that would save their lives: and only
one, evacuation, would save them in the firestorm. On top of this, the
second wave of British bombers was designed to bomb the center of the
city at precisely the time when the maximum amount of aid would be in
the streets trying to save the lives of the victims from the first wave:
that percentage of losses must also be considered. Finally, the third
blow by the Americans, next day, doubtless brought its casualties, along
with the P-51 Mustangs who in several well documented instances strafed
survivors, including Allied POW's, and clearly marked hospital wings.
[D182,SF180]
Graphic 1-9: The arrows
point to shelter areas.
Finally, there is the matter of accurate counting due to the
problems of cleaning up the destruction. It is well known that tens
of thousands were burned on pyres in the center city, but bodies were
still being recovered when the Soviets took over the city on May 8,
1945. And, as in the case of other cities, the recovery of dead bodies
was not the highest priority: bodies were recovered when possible, and
there were several cases after the war when the bulldozing of previously
impassable remains turned up human remnants. [G167] Hans Voigt of Bielefeld,
whose diary was employed by David Irving in his famous study of the
Dresden raid, described his job in the gathering, identification, and
disposal of remains: his final estimate was 135,000. [D208ff] While
Hamburg is usually conceded to have caused 50,000 deaths, it is well
to keep in mind that at the time the death toll was given out as between
30,000-40,000 [G167]: therefore, for people to assume similar casualties
at Dresden would have seemed normal at the time. However, the conditions
were definitely much worse in Dresden, for the reasons given, and therefore
it seems likely that the casualty figures were much higher than Hamburg.
In that case, Hans Voigt's projection seems reasonable, which would
mean that the overall loss of life in the air war was in the neighborhood
of 700,000.
Of the 15,802 bodies that were identifiable after the Hamburg
firestorm, 6,072 were men, 7,995 were women, and 1,735 were children
(children usually meaning pre-teenage). The percentages are thus 38.4%
men, 50.6% women, and 11% children. [G167] For Darmstadt, which also
experienced a firestorm but which was not as well prepared as Hamburg,
there were 936 military deaths, 368 POW deaths, and 492 foreign laborer
(i.e., forced laborer) deaths. Of 6,637 identifiable civilian dead (twice
that many died) 1,766 were men, 2,742 were women, and 2,129 children.
The percentages are thus 26.6% men, 41.3% women, 32% children. [H325f]
Other raids show similar breakdowns, from which we conclude that the
Allied campaign directed at German civilian morale killed mostly women
and children.
There is a melancholy footnote to the Dresden raid, which,
whatever its final counting, was surely the worst air raid in the European
theater. As is well known, Churchill proceeded with the raid because
he wished to make a demonstration of British might on the continent
to the Soviets. [D148,D214] In the event, however, the raid, which was
promised to hold up communications and transport for the front, and
thus abet the Soviet offensive, was a failure: within three days, the
marshalling yards were back to limited operation, and the city was not
taken until after the war was over. [D177f] It is interesting to note
that Churchill, in his memoirs, describes his determined effort to ensure
that Eisenhower not capture the city. [D232] One can suggest a number
of reasons for this, certainly the Americans crossed the Elbe at several
other points. Popular perceptions of Dresden continue to be informed
by Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, a tremendously popular
and widely read novel that describes the raid as "the greatest massacre
in European history." [SF101]. In opposition, we have the occasional
little-read book which assures us that the bombing of Dresden was not
a crime. As Vonnegut would say, so it goes.
