Le
Paradis Massacre WW II
(Pas-de-Calais, May 26,1940)
A company of the Royal Norfolk Regiment, trapped in a
cowshed, surrendered to the 2nd Infantry Regiment, SS
'Totenkopf' (Death's Head) Division under the command of
28 year old SS Obersturmfuhrer Fritz Knoechlein. Marched
to a group of farm buildings, they were lined up in the
meadow along side the barn wall. When the 99 prisoners
were in position, two machine guns opened fire killing 97
of them. The bodies were then buried in a mass grave on
the farm property. Two managed to escape, Privates Albert
Pooley and William O'Callaghan emerged from the slaughter
wounded but alive. When the SS troops moved on, the two
wounded soldiers were discovered, after having hid in a
pig-sty for three days and nights, by Madame Castel of Le
Paradis who then cared for them till captured again by
another Wehrmacht unit to spend the rest of the war as a
POW. In 1942, the bodies of those executed were exhumed by
the French authorities and reburied in the local
churchyard now part of the Le Paradis War Cemetery. After
the war, the massacre was investigated and Knoechlein was
traced and arrested. During the war he had been awarded
three Knight's Crosses. Tried before a War Crimes Court in
Hamburg, he was found guilty and sentenced to death by
hanging, and on January 28, 1949, the sentence was carried
out. Married with four children, his wife attended the
trial every day.
On the night of 26-27 May 1940, the German force which
included the 1st Battalion, 2nd SS 'Totenkopf' Regiment,
moved up the south bank of the La Bassee Canal. It
attacked across the canal in a northerly direction with
Bailleul as its objective. In the area immediately north
of the canal they were held by the Norfolk Battalion in
much depleted strength because of the previous fighting
and the physical exhaustion of the men. The Battalion and
the Royal Scots were holding the villages of Riez du
Vinage, Le Cornet Malo and Le Paradis. The Battalion
Headquarters was in Le Paradis.
During the night, the 2nd SS Infantry Regiment crossed the
canal using the ruins of the bridge Pont Supplie. They met
heavy British resistance and advanced very slowly and at
high cost. They eventually occupied Riez du Vinage and
spent the night in the Bois de Paqueaut.
At dawn on 27 May 1940, the German forces emerged from the
wood and began attacking Le Cornet Malo. No 3 Company was
in the centre, with No 2 on the right and No 1 on the left
in semi-reserve. The British troops defended very
stubbornly. According to a German account four officers
and one hundred and fifty men were killed and eighteen
officers and four hundred and eighty men wounded of this
and another action. Fritz Knoechlein's company suffered
the greatest casualties. With the village of Le Cornet
Malo burning and its fields dotted with dead, the Germans
attacked Le Paradis.
The British Battalion's last contact with Brigade took
place at 1130 am. They were then told that they were
isolated and must fend for themselves. They had fallen
back upon the Battalion Headquarters situated in a farm on
the Rue du Paradis. This road formed the boundary between
the Norfolks and the Royal Scots who had been fighting on
the right of the Norfolks. The location of the Battalion
Headquarters on the boundary between these two forces,
accounts for the curious events that followed the
surrender, for although the Norfolks were attacked by one
SS Battalion, most of their survivors were captured by the
SS Company which up to that moment had been fighting the
Royal Scots. This other SS Battalion took a number of
prisoners, among them Capt C Long MC, who was the Bn
Adjutant. The treatment they received was good, and gave
little cause for complaint. Had all the Bn fallen into
their hands the events of the Le Paradis massacre would
not have happened.
 Right, the house at which British troops
surrendered at Le Paradis.
When
the Bn surrendered about one 100 men were collected and
paraded on a minor road off the Rue du Paradis. There they
were given many evidences of the mounting temper of German
troops.
Their equipment was taken and they were marched into a
paddock of a farm and shot. Right,
the field where the unarmed British prisoners where shot. The German Bn Commander had gone forward
after the surrender, which took place in the early hours
of the afternoon. While the men were waiting on the road
two machine-guns of No 4 Machine Gun Coy were brought
forward and set up in the paddock. Fritz Knoechlein was No
3 Coy Commander of the Bn and also the Deputy Bn
Commander. He was directly responsible for the crime and
it was on his orders to fire that the killing of the
prisoners occurred. After the shooting of the British
soldiers Knoechlein had gone around the locality looking
for British prisoners or wounded. He found some French
civilians and threatened them. These civilians saw a
wounded soldier shot with a rifle after the mass shooting.
The bodies of the shot British prisoners were thrown into
a mass common grave by the Germans. In 1942, the bodies
were exhumed by the French authorities and removed to Le
Paradis churchyard. Only about 50, out of an approximate
total of 90, were identified.
