Huertgen Forest:
Documents, pictures and military relics, all found in
the Huertgen Forest after the war, will tell you the most unpleasent part
of Huertgen Forest`s history:
"The Battle of All Souls´Day" 1944 and is after math
70.000 young soldiers lost their future; the villages,
the soiland the woods were ravaged and the population suffered for years
great pain.
Pfarrer-Dickmann-Straße 21 - 23,
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Documentation "Huertgen Forest: War 1944 and Peace"
of the Geschichtsverein Hürtgenwald e. V.
52393 Hürtgenwald - Vossenack Tel./Fax: 02429/902613 |
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52393 Hürtgenwald-Vossenack next to the
open air swimming pool
Here you can find a detail map of the Huertgen forest community, please click the following link: Detail map of the Huertgen forest community - please click here
Museum open:
Period: First Sunday in March to last Sunday in November
Day: Only on Sundays between 11.00 a.m. To 05.00 p.m.
Expect for tours arranged by phone under
1) Museum only on Sundays between 11.00a.m. to 05.00p.m. 00 49 - (0) 24
29 - 90 26 13 or
2) Bernd Henkelmann: 00 49 - (0) 24 29 - 33 80
Admission price from 01. September 2005:
| Museum:
|
Adults from 18 years |
Children and young persons up to 18 years, Handicapped persons, Conscript persons, Civil service, Students, Members of the "NRW-Stiftung" |
| without tour |
3,00 € |
1,00 € |
| with tour (if offered) |
4,00 € |
2,00 € |
| Medical bunker (if opened): |
3,00 € |
1,00 € |
| Museum and medical bunker: (if bunker opened) |
||
| without tour |
5,00 € |
2,00 € |
| with tour (if offered) |
6,00 € |
3,00 € |
Note: Admission price per person for groups as mentioned above!
Additional information provided by Dr. Ing. Leo Messenig,
Huertgen Forest Registered Historical Association
The call for peace requires without any doubt the remembrance of the last
World War and its devastating consequences. A concrete example of this war
is the so-called All Souls' Day Battle of 1944 in the Huertgen Forest, which
brought about death, suffering and damage beyond measure and which -- by
not only ruining the villages and the landscape, but also by taking the precious
lives of about 70,000 human beings -- devastated the Huertgen Forest.
The museum "Huertgen Forest in 1944 and in Peacetime" owned and operated
by the Huertgen Forest Registered Historical Association provides documentation
of the battles fought in the region in a vivid, factual and unpolitical way
and without raising a "moral finger," with the military items displayed serving
only as contemporary materiel witnesses but not being the center of attraction.
The museum's ultimate goal is to remind the visitors of the atrocities of
war and thus make them aware of the importance of peace.
The "Trail of Remembrance" is a way passing the few relics of that ill-fated
time and pursuing the same goal as the museum.
The museum "Huertgen Forest in 1944 and in Peacetime"
BACKGROUND
In 1959/1960, Mr. Koni Schall from Winden near Kreuzau began to collect documents,
leaflets, maps and newspaper articles from the years 1944 and 1945. Later,
he supplemented this collection by military items found and secured in the
Huertgen Forest by relatives and explosive ordnance clearance personnel,
respectively.
The collection allowed him to organize an exhibition on the Huertgen Forest
battles which he presented to the public during the Kreuzau Culture Festival
of 1977. It attracted so much attention and won so much approval that he
decided to turn it into a permanent museum. This museum he opened in 1984;
it was housed in a former barn in Kleinhau. For personal reasons (e.g., overburdening
by the presence in the museum on virtually all weekends) he closed the museum
and sold the exhibits -- exclusive of the military vehicles -- in 1992 to
the town of Huertgenwald. The town council's purchase decision, while reached
not by a unanimous vote, was based on the reasonable conviction that the
items found in the Huertgen Forest were an impressive and moving illustration
of the disastrous battles which devastated villages, woods and fields; they
were to be contemporary materiel witnesses serving as a reminder.
In August 1994, the town handed over the exhibits to a newly established
museum association for an exhibition taking place on the occasion of the
50th anniversary of the 1944 All Souls' Day Battle. Having fulfilled its
purpose, the exhibition was closed shortly after the event. In December 1995,
the Huertgenwald town council decided to cede the exhibits to the Huertgen
Forest Registered Historical Association to establish a new, this time permanent
exhibition. It was opened on 4 July 1996 and was housed inside the large
attic of the hotel "Zum Alten Forsthaus" in Vossenack. At the end of 2000,
however, this room had to be vacated. With great financial and material assistance
from the town of Vossenack, two pavilions were built in the town center on
Pfarrer-Dickmann-Strasse: the present museum "Huertgen Forest in 1944 and
in Peacetime." (It is open from March through mid-December every Sunday between
1100 and 1700 hours; visits are also possible on working days upon advance
notification under the phone number (+49-2429) 902613).