1.6 After the Raids: The Nature of Victim Injuries
The morning after the raids was the time for cleanup and rescue,
although even before the raids were over the people would be out in
the street; women putting out fires, boys working water pumps for the
firefighters, members of various crews and civilians organizing ad
hoc rescue operations. The first priority was locating and rescuing
survivors, as well as treating the injured, who, as in a real battle,
would far outnumber the dead. Doctors had been privately informed that
the threat of carbon monoxide poisoning was high, even in open areas,
therefore they were told to give priority to unconscious victims ahead
of those who had only been buried, burned, or with broken bones. [US24f]
And needless to say as in regular battle the number of injuries would
far exceed the dead; in Hamburg alone 37,439 were injured seriously
enough to be counted, including many amputees and those with severe
and lifelong burns. [G167]
Graphic 1-10: Listening
for signs of life under the rubble
Locating the living had its problems because if they were
in shelters their location might have been covered by tons of brick
and masonry. To help orient the crews, underground cellars were supposed
to have white paint markings several meters up the side of the building
pointing down to the air raid shelter. [N495,N540] The I-Dienst
was equipped with listening equipment, which consisted of a console
from which highly sensitive microphones were led and then placed in
piles of rubble. A photograph from the period shows two members of a
rescue crew, one gesturing for silence, as they listen intently for
the sound of breathing. [N538,N79-105] Everyone was involved in rescues,
including the forced laborers and POW's who would be trucked in or marched
in from local camps. Naturally, the prisoners and laborers did not have
much choice, but it appears that in the immediate aftermath of a raid
the political hatreds that had inspired it were forgotten and the common
denominator of humanity took over. Irving relates how British POW's
threw themselves into rescue work after Dresden, improvising listening
devices, running pipes down into the debris to provide air to those
below, putting themselves at risk to save lives. [D183,D194] It was
probably the same after all of the raids.
Graphic 1-11: A sample
page from a record of the dead at Nuremberg.
The center of the bombing zone was usually marked off, and
the people were forbidden access, as Vonnegut described it, "Germans
were stopped there. They were not permitted to explore the moon." [SF213]
Then the work crews, supplemented by POW's and camp internees, would
turn to the grisly task of recovering the dead. After the Kassel firestorm
of 1943, the Police President issued suggestions on the things that
would be required by the rescue crews, including protective suits, rubber
gloves, goggles, disinfectants, and also tobacco (probably to defeat
the sense of smell), alcohol (to encourage the workers), shears and
bolt cutters to cut off the fingers of the dead wearing jewelry, and
which would later be used to identify the victims.[H320] Buckets of
rings were recovered from the Dresden dead in this fashion. [D208] In
Dresden, the devastation had been so great that there were no rubber
gloves available; an American POW describes how they improvised:
"The guard pointed at the corpse as one I should remove.
He indicated I take a belt off another body and put it around the
one I was to remove. It's surprising how much could be communicated
by hand motions. I put a belt around the neck of this man and started
to drag it towards the ramp, but [the body] broke in half. That
was too much for me. I sort of lost it for a bit. I began to scream,
yell and dance around. I tried to go out but they wouldn't let me.
They got me quieted down, pointed to one of the bottles on the table
and insisted I have a few swallows. That was the first I ever tasted
liquor of any kind." [A408]
Graphic 1-12: A young
victim of the Hamburg firestorm
While It was understood that the decontamination squads would
work as firefighters until needed for special purposes, it should be
obvious that their protective clothing, equipment, and training made
them perfectly suited for activities including corpse handling, as well
as in the disinfection of shelters, where for example "corpse water"
(Leichenwasser) was found. [N77]
Graphic 1-13: A group
of Nuremberg firefighters and decontamination workers
At that point the decontamination squads would be subordinated
to the Sanitation Service (about 1/3 of the Nuremberg decontamination
personnel were so assigned)[N135], whose duties involved not only medical
care but also water purification, corpse handling, garbage disposal,
pest control, and disease control. [N77f,N123f,N298ff] In fact in Nuremberg,
in the last years of the war, the municipal disinfection center was
used not only for the combatting of rats and flies but also for the
delousing of city residents. [N123f]
The reward for these levels of sanitation prophylaxis was
that German cities were untouched by epidemics throughout the war, despite
the intensive destruction. One doctor, writing for the US Strategic
Air Survey after was war, was "incredulous" at this fact, which he initially
considered "inconceivable." [US82] His explanation focused on three
factors: first, the German people had high standards of personal cleanliness
and orderliness even under the most extreme conditions, the RLB
agressively pursued a program of education on personal hygiene, for
which citizens were required to attend six lectures each quarter throughout
the war, and finally the cooperation (Dr. Enloe calls it "docility")
[US82] of the population in such measures as boiling water after an
air raid or in laying out traps during designated rat extermination
campaign.