The two survivors of the shooting were Privates Albert
Pooley and William O'Callaghan. Despite being wounded,
both men escaped and lived for 3 days and nights in a
pig-sty on raw potatoes and water from puddles. They were
then discovered by a Frenchwoman, who risking death from
the Germans, cared for them. They were eventually taken
prisoner by the Germans in the normal way. Pooley was in
hospital in Germany until he was repatriated as medically
unfit in 1943. After his arrival back in the UK, no one
was prepared to believe Pooley that the Germans were
capable of committing such atrocities. Pte William
O'Callaghan returned to the UK in 1945, after his POW camp
had been liberated.
The Investigation
After Pooley had paid a return visit to Le Paradis in Sep
1946, and the visit had made the 'Nord Elair' newspaper,
action started to happen. Also at this time, the
investigating authorities were more inclined to believe
that the atrocities experienced by Pooley and O'Callaghan
were credible.
The investigation of the Le Paradis atrocity was conducted
by the War Crimes Investigation Unit. It began its
enquiries after Pooley's return from France, in the latter
half of 1946.
The first item to establish was the German units which had
been in action at Le Cornet and Le Paradis on the day of
the shooting. British Intelligence and captured German
Orders of Battle quickly established the make-up of the
German forces. The 2nd Inf Regt, SS 'Totenkopf' (Death's
Head) Division had attacked across the Le Bassee Canal and
fought its way through Le Cornet Malo and Le Paradis to La
Fosse and Bailleul. A reinforcement from the 3rd SS Regt
had also helped in the fighting at Le Paradis. It looked
as if the 2nd Inf Regt was the one concerned with the
shooting. Regimental Commander -
Standartenfuehrer Bertling; Battalion Commander -
Sturmbannfuehrer Fortenbacher
OC No 1 Company - Hauptsturmfuehrer Kaltofen; OC No 2
Company - Hauptsturmfuehrer Stoeter
OC No 3 Company - Hauptsturmfuehrer Knoechlein; OC No 4
Company - Hauptsturmfuehrer Schroedel Pooley was requested to attend the London
District POW Cage, in Kensington Gardens, London. The
London District Cage was a large mansion, surrounded by
barbed wire, with an armed guard at the entrance. After
taking Pooley's statement, the Warrant Officer, took the
statement away and left Pooley in the room for sometime.
He eventually returned with Col Scotland, who was the
Chief of the War Crimes Investigation Unit. Col Scotland
wanted to know why Pooley had not reported this incident
earlier. When Pooley told him that he had reported the
incident at Richmond Convalescent Camp, in the summer of
1943, Col Scotland was furious. One week later, on 6 Nov
1946, Pooley returned to the London District Cage and made
a sworn statement. A short while later, O'Callaghan also
made a sworn statement at Kensington.
Both Pooley and O'Callaghan attended separate identity
parades while at Kensington. Separately, they both picked
someone out from their respective identity parades.
Knoechlein was found still alive, and was brought to
London for examination. Born in May 1911 at Munich, he
attended an elementary school for 4 years and then spent 8
years at a secondary school in Munich. He was forced to
end his studies as his father became unemployed. From 1928
to 1933 he was an errand boy, tutor, insurance agent and
clerk. In 1934 he joined the Waffen SS 'Ellwangen'
Battalion. In April 1935, he went to the SS School of
Warfare at Brunswick, completing a year's course of
instruction. He returned to the 'Ellwangen' Battalion,
'Deutschland' Regiment as a Platoon Commander serving
until 1939.
After the outbreak of war in 1939, he was posted as a
Company Commander to Dachau on the formation of the SS
'Totenkopf' Division. He served through the Western Front
campaign as Commander of No. 3 Company SS 2nd Infantry
Regiment. After this campaign was completed, he
transferred to No. 5 Company. With the dissolution of the
regiment in 1941, he went to an AA Battery of the same
division as Battery Commander. He served in this capacity
on the Russian Front until January 1942, and then became
Battalion Commander of the newly-formed No. 36 Regiment,
16 Panzer Grenadier Division. In April 1944, he became a
Regimental Commander, and remained in command of a
regiment fighting the Russians until the capitulation.
Fritz Knoechlein was decorated with the Iron Cross in
France in May 1940; with the German Cross in 1942, for
fighting in Russia; and in 1944 with the Knight's Cross in
Russia. He was promoted in 1939 to Captain; in 1942 to
Major and in 1944 he became a Lieutenant-Colonel.