The new museum's official dedication took place on 15 September 2001 in the
presence of the administrator of the Dueren district, Wolfgang Spelthahn,
and the mayor of the town of Huertgenwald, Axel Buch, with musical support
provided by the 7th Army Band from Duesseldorf.
The general response to the museum has up to date been very positive.
Visitors come not only from Germany, but from many countries as far away
as Australia. German and American veterans who fought in the Huertgen Forest
in 1944 came to not only bring back the memory of that time of their lives,
but also to meet on friendly terms with former enemies. And many relatives
of soldiers killed in the Huertgen Forest visit this place. Apart from them,
groups of German, American and Dutch military personnel come to both the
museum and the surrounding area on an almost regular basis to learn in the
context of tactical training from the miscalculations and faults then made
in the pursuance of a senseless strategy.
INTENTION AND RELEVANCE
The museum "Huertgen Forest in 1944 and in Peacetime" is at least to the
town of Huertgenwald of major importance.
Its intention is to provide remembrance. It is intended to remind the visitors
of the 1944 All Souls' Day Battle which brought about death, suffering and
damage beyond measure and which -- by not only ruining the villages and the
landscape, but also by injuring and killing a very large number of people
-- devastated the Huertgen Forest. -Having been forced into evacuation all
over Germany where they had to be accommodated by the populations there and
were therefore much disliked, the local residents returned home in 1945,
only to find their houses which they had built over many years and under
great efforts completely destroyed.
The museum is also intended to remind the visitors of the fact that there
was once a terrible period in local history through which the Huertgen Forest
put itself on the map, but which is pushed more and more into the background.
The World War II period is certainly a highly sensitive topic as it brings
back old, painful memories and reminds people of gloomy, miserable years.
These years, however, must not be allowed to sink into oblivion, but must
be preserved in the public's mind, not least to show that the present state
of peace should not be taken for granted but is also shaky. One cannot help
feeling that some part of the local population would like the year 1946 follow
immediately that of 1933, the year of Hitler and the Nazi party's accession
to power, as if the fateful intervening period did not belong to the region's
history. But whichever way one looks at it: the All Souls' Day Battle did
take place. It is therefore without reservation part of our past as any other
event.
Beyond that, we need to remain conscious of the fact that tens of thousands
of young soldiers lost in this area their only precious lives before they
were able to fully live and enjoy it. Also, neither the large number of civilians
who died in the fighting nor the members of the explosive ordnance clearance
teams who were killed in the fulfillment of their duties must be forgotten.
It was clear right at the beginning that the museum had to provide documentation
of the 1944 Huertgen Forest battles in a factual and unpolitical way and
without raising a "moral finger," with the military items displayed, even
though they were found in the Huertgen Forest, serving only as contemporary
materiel witnesses but not being the center of attraction. A central element
is the collection of photos, television reports and films, newspaper articles,
poems, etc. It needs to be expanded in the future by reports and anecdotes
of contemporary witnesses to provide a comprehensive illustration of the
Huertgen Forest region in those days.
What can the events of that period teach us in terms of planning our course
of life? The major lesson is without doubt the imperative that such a time
must never repeat itself. We can certainly contribute to this by achieving
peace in ourselves, our families and our neighborhoods. Another important
lesson we can learn from the generation then living should we happen to be
in a desperate situation is to never lose optimism. Having returned home,
these men and women were left with nothing. In an admirably courageous and
undaunted manner they set to remove the ruins left by the war, to rebuild
their homes and to redesign the landscape so that today it presents itself
as if it had never seen devastating fighting. Their optimism is the motto
of the exhibition: "In the Middle of the Night Does a New Day Break."
RELICS OF THE ALL SOULS' DAY BATTLE
The museum's stock -- exhibits both acquired by the town of Huertgenwald
from the formerly existing "1944 Museum" in Kleinhau and handed over to the
Huertgen Forest Historical Association until now -- comprises items of the
German and American troops from the years 1944 and 1945. They were all found
in the Huertgen Forest region and thus constitute a direct link to the town's
local history.
These items include battle dresses and other garments as well as equipment
used on a daily basis, such as jackets, coats, shoes, mess kits, water bottles,
cutlery, backpacks, tent sheets, spades and carbide lamps. Also included
in the collection is optical and communications equipment, such as periscopic
binoculars, direct-fire telescopes, range finders, field telephones, radio
sets and appropriate auxiliary power units.
Apart from that, the collection comprises .45 caliber colts, various "Browning"
machine guns, antitank guns (bazookas), hand grenades and artillery grenades
in terms of American weapons and munitions, and machine guns, carbines, pistols,
flare guns of various types, grenade launchers, shoulder-fired antitank weapons,
hand grenades, anti-tank and anti-personnel mines as well as artillery grenades
in terms of German equipment.
As far as documents are concerned, the museum displays newspapers articles,
postcards, weapon manuals, maps, German and American propaganda leaflets,
ID cards and passports. Photo walls show how the streets in various villages
of the region looked before the war and immediately after the fighting and
what they look like in present times.