Nevertheless, there were some outbreaks of disease, including
typhus fever, which did not appear until after "foreign laborers" had
been imported from Eastern Europe where the disease was endemic (it
is assumed that these foreign laborers constituted Soviet POWs and Eastern
Jews).[US30] Although the foreign workers and POW's were inspected,
and one assumes, deloused, twice on entering Germany, [US30f, cf. SF86]
Dr. Bauer believed that the conditions of the labor camps contributed
to the outbreaks, where overcrowding and lack of sanitation helped foster
the disease, plus the air raids which led the civilian population to
freely mix with the internees insofar as public shelters were used by
both and because evacuations usually involved both. He also cited the
extension of working hours and the lack of soap as contributing factors.
Another likely influence was the fact that the firefighting crews frequently
wound up using raw sewage in combating fires. [US63]
That the gas decontamination squads would become involved
in such activities corpse handing, disinfection, vermin control, and
delousing creates a number of powerful associations that point to multi-pupose
roles in situations where facilities or personnel are scarce. To put
it another way, the decontamination paradigm of treatment, featuring
undressing, washing, and dressing in clean garments, is also the model
for the handling of infectious material including the disposal of the
dead, as well as for the municipal disinfection stations, and the delousing
stations in concentration camps.
Most descriptions of the cleanup procedures contain not only
wrenching but also fantastic descriptions, particularly when dealing
with the recovery of the dead. Thus one reads of an "undulating layer
of of gray ash" that are supposed to represent firestorm victims [D45],
or reductions of people to puddles, or multi colored corpses, and so
on. But unlike other fantastic descriptions that have emerged from the
war, such descriptions have a strong documentary, forensic, and even
photographic basis. After the war the United States published studies
that were based on the extensive reports prepared by German doctors
for the secret use of the German government, and these explain the reality
of these fantastic descriptions.[US, 14, 16, bibliography p. 29]
Graphic 1-14: Victims
in Hamburg
The discoloration of corpses is one feature that even historians
do not seem to clearly understand. Thus, David Irving, who describes
corpses that are blue, orange, and green seems to think that carbon
monoxide poisoning was somehow responsible [D48], while Max Hastings,
who even cites the color purple, seems to think that the discoloration
was due to pyrotechnics. [H319,H315] In short, the descriptions are
not understood, so the authors have simply projected explanations onto
the situation. And this is human nature: confronted with sights and
sounds that we do not understand, we project onto the reality an explanation
that accords either with what we have been taught, or what we expect,
or simple guesswork.
Corpse discoloration also accounted for similar projections
by the German people during the course of the war. A particular case
concerns the city of Kassel after the raid of October 22, 1943. This
raid, which raised a firestorm, killed less than 8,000 out of a population
of 228,000, and it appears that the extensive precautions of the
RLB were a major factor [D46ff]. But when many of the dead were
found in their shelters days after the attack, the brilliant hues their
bodies had assumed brought forth the charge of poison gas usage. To
stabilize the situation, doctors conducted extensive postmortems; part
of their report, dated November 1, 1943, reads as follows:
Five of the corpses selected by the chief Police-doctor
in Kassel, Herr Senior Staff Police-doctor Fehmel, were dissected
at the cemetery. The corpses concerned, of people killed during
the terror-raid on Kassel on 22.10.43, had been recovered from basements
after several days. Closer particulars are not known. Two corpses
were of the male sex and about 18-20 years old; three were of women,
of which one was between about 50 and 60 years old, the other two
about 30 years old.
