© Eichborn Verlag
SIX BRIEF PROFILES
((pp. 15 to 24 in the original edition))
Setting out to find traces of resistance fighter Count Heinrich Lehndorff is to embark on a long and difficult search. That has its reasons. Neither before nor after July 20, 1945, was there any time to secure documents or leave behind hints. The object was to cover one’s tracks and to conceal relationships with co-conspirators. When operation Walküre was called, Heinrich von Lehndorff was at the top of the list of liaison officers for the coup d'état, with responsibility for Military District I, Königsberg. This explains why the search for him began as early as July 21. Eleven days beforehand, he had put his three children on a train heading west so that they would be safe with his parents-in-law in Graditz, near Torgau on the Elbe. His wife Gottliebe, née Countess Kalnein and nine months pregnant, was driven out of the castle on July 23 by Foreign Minister Ribbentrop. Seething with rage, he feared for his reputation and credibility because he realized only then that he had been double-crossed by his greatly admired host family, whose Schloss[1] Steinort he had chosen as a "befitting” domicile – six kilometers from Mauerwald, the High Command of the Army, and 14 kilometers from Wolfschanze.[2]
With Hitler's foreign minister as a permanent guest in one's own castle, it was far too dangerous to keep photos, historical documents, let alone diaries and letters, or to move them to a secure location well enough in advance. At the beginning of August 1944, after Heinrich Lehndorff's second escape, his entire family was put in “Sippenhaft,” that is, his wife, daughters, parents, and sister, were collectively placed under arrest. As an ancient East Prussian family, the Lehndorff's owned no estates in the West where they could transfer letters or records for safekeeping. After the war, and their collective custody and escape, they were housed in constantly changing emergency shelters; their daughters recall some 16 of them. The old, meticulously kept family archive from the days of previous estate owners ends in the year 1931. Today, major portions of it are held by the Sächsicher Staatsarchiv in Leipzig, with smaller holdings in the archive at Allenstein (currently Olsztyn, Poland). We can assume that the young lord of Steinort himself saw to it that the latter documents were taken to a secure location in sufficient time, whereas he probably destroyed all current documents pertaining to the period of the conspiracy. Original finds from the 1930s and 40s are therefore rare. Nevertheless, if one delves deeper isolated fragments can be found: recollections, pictures, and descriptions not only by friends and relatives but also by enemies. When they are pieced together, a clear, specific, and distinctive picture emerges of the person we seek.
Interviews with Heinrich von Lehndorff's wife, friends, and relatives, and the written records they kept, are quoted extensively as sources in the following book, particularly when they pertain to his youth and private life. The texts have their own special appeal. They transport us to a world where there was still no sense of apprehension about the impending catastrophe. Sometimes they strike a note and evoke memories of things that are as distant from people living today as a sunken continent. It is only when we have heard the music of this language that we can sense the scope of what collapsed during the years between 1933 and 1945.
The first brief personal description of Heinrich von Lehndorff stems from the Gestapo itself, which dispatched a telegram with the following content.
Schwerin Criminal Investigation Unit Schwerin, August 9, 1944
Log number...5.K.-NS-5171/44.
B u l l e t i n
- - - - - - - -
Distribution list C:
Subject: Wanted persons search for accomplice in July 20, 1944, attack – RM 5,000 reward – intensified Kriegsfahndung[3] with particular emphasis on traffic checks.
Arrest as accomplice to the assassination attempt on July 20, 1944: husbandman Count L e h n d o r f f, DOB June 20, 1909, in Hanover, last residing in East Prussia.
Description: 1.90 m tall, slender, broad shouldered, receding forehead, long head, blonde hair parted on the left, blue eyes.
Last seen wearing: Brown single breasted sport coat, brown-green hunting shirt and necktie, gray riding breeches with dark leather trim, light brown sport socks, brown shoes, slouch hat.
