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WWII - Holocaust:  The Extermination of European Jews

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Dwight D. Eisenhower's signature

 

 

World War II: Holocaust: The Extermination of European Jews


The Holocaust was a deliberate and systematic extermination of European Jews during World War II. As the Allied Powers fought Nazi Germany's domination of Europe, Adolf Hitler's henchmen were carrying out a mass annihilation of the Jews in Europe at their numerous concentration camps. The total number of Jews murdered during this genocide has been estimated to be nearly 6 million. Besides European Jews, there were many other groups targeted for destruction. They included the handicapped, mentally ill, Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals and political dissidents.

Report, "Economic Life in Poland" (report covering period from January 1st to April 30th, 1942) which includes a 13-page description of various concentration camps, July 1942  (35 pages)

"Investigation Report on the Life in a German Extermination Camp (Kz Natzweiler) and the Atrocities Committed There. 1941-1944" (23 pages; there is no page #22)

Report, "Report on Atrocities Committed by the Germans Against the Civilian Population of Belgium, February 1945, by Hq. 21 Army Group" (78 pages)

Letter, General Eisenhower to General Marshall concerning his visit to a Germany internment camp near Gotha (Ohrdruf), April 15, 1945

Letter, General Patton to General Eisenhower concerning a prisoner/guard who showed them the camp at Ohrdruf and another camp at Weimar, April 15, 1945

Report, "Inspection of German concentration camp for political prisoners located at Buckenwald on the north edge of Weimar - made by Brig. Gen. Eric F. Wood, Lt. Col. Chas. H. Ott, and CWO. S.M. Dye, on the morning of 16th April 1945."

Letter, General Eisenhower to General Patton in response, April 18, 1945

Telegram, General Eisenhower to General Marshall concerning Nazi horrors; requests visit by members of Congress and the media, April 19, 1945

G-2 Report No. 307, "The Hasag Panzerfaust Factory and Concentration Camp," April 28, 1945

Telegram, General Marshall to General Eisenhower authorizing visits of Congress and media, April 19, 1945

Telegram, Winston Churchill to General Eisenhower regarding inspection teams to be sent to Ohrdruf Camp, April 21, 1945

Telegram, General Eisenhower to Winston Churchill regarding inspections teams to Ohrdruf Camp, April 23, 1945

Adolf Hitler's Private Will, Marriage Certificate and Political Testament, April 1945 (34 pages)

Part II:  General Intelligence, "The Discovery of Hitler's Wills," undated [This is a history of how the will, marriage certificate and political testament were found]

Report, "Dachau," prepared by the Office of Strategic Services Section, Seventh Army, undated (71 pages)

Letters, Harold Porter (served in World War II with the 116 Evacuation Hospital in Europe and was stationed at Dachau) to his parents detailing grim conditions found by the Allies at Dachau, May 7, 10, 13 and 15, 1945 WARNING: contains graphic photographs

Letter, Alexander Frieder to General Eisenhower regarding victory in Europe and the decision to allow inspections of the concentration camps, June 1, 1945

Letter, General Eisenhower to Alexander Frieder in response, June 9, 1945

Press Conference, General Eisenhower at the Pentagon, references Nazi camps on page 11, June 18, 1945

Report, Earl G. Harrison's "Mission to Europe to inquire into the condition and needs of those among the displaced persons in the liberated countries of Western Europe and in the SHAEF area of Germany -- with particular reference to the Jewish refugees -- who may possibly be stateless or non-repatriable," undated [c. August 1945]

Telegram, General Eisenhower to President Truman concerning the Harrison report and Jewish displaced persons, September 14, 1945

Letter, General Eisenhower to President Truman concerning Jewish displaced persons, September 18, 1945

Letter, General Eisenhower to President Truman concerning Jewish victims of Nazi persecution, October 8, 1945

Suggested material for General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower for his speech to the United Jewish Appeal, February 23, 1947

Report, "SHAEF Evaluation and Dissemination Section, G-S (Counter-Intelligence Sub-Division), German Concentration Camps," undated (195 pages)

Letter, Rabbi Philip S. Bernstein to Maxwell Rabb regarding the tenth anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, February 25, 1955

Memorandum, Maxwell Rabb to Kevin McCann regarding Bernstein letter, February 28, 1955

Night letter, President Eisenhower to Dr. Israel Goldstein, President of the American Jewish Congress concerning the tenth anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, March 21, 1955

Letter, Dr. Israel Goldstein to President Eisenhower in response, April 29, 1955


Photographs:

From the John Dieter photograph album, 166th Signal Photo Co., Det. 16; photograph with description, "This tattoo was part of a man's body until it was skinned off by Nazi SS men and used as a decoration on the wall of their quarters, at Buchenwald Concentration camp," April 23, 1945

From the John Dieter photograph album, 166th Signal Photo Co., Det. 16; photograph with description, "This photo shows the conditions and the amount of sleeping space for the prisoners at Buchenwald Concentration Camp.  They range from young kids to old men, all doing the same amount of work each day," April 23, 1945

Generals Dwight Eisenhower, Omar Bradley and George Patton are given a tour of Ohrdruf concentration camp

Various methods of torture were described during this tour.  The guide was later recognized by prisoners as a German guard and was stoned to death by the prisoners

The guide demonstrates methods of torture.  The generals in front are Patton, Bradley and Eisenhower

General Eisenhower listens to a description by tour guide

Corpses stacked at Ohrdruf concentration camp  WARNING: graphic photograph

Remains of burned bodies  WARNING: graphic photograph

Pits used for mass graves  WARNING: graphic photograph

 

For a listing of collections at the Eisenhower Presidential Library with materials pertaining to this topic, please see: Holocaust Subject Guide.


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