There were no external injuries manifest on the corpses,
which were in a condition of high-degree putrefaction. [...] The
skin was partly colored a uniform red as a result of the hemolysis
which had set in, but in extensive areas it was already colored
green. This green coloring is attributed to the action of the ammonium
sulphide with the reduced hemoglobin, which had, of course, permeated
the skin as a result of the hemolysis that had preceded it. This
green coloration, the analysis of which had been specially stressed
in the conferences in Kassel, is as such purely a post mortem manifestation
of corpses, cannot be connected with any particular poisonous chemicals
which might have been employed by the enemy during the terror-raid.
[emphasis in original, DOD 235f]
The issue is confirmed also in mortuary literature, which
clarifies the details of the Kassel report:
The first sign of putrefaction is a greenish skin discoloration
appearing on the right lower abdomen about the second or third day
after death. [...] Both color and smell are produced by sulphur
containing intestinal gas and a breakdown of red blood cells.
Under normal conditions, the intestinal bacteria in a
corpse produce large amounts of foul-smelling gas that flows into
the blood vessels and tissues. It is this gas that bloats the body,
turns the skin green to purple to black, makes the tongue and eyes
protrude, and often pushes the intestines out through the vagina
or rectum. The gas also causes large amounts of foul-smelling blood-stained
fluid to exude from the nose, mouth and other body orifices. [I42]
This last is no doubt a reference to the "Leichenwasser"
or "corpse-water" described above, which occurs as the internal organs
liquefy [I 43], as well as a confirmation of such descriptions as "The
bottom steps were slippery. The cellar floor was covered by an eleven
or twelve inch deep liquid mixture of blood, flesh and bone." [D194]
The Kassel Report, supplemented by the mortuary literature,
is important in several respects. In the first place it makes it clear
that putrefaction could engender a wide variety of hues and it is possible
that fire and heat even extended this palette [H315]. Thus the claim
of multi-colored corpses is strikingly confirmed. Secondly, the mere
issuance of the report indicates not only a widespread ignorance of
the discoloration that attends dead bodies, but also the wide-spread,
if not paranoid, assumption that discolored corpses must have been killed
with poison gas. This will be, I believe, an important factor to consider
when evaluating Allied reports from the last days of the war. But finally,
the fears of the populace with regards to the danger of poison gas were
in a sense justified: although the fact was not publicized at the time,
many of the victims had died from carbon monoxide poisoning, which is,
after all, a poison gas.
1.7 Firestorms and Carbon Monoxide
Carbon monoxide deaths were usually brought on by the fires set by
the Allied bombers' incendiary bombs. To grasp the widespread nature
of such deaths, we must first explain the nature of firestorms, which,
in turn, will not only explain the high incidence of carbon monoxide
poisoning but also some other seemingly fantastic claims pertaining
to the victims of air raids.
Graphic 1-15: Two Hamburg
women who probably succumbed to carbon monoxide.
Firestorms are caused when a number of small fires converge
into a single blaze, creating a huge conflagration which in turn sucks
in oxygen at high speeds and at very high temperatures. In Hamburg,
the conflagration eventually enveloped 4 1/2 square miles, developed
100 mph winds [G110], and reached temperatures of at least 600 to 800
degrees Centigrade [US19](other firestorms have been said to generate
temperatures of 1,500 to 2,000 degrees Centigrade). [H314] By way of
comparison it should be noted that startup temperatures for crematoria
are between 600 and 700 degrees Centigrade. [I262]
Under such conditions "flash overs" or incidences of spontaneous
combustion were not uncommon. [G103] Several testimonies refer to people
in the street or in apparent safety in a park who would suddenly have
their clothing burst into flames with no apparent trigger by way of
a spark. The same conditions could be found in the cellars, many which
were too hot to excavate until weeks after the raid: when a cellar was
reopened, it was not uncommon for the inrush of oxygen to cause the
remains of victims or coal and coke supplies to burst into flames. [US23,G167]
Carbon monoxide gas played a major role in the fatalities,
particularly in incendiary raids, which were the type usually employed
against population centers. Although this development was unexpected,
it was soon recognized as the typical cause of death for those found
in underground cellars or bunkers. [US24f] It was also a frequent cause
of death for aboveground casualties, because the concentrations of the
gas were so great in the streets and because heart attacks and other
pathologies could result from exposure to less than lethal levels. [US24f]
In Wesermunde, for example, of 210 people killed in a fire caused by
an air raid, 175 perished from carbon monoxide poisoning. [US24] Of
the victims of the Hamburg raid, apart from mechanical injuries, 70%
were poisoned with the lethal gas. [US24] It should be noted that carbon
monoxide would be generated not only from incomplete combustion but
also by exploding bombs: gas from a high explosive shell would contain
60% to 70% carbon monoxide. [US24] The Germans attempted to develop
a number of tests that would test carbon monoxide hemoglobin in corpses
even after putrefaction. The indications are simply astonishing: while
CO levels of .5% can kill, some bodies found in bomb shelters contained
concentrations of up to 95%. [US25]
Aside from forensic tests, the influence of the poisonous
gas could usually be detected by inspecting the posture of the remains.