Manhunt for wanted individual to be conducted within the framework of an intensified Kriegsfahndung, with particular emphasis on traffic checks in conjunction with the NSKK.[4]
By order of:
Köppen
[top rectangular stamp]
4th Police Precinct
August 11, 1944
[illegible signature]
[lower rectangular stamp]
Archive of the Hanse-City of Rostock
Copy
[circular stamp]
Criminal Investigation Unit 4, Schwerin]
[photo caption: Search Alert of August 9, 1944]
This urgent bulletin made Count Heinrich Lehndorff a wanted man throughout the Reich and in all countries occupied by German forces. Telegrams are extant from locations as disparate as Cologne, Krakau, and Schwerin. The arrest order was issued to: "All local/central crime investigation offices within the territory of the Reich to include Criminal Investigation Units Strasbourg, Metz, and Luxembourg, Commanders of the Security Police and the SD[5] Department V, Königsberg, Tilsit, Zichenau, Krakau, Warsaw, Radom, Veldes, and Marburg/Drau." It also specifies a "cc. to SD commandants in the aforementioned regions.”
This and all subsequent wanted persons alerts were based on a “blitz” telegram from Berlin, Nr. 10636, of August 9, 1944, 15:00 hrs, ordering that pertinent information should be reported "immediately by telephone, telegram, police radio, or courier" to the Special Commission on July 20, Gestapo Headquarters, 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, "Telephone 120040 or 126421."
Five days later, on August 14, 1944, Sturmbannführer[6] Paul Opitz of the Special Commission of the Secret State Police, Group II, was able to report to all central Gestapo offices that the urgent wanted persons alert of August 9, 1944, had produced the desired effect: "The fugitive Count Heinrich Lehndorff, DOB June 22, 1909, in Hanover, has been apprehended. Discontinue search.”
[marginal note on p. 18:
All copies cited here were supplied by the German Resistance Memorial Center in Berlin.]
Previously, the wanted man had twice escaped his pursuers. The first time was on July 21st at Schloss Steinort, his estate in East Prussia; the second time was on the night of August 8th just before he was to be interned at 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, the Gestapo’s own infamous “house prison” in Berlin. Beset though he was by the dogs in pursuit, he eluded his hunters to know the last five days of liberty in his life.
The second sketch of the fugitive was recorded by his wife, Countess Gottliebe Lehndorff, during a later conversation with her daughter, Vera. After his first escape attempt and first arrest, they had briefly taken her husband upstairs to the second floor of the castle. There, as she reports in the taped interview, "…we stood in front of his beautiful big desk and there they were, sitting there, constantly opening and closing the drawers, taking everything out and throwing it all on the floor. You know, it's frightful, because you're completely at their mercy! And he stood there across from the desk, with one of those black Gestapists sitting on his right, and another black Gestapist on his left. He wasn't handcuffed. He just stood there with his long arms, so absolute. He was always wearing one of those little country squire jackets – that’s what I called them – just a little green jacket, a bit ragged, well, not ragged, but slightly weakened by age, somewhat frayed. And so there he stood, with his arms hanging down, and you couldn’t look at his face. It was horrible."
"Suddenly broken, somehow?"
"It was more than that, it wasn't fear in his face, but total desperation."
"Because, of course, he knew what it meant?"
"Yes. It was over. And I stood there on the other side, in the same desperation, with my huge stomach. Well, what could you do?"
Shortly thereafter, Count Heinrich Lehndorff was initially transferred to Königsberg prison for his first "harsh" interrogation in custody.
The third profile stems from Count Carl-Hans Hardenberg and was written down on “New Year's Eve, 1945.” Carl-Hans Hardenberg was a gnarled conservative Prussian monarchist who had been a friend of Lehndorff's even before the war and had repeatedly hosted him at Neuhardenberg, his estate. Early in the war, he and Lehndorff had made a joint effort to enlist Fedor von Bock for the resistance. Later, von Bock would advance to General Field Marshal and Commander of the Army Group Center; Lehndorff and Hardenberg served as his aide-de-camp and adjutant respectively. That they did not succeed was no fault of their own. "Even during the first discussions we conducted with individual field marshals and four-star generals, it became clear that not a single one of them was of a mind to take steps against any of us. Almost to a man, they had toyed with the thought, recognized the necessity, expressed their willingness to participate if someone else assumed the responsibility."