Pooley's pilgrimage to France in September 1946 had been a
tremendous strain. He made his statement in November 1946,
after three years of complete indifference and
incompetence by the British authorities. On 28 December
1946, he was admitted to Roehampton Hospital for a major
operation on his stomach ulcers. The ulcers had been there
since his first operation in a Paris hospital in 1940.
Often during the time that he was in hospital, Pooley was
not expected to survive. Out of the five people that had
the same abdominal operation that day, only Pooley
survived. Three died on the operating table, and one died
later in the ward. Pooley eventually confided to the
hospital superintendent and surgeon that the obligation to
avenge his pals had lain very heavily on him.
When Pooley was eventually mobile again, he received a
surprise visit from Sister Lawrence, the Irish nun who had
nursed him in Bethune Hospital, after his capture by the
Germans. As a result of torture by the Gestapo, she was
crippled and unable to work. She told Pooley that the
escape organisation had been betrayed by a wealthy women
visitor to the hospital. She had been taken to
Ravensbrueck Concentration Camp. After being badly
tortured, she was sentenced to death. On the day of her
execution, Soviet troops liberated Ravensbrueck. Early in 1948, Pooley and
O'Callaghan received letters from the War Office asking if
they would be prepared to give evidence at the trial of an
alleged war criminal in Hamburg.
They both separately replied at once, and said: 'Yes'.
Right, William O'Callaghan and Bert Pooley
arriving at Hamburg for the trial
The Trial
The trial of Fritz Knoechlein took place in No 5 Court of
the Curiohaus, Altona, on Monday 11 October 1948. The
accused had already pleaded not guilty when arraigned on
28 August 1948.
President
|
Lieutenant
Colonel EC Van der Kiste |
Members
|
Major P
Witty |
|
Major C
Champion |
|
Captain
JE Tracey
|
|
Captain
A Preston
|
Judge
Advocate
|
Mr F
Honig |
| Prosecutor |
Mr T
Field-Fisher (Barrister) |
| Defence |
Dr Uhde |
Fritz Knoechlein was charged with the
following:
The accused Fritz Knoechlein, a
German national, in the charge of the Hamburg Garrison
Unit, pursuant to Regulation 4 of the Regulations for the
Trial of War Criminals, is charged with committing a war
crime in that he in the vicinity of Paradis,
Pas-de-Calais, France, on or about 27 May 1940, in
violation of the laws and usages of war, was concerned in
the killing of about ninety prisoners-of-war, members of
The Royal Norfolk Regiment and other British Units.
During his defence, Knoechlein claimed that
the British soldiers had been using dum-dum ammunition and
had mis-used a flag of truce. This was robustly denied by
the prosecution.
On the 12th day of the trial, 25 Oct
1948, the Judge-Advocate summed up the trial. He stated
that the question of whether British troops had been using
illegal ammunition, or mis-using a flag of truce, was
irrelevant. If they had, then the British troops had
committed an offence under the laws and usages of war. The
enemy should then have conducted a proper legal trial. No
such trial took place, so if these prisoners were shot out
of hand, then this was still a crime.
The defence lawyer did not deny that
an atrocity had taken place in the field at La Paradis, he
stated that the accused had not been present, and so could
not have issued the order to open fire.
The prosecution offered the evidence
of Madame Castel, the Frenchwomen who risked her life to
treat Pooley and O'Callaghan. She also stated in court
that she recognised the accused as the man that was
looking for British prisoners and that he also threatened
her.
After the Judge Advocate's summing
up, the court adjourned to consider its verdict.
The Court's Decision
At 1130 am on 25 Oct 1948, the President of the court
announced that Fritz Knoechlein had been found guilty. The
President also reminded Knoechlein that its findings were
subject to confirmation by higher authority.
Dr Uhde, the accused's lawyer, then
presented several character witnesses. He concluded by
saying :
'All that is left for me to say is that some little
doubt may have remained in the minds of the Court which
will enable the members not to award the extreme penalty.
Spare the life of the accused. He has a wife [who attended
every day of the trial] and four children who are
dependent upon him for support. Consider also the fact
that he is a soldier, and the Court is composed of members
of the British Army. I believe I am entitled to appeal to
the Court to pronounce a sentence which will enable my
client to come out of prison at an early date.'
The President then announced that
the Court would re-assemble no earlier than 3 pm.
At 3pm, on 25 Oct 1948, the President of the
Court announced that Fritz Knoechlein had been sentenced
to death by hanging. Upon hearing this, the accused turned
grey, but gave no other sign. He was then escorted from
the court.
On 28 Jan
1949, at Hamburg, Fritz Knoechlein was hanged.
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