Because carbon monoxide is odorless, tasteless and invisible, it is
possible to inhale a lethal dose without knowing it and then simply
fall into a deep sleep. As a result most carbon monoxide victims showed
a relaxed and unthreatened posture when found: the death was painless
and came without any premonition. [US25] The authorities faced a dilemma
with the results of their surveys because there were no effective preventive
measures to take. As a result, the secret of the CO poison gas threat
was concealed from the public. [US25] The Strategic Bombing Survey would
report after the war:
In all the cities visited, carbon monoxide poisoning was
regarded as the primary cause of death or injury, sometimes reaching
to as much as 80% of all incendiary raid casualties. [US28]
As already suggested, cleanup after the raids was a daunting proposition.
Many of the dead were lying naked in the streets, and it is known that
many had stripped down to their shoes to avoid flash over.
Graphic 1-16: A Hamburg
casualty literally roasted by heat, not flames.
Initially, the corpses would swell, but after a few hours
"the bodies shrunk to small objects with hard brownish black skin and
charring of different parts and frequently to ashes and complete disappearance."
[US22] This description, from the US Strategic Bombing Survey, shows
three photographs of shelter dead, who have been between 50% to 80%
cremated -- the presence of hair and even clothing indicates that the
destruction was achieved through high heat alone, and not through exposure
to flame. [US17-21,cf. Figs. 8,14-16]
Access to the shelters could take months, and this would affect
not only the body counts but also the appearance of the remains. The
lack of escape movements indicated carbon monoxide poisoning in the
absence of testing [US25]. The odor of putrefaction was a frequent clue
to the location of the dead, except in cases where total cremation had
occurred. [US23] Bodies were often found "lying in a thick greasy black
mass which was without doubt melted fat tissue." [US23] The systematic
shrinkage, probably caused by the burning which removed the water mass,
led the Germans to call such victims Bombenbrandschrumpfleichen
or "firebombshrunken bodies" [US23]. "Many basements contained only
bits of ashes and in these cases the number of casualties could only
be estimated." [US23] Of course, given the temperatures that are known
to have been achieved in the course of a firestorm none of these characterizations
should be surprising. As Gordon Musgrove, a highly decorated pilot for
Bomber Command, has noted:
The enormous heat seems to have turned the cellars and
underground shelters into crematoria. The exits and emergency exits
were surrounded by fires; steel doors, specially installed as a
safety precaution, became red-hot or jammed; ceilings, weakened
by excessive heat, collapsed under the weight of falling masonry;
and even when they were not actually invaded by fire, many rooms
were made untenable by smoke or fumes. [G94]
Musgrove was at least half right. The inhabitants of the shelters
found themselves in the abnormal situation of hiding in their basements
while their buildings burned above them. As the intensive heat dried
them out and turned their faces puffy and red before heat stroke set
in, the deadly concentrations of carbon monoxide would slowly and silently
kill them. The cellars and underground shelters were both crematoria
and gas chambers combined.
END OF PART 1 --
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