In his memoirs, Hardenberg mentions personally and with great respect two close friends from the circle surrounding Henning von Tresckow, namely, Fabian von Schlabrendorff, a relative of Tresckow’s and later justice of the Federal Constitutional Court, and Count Heinrich Lehndorff.
[photo caption p. 20: General Field Marshal von Bock with aide-de-camp Heinrich Lehndorff.]
"Heini Lehndorff, that outstanding son of the East Prussian soil with whom I enjoyed a bond of genuine friendship from our mutual posting at the Army Group, had apparently escaped from them at first but was then unfortunately apprehended again. During the war years he matured in a strange way and developed from a carefree officer into a person with the highest sense of responsibility. He was a true man, and he died a hero's death."
[marginal note p. 20:
Carl-Hans Hardenberg, Patrioten im Widerstand. Erlebnisbericht. 1945.
(Patriots in the Resistance. An Experience Report. 1945),
in: Countess Reinhild von Hardenberg: Auf immer neuen Wegen
(Always Breaking New Ground), p. 163 ff.)
[photo caption p. 21: Lehndorff's brother Ahasverus]
Marion Dönhoff, publisher of DIE ZEIT, grew up and for periods of time was educated together with the Lehndorff children, Heinrich, Karin (Sissi), and Ahasverus. She recalls the following farewell scene: "In August 1939 we all met in Königsberg and had a sense that this might well be the last time. There could be no doubt that Hitler was bent on war and war alone. I will never forget the moment when we were standing in front of Hotel Berliner Hof, and Heini's younger brother was bidding farewell to my brothers. He was 23 years old at the time, a tall, serious youth of well-nigh classical beauty who was serving as a lieutenant in the 1st Infantry Regiment. His parting remark was, ‘We’ll meet again on the barricades!’ – with his eyes aglow as I hadn't seen since his childhood days.
He (Ahasverus) had established ties to the nascent resistance movement very early, even before the war broke out, and was completely taken with the task of liberating Germany from the scourge of Hitler. He fell in Estonia as a company commander in June 1941, two months after the war against Russia had begun.
For Heini Lehndorff, losing his only brother was a bitter blow that he was barely able to overcome. There can be no doubt that the sense of having to fulfill the task his brother had set for himself was a contributing factor in his decision to establish contact with the opposition.
[marginal note p. 22:
Countess Marion Dönhoff, Um der Ehre Willen
(For the Sake of Honor), p. 143f.]
Count Hans Lehndorff, cousin to the resistance fighter and the later author of Ostpreussisches Tagebuch (East Prussian Diary), provides the following description of the young farmer who assumed control of the huge but extremely rundown Steinort estate in 1936: "Heini, who had studied agriculture, took a passionate approach to the task of setting the grossly neglected estate in order again. By nature, he was the right man for the job. He combined a sense of the practical with a great sense of humor and a tangible zest for life. The feminine element played an important role in his life, allowing him to create a much more easy-going, less critical impression than, for example, his significantly younger brother Ahasverus. (…) When I visited him and his wife in October 1940, I noticed as I drove through the Mauerwald Forest that many old spruces had been stripped bare by insects. The forest looked desolate. In the assumption that Heini would be very upset over this, I greeted him somewhat hesitantly. Yet he was the same as ever, and when I mentioned the enormous damage he replied, ‘Yes, it disturbed me very much at first. But in the meantime I've calmed down again because over the next few days the forest is going to see something far worse. Eight thousand laborers from Organisation Todt[7] are supposed to come in and build an ammunition depot. Of course, we seriously doubt whether it will be limited to an ammunition depot. The commercial airliner from Moscow to Berlin has already changed its flight path and has been flying over our forest for several days.’ Eight months later our troops marched into Russia, and it turned out that they had not built an ammunition depot but the Army High Command for the Russian Campaign" – right on the Lehndorff estate.
[upper marginal note p. 23:
Count Hans Lehndorff, Menschen, Pferde, weites Land
(People, Horses, Open Country), p. 283f.]
[lower marginal note and photo caption p. 23:
Front: von Ribbentrop with the Lehndorff children.
Background: Heinrich, his sister Karin (Sissi), and Gottliebe.]
