Sunday 17 January 2021

Loughborough cemetery Part 2

More memorials to World War Two PoWs



It appears there were over 1,000 Prisoner of War camps in Britain, and quite a few of these were in Leicestershire. Many are listed in this article and associated databank (2020) which includes the following:




 

o    Barkby Camp, Barkby Lane, Leicester, No.616 (previously a heavy anti-aircraft battery)

o   Farndon Road Camp, (Harrington Camp), Farndon Fields Farm, Market Harborough, No.49, (German working camp, standard type/caravan site)

o   Garendon Park, Loughborough, No.28

o   Gaulby Road, Billesdon, No.94 (German working camp, standard type)

o   Hathern Camp, Pear Tree Lane, Hathern, No. 590 (farmland)

o   Knightthorpe Camp, Loughborough, No.28 (German working camp)

o   Old Dalby Camp, Old Dalby Lane, Melton Mowbray, No.613 (large RAF depot with huts converted to accommodation)

o   Old Liberal Club, Charnwood Road, Shepshed, N0.152 (German working camp)

o   Quorn Camp, Wood Lane, Quorn, No.9/183 (Base camp, standard type)

o   Scraptoft, Thurnby, Leicester, No.4 (Base camp)

o   Shady Lane, Stoughton, Leicester, No.167 (Base camp)

There is, however, some debate as to whether or not Knightthorpe and Garendon were actually the same place: Garendon Hall was originally used as the headquarters for local munitions, but both seem to be known as Camp 28, with the main camp being towards the south of the estate lands. 

Last week we looked at some of the PoW camps close to Loughborough, and one in Stoughton which had a Loughborough connection. Let’s stay with the Leicester area, and a camp in Billesdon for a moment as there are more Loughborough connections, before moving closer to Loughborough.

A report in the Leicester Evening Mail of 6 October 1947 carried a report of the death of Peter Leugner. He was born on 17 September 1902 in the Ukraine, and died on 4 October 1947. Leugner was found hanging in a room at the Scraptoft PoW camp. The article says:

“It is understood that he was due for repatriation.”

Leugner has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.


Earlier in 1947, an inquest took place in Market Harborough on the death of Corporal Konrad Schubert. Schubert was born on 30 July 1906 in Paszowice, Poland, and died on 19 January 1947 in the camp at Billesdon. According to a report in the Leicester Evening Mail of 23 April 1947, Schubert was depressed following the death of his mother and sister, and worried about his two children who were living in the Russian part of Germany. His own ill-health had meant that he had been unable to work on the farm, and this made him more unhappy, although his fellow PoWs had not ever heard him talk about taking his own life.  

Mr Tempest Bouskell, the coroner for South Leicestershire, pronounced that Schubert had committed suicide whilst the balance of his mind had been temporarily disturbed, and passed on his sympathy to Corporal Schubert’s fellow prisoners.

Schubert has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.



We shall now leave these distant Leicestershire camps, and return closer to home, where we find a camp at Quorn which was used as such until about 1948. In the Nottingham Evening Post 12 August 1947, the following report appeared:

“A German prisoner-of-war, Baumann Hubert, died suddenly at the Quorn Camp yesterday. The body was removed to the Loughborough mortuary and the facts reported to the Coroner for North Leicestershire.”

Listed as Hubert Baumann on his memorial stone, Corporal Baumann was born 27 October 1924, died 11 August 1947, and has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.




 


A report of a sad event appeared in the Daily Mirror of 18 September 1945:

COMEDIAN HANGED HIMSELF BECAUSE HE WAS LAUGHED AT.

A German giving evidence at a Loughborough, Leicestershire, inquest yesterday on a fellow prisoner of war who hanged himself at a camp said that the dead man had complained that other men in his working party made too much fun of his acting on the camp stage. He was a comedian.

Other prisoners said that the dead man, Sargeant Herbert Bruhn, 29, of Hamburg, had been unhappy for the last two weeks – they didn’t know why.

A police witness said he found no suggestion of either foul play or bullying. Recording a verdict that Bruhn hanged himself while his mind was disturbed, the coroner said it was difficult to understand the mind of a German, particularly a prisoner.”

Sergeant Herbert Bruhn, was born 28 January 1916 in Hamburg, died 16 September 1945, and has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery, but I have no idea which camp he was held in, nor in which camp he died.

The following report appeared in the Sunday Post 1 April 1945:

Allies sentence German boy to death. Karl Punzeler, of Monschau, 16-year-old boy, former leader of the local Hitler Youth, has been found guilty of espionage. Sentenced to death. This is an extract from ‘Die Mitteilungen’, the Allied newspaper, which is being distributed free in occupied Germany. It’s one of a list of sentences passed by Allied Military Government on civilians, and reported in the paper.”

The report continues with a list of misdemeanours, perpetrators, and punishments, in which we find the following:

“Franz Franke and Helmut Engel – for refusing to work as directed with a labour gang – 60 days.”

I believe Private Helmut Engel was born 30 April 1926 in Berlin-Neukolln, and died in Ankle Hill camp at Old Dalby, in Melton Mowbray, on 22 August 1947. The camp, which as well as housing over 3,000 soldiers, housed around 300 PoWs, during WW2. Quite why Helmut Engel has a memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery, I’m not sure.  








I have been unable to trace much information pertaining to Dr Karl Theodor Reuter, other than that which appears on his memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery. 

Dr Karl Theodor Reuter, was born 24 March 1914 in Herdecke, Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany, and died 11 December 1946 in Leicestershire, in the Thurnby Camp at Scraptoft.






Corporal Leonhard Rademacher was born on 24 May 1910 in Monchengladbach, died on 17 September 1946 in Garendon Park/Knightthorpe Camp, No.28, in Loughborough. He has a memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery.


It will be noted from the death dates found on the memorial headstones that the majority of these eight people died in Britain after the end of the Second World War. There are likely to many and varied reasons why they still found themselves in Britain, rather than returned to their homeland: according to this article, published on the occasion of VE Day in May 2020, some stayed and integrated themselves into the British way of life because they had made good friends, or had fallen in love. Other reasons may have been that conditions in Germany were very difficult, and there was a delay in repatriation, but also perhaps because the British government resisted sending them home as the country was short of workers. Indeed, the final German PoW returned home as late as 1948.

The bridge at Shepshed watermill built by PoWs from Garendon Hall


The bridge at Shepshed watermill from a distance


Pear Tree Lane, approach from Derby Road


Site of the Pear Tree Lane PoW camp

Site of the Pear Tree Lane PoW camp

Site of the Pear Tree Lane camp


Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 17 January 2021

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Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough cemetery part 2. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/loughborough-cemetery-part-2.html [Accessed 17 January 2021]

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Lynne

2 comments:

  1. Have you seen the grave of Wing Commander Charles Tucker ( of the brick making family. Died in a Blackburn ISIS 1933 at Cattawater Plymouth Sound .
    1933. The accident revolutionised the rescue procedures ,thanks to a Mr Shaw ( who was Lawrence of Arabia)

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    Replies
    1. Hello Unknown! Thank you for reading the blog and taking the time and trouble to comment. I did know about Charles Tucker's death, which I mentioned briefly on an earlier blogpost ( https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2016/04/tuckers.html ) but haven't as yet looked for his grave. I will do now!! Thanks for alerting me. Lynne

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