In addition, the museum displays
· models of the Siegfried Line and the western air-defense
zone;
· models of military vehicles;
· a farm model showing the medical treatment of
a wounded soldier;
· a jeep from this time and a fire engine which
was the only vehicle available right after the war for fire fighting in the
Huertgen Forest (only two vehicles of this type still exist);
· a pillbox model in original size.
The fact that despite all enmity there existed humanity between the opposing
forces is illustrated by the picture entitled "A Time for Healing." It shows
the humanitarian collaboration between German and American physicians during
the fighting in the vicinity of the Mestrenger Mill in the Kall River valley
near Simonskall. German and American veterans commissioned an artist to paint
the picture based on authentic data. It was unveiled with all due ceremony
in Pennsylvania in 1996, and in 1997 American officers handed over a copy
to the Huertgen Forest Historical Association.
The first room to enter in the museum holds the collection of Mr. Walter
Strunk: items from the Neolithic and Roman periods found in the Huertgen
Forest region. This room is followed by the Siegfried Line room showing models
of the fortifications, items from and design plans of the pillboxes as well
as pictures, e.g., from pillbox construction. Having passed two more rooms
displaying maps and German military equipment, respectively, one reaches
the wartime-type farm model showing the medical treatment of a wounded soldier.
Next on display are American exhibits and items of equipment as well as a
large photographic documentation of the landscape's devastation.
The museum will be left through a pillbox. Its walls are covered with photos
taken by a Catholic youth group which hiked the Siegfried Line from Heinsberg
north of Aachen to Saarbruecken, taking pictures of everything that attracted
its attention, especially in regard to the present condition and use of both
pillboxes and dragon's teeth. (The group wrote a very successful book about
this trip: Hansen, Auf der Spurensuche des Westwalls, Helios-Verlag, Aachen.)
The "Trail of Remembrance"
The "Trail of Remembrance" is a 10 kilometer (approx. 6 miles) long way which
takes the visitor along relics of and provides information on the 1944 All
Souls' Day Battle around Vossenack which inflicted serious casualties on
both sides. The trail, along with several hiking trails, was prepared and
signposted by the Rureifel Tourism Registered Association to offer tourists
the opportunity to combine hiking tours with the visiting of remarkable places.
Begining at the museum, the trail leads to the parish church and the cross
in the graveyard. In the church, German and American soldiers confronted
each other at the altar and the entrance and were soon involved in merciless
close combat. The cross, erected in 1987, is not a cross of peace, even though
it symbolizes the call for peace, but one of consolation.
From here, the trail continues along the Mestrenger Weg path, passes the
old "Stumms Krüzche" ("Silent Cross") field cross and then runs into
the ill-famed Kall Trail, which descends to the Mestrenger Mill and thus
to a tract of terrain that saw severe fighting involving a high number of
casualties. The way from the parish church to the Mestrenger Mill was a major
route of advance during the American forces' attack on Schmidt. Walking towards
that town, one can still see tracks -- remains of American A-10 tanks and
of one "Weasel" armored carrier knocked out by the enemy -- as well as foxholes.
The Mestrenger Mill was frequently used by both the German and American troops
as headquarters and as a dressing station. It was especially during pauses
in combat that physicians and medics from both sides assisted each other
in the provision of medical support to their wounded -- a piece of humanity
in a bitter war.
The trail then runs over the dominating "Teufelsley" hill, from where the
Germans commanded the Kall River valley against the attacking American infantry,
and further to the town of Simonskall. Here, the well-preserved medical pillbox
No. 347 can be inspected upon request in the museum. The pillbox is a regular
type 32 construction built in 1938 and measuring 10.2 x 14.8 meters (33.5
x 48.5 feet); it was designed for 20 wounded and 4 medical personnel.
Immediately next to this medical pillbox lies a squad shelter which, however,
is bare of a fighting compartment. The shelter was demolished during the
war but is still in good condition. Designed to hold 15 soldiers, it offered
protection against aircraft bombs and artillery shells and served as accommodation.
The battle was fought outside the shelter in foxholes and trenches. It is
a regular type 10 construction built in 1938 and measuring 8.8 x 8.4 meters
(29.0 x 27.5 feet).
The Vossenack information center "Haus des Gastes" houses a documentation
on the German 116th Armored Division, called the "Greyhound Division," which
fought in the Huertgen Forest.
The trail then ascends to the town's war cemetery where about 2,400 German
soldiers and 33 prisoners of war killed during the forced clearance of mines
are buried. Among those buried here is Field Marshal Walter Model, in his
last function commander of the German Army Group B. Next to the cemetery
is a memorial established by former members of the 116th Armored Division
in commemoration of all soldiers of this division who died in the Huertgen
Forest: a soldier supports a dying comrade.
On the way back to the museum, one passes the peace cross erected by the
Huertgen Forest Historical Association.
The "Trail of Remembrance" requires the company of an expert guide. The museum
offers trail tours including a comprehensive overview of the All Souls' Day
Battle.
Translation gratuiert translator Ulf Böhme, Aachen