In conclusion, a photo that reflects the tensions of living a conspiracy: taking a walk in the park surrounding Steinort, beginning from the rear terrace, passing by the park's ancient oaks, heading toward the small Schinkel-style teahouse. The smiling man in the foreground wearing an elegant white jacket is Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hitler's foreign minister. As of 1941, he had taken up residence in the left wing of the Lehndorff's castle where he resided with his administrators, cooks, servants, military officers and Gestapo security agents. He leads two little girls by the hand, left and right: Nona and Vera Lehndorff at the ages of roughly six and four. The girls with their pageboy cut blond hair are wearing pretty little white summer dresses, knee socks, and shoes with straps. The children are pulling away from the “nice man,” they’re unwilling, don't want to be led by the hand and turn toward their parents, Heinrich and Gottliebe Lehndorff, seeking help. The parents are looking at the children with concern, calming, soothing them, conveying security. In the row behind we see Heinrich's sister Sissi, on either side there are military officers from Ribbentrop’s retinue and diplomats in riding boots. The young Countess is lovely, slender, and radiant, she wears a long narrow string of pearls. When Ribbentrop encountered her in private, he would kiss her hand; when Gestapo men were present, he greeted her with "Heil Hitler." The photo could be a still from a film: Last Year in Steinort or The Last Time I Saw Masuria.
[marginal note p. 24: Not shown in the detail on p. 23.]
SIX BRIEF PROFILES
((pp. 15 to 24 in the original edition))
Setting out to find traces of resistance fighter Count Heinrich Lehndorff is to embark on a long and difficult search. That has its reasons. Neither before nor after July 20, 1945, was there any time to secure documents or leave behind hints. The object was to cover one’s tracks and to conceal relationships with co-conspirators. When operation Walküre was called, Heinrich von Lehndorff was at the top of the list of liaison officers for the coup d'état, with responsibility for Military District I, Königsberg. This explains why the search for him began as early as July 21. Eleven days beforehand, he had put his three children on a train heading west so that they would be safe with his parents-in-law in Graditz, near Torgau on the Elbe. His wife Gottliebe, née Countess Kalnein and nine months pregnant, was driven out of the castle on July 23 by Foreign Minister Ribbentrop. Seething with rage, he feared for his reputation and credibility because he realized only then that he had been double-crossed by his greatly admired host family, whose Schloss[1] Steinort he had chosen as a "befitting” domicile – six kilometers from Mauerwald, the High Command of the Army, and 14 kilometers from Wolfschanze.[2]
With Hitler's foreign minister as a permanent guest in one's own castle, it was far too dangerous to keep photos, historical documents, let alone diaries and letters, or to move them to a secure location well enough in advance. At the beginning of August 1944, after Heinrich Lehndorff's second escape, his entire family was put in “Sippenhaft,” that is, his wife, daughters, parents, and sister, were collectively placed under arrest. As an ancient East Prussian family, the Lehndorff's owned no estates in the West where they could transfer letters or records for safekeeping. After the war, and their collective custody and escape, they were housed in constantly changing emergency shelters; their daughters recall some 16 of them. The old, meticulously kept family archive from the days of previous estate owners ends in the year 1931. Today, major portions of it are held by the Sächsicher Staatsarchiv in Leipzig, with smaller holdings in the archive at Allenstein (currently Olsztyn, Poland). We can assume that the young lord of Steinort himself saw to it that the latter documents were taken to a secure location in sufficient time, whereas he probably destroyed all current documents pertaining to the period of the conspiracy. Original finds from the 1930s and 40s are therefore rare. Nevertheless, if one delves deeper isolated fragments can be found: recollections, pictures, and descriptions not only by friends and relatives but also by enemies. When they are pieced together, a clear, specific, and distinctive picture emerges of the person we seek.
Interviews with Heinrich von Lehndorff's wife, friends, and relatives, and the written records they kept, are quoted extensively as sources in the following book, particularly when they pertain to his youth and private life. The texts have their own special appeal. They transport us to a world where there was still no sense of apprehension about the impending catastrophe. Sometimes they strike a note and evoke memories of things that are as distant from people living today as a sunken continent. It is only when we have heard the music of this language that we can sense the scope of what collapsed during the years between 1933 and 1945.
The first brief personal description of Heinrich von Lehndorff stems from the Gestapo itself, which dispatched a telegram with the following content.
Schwerin Criminal Investigation Unit Schwerin, August 9, 1944
Log number...5.K.-NS-5171/44.
B u l l e t i n
- - - - - - - -
Distribution list C:
Subject: Wanted persons search for accomplice in July 20, 1944, attack – RM 5,000 reward – intensified Kriegsfahndung[3] with particular emphasis on traffic checks.
Arrest as accomplice to the assassination attempt on July 20, 1944: husbandman Count L e h n d o r f f, DOB June 20, 1909, in Hanover, last residing in East Prussia.
Description: 1.90 m tall, slender, broad shouldered, receding forehead, long head, blonde hair parted on the left, blue eyes.
Last seen wearing: Brown single breasted sport coat, brown-green hunting shirt and necktie, gray riding breeches with dark leather trim, light brown sport socks, brown shoes, slouch hat.
Manhunt for wanted individual to be conducted within the framework of an intensified Kriegsfahndung, with particular emphasis on traffic checks in conjunction with the NSKK.[4]
By order of:
Köppen
[top rectangular stamp]
4th Police Precinct
August 11, 1944
[illegible signature]
[lower rectangular stamp]
Archive of the Hanse-City of Rostock
Copy
[circular stamp]
Criminal Investigation Unit 4, Schwerin]
[photo caption: Search Alert of August 9, 1944]
This urgent bulletin made Count Heinrich Lehndorff a wanted man throughout the Reich and in all countries occupied by German forces. Telegrams are extant from locations as disparate as Cologne, Krakau, and Schwerin. The arrest order was issued to: "All local/central crime investigation offices within the territory of the Reich to include Criminal Investigation Units Strasbourg, Metz, and Luxembourg, Commanders of the Security Police and the SD[5] Department V, Königsberg, Tilsit, Zichenau, Krakau, Warsaw, Radom, Veldes, and Marburg/Drau." It also specifies a "cc. to SD commandants in the aforementioned regions.”
This and all subsequent wanted persons alerts were based on a “blitz” telegram from Berlin, Nr. 10636, of August 9, 1944, 15:00 hrs, ordering that pertinent information should be reported "immediately by telephone, telegram, police radio, or courier" to the Special Commission on July 20, Gestapo Headquarters, 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, "Telephone 120040 or 126421."
Five days later, on August 14, 1944, Sturmbannführer[6] Paul Opitz of the Special Commission of the Secret State Police, Group II, was able to report to all central Gestapo offices that the urgent wanted persons alert of August 9, 1944, had produced the desired effect: "The fugitive Count Heinrich Lehndorff, DOB June 22, 1909, in Hanover, has been apprehended. Discontinue search.”
[marginal note on p. 18:
All copies cited here were supplied by the German Resistance Memorial Center in Berlin.]
Previously, the wanted man had twice escaped his pursuers. The first time was on July 21st at Schloss Steinort, his estate in East Prussia; the second time was on the night of August 8th just before he was to be interned at 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, the Gestapo’s own infamous “house prison” in Berlin. Beset though he was by the dogs in pursuit, he eluded his hunters to know the last five days of liberty in his life.
The second sketch of the fugitive was recorded by his wife, Countess Gottliebe Lehndorff, during a later conversation with her daughter, Vera. After his first escape attempt and first arrest, they had briefly taken her husband upstairs to the second floor of the castle. There, as she reports in the taped interview, "…we stood in front of his beautiful big desk and there they were, sitting there, constantly opening and closing the drawers, taking everything out and throwing it all on the floor. You know, it's frightful, because you're completely at their mercy! And he stood there across from the desk, with one of those black Gestapists sitting on his right, and another black Gestapist on his left. He wasn't handcuffed. He just stood there with his long arms, so absolute. He was always wearing one of those little country squire jackets – that’s what I called them – just a little green jacket, a bit ragged, well, not ragged, but slightly weakened by age, somewhat frayed. And so there he stood, with his arms hanging down, and you couldn’t look at his face. It was horrible."
"Suddenly broken, somehow?"
"It was more than that, it wasn't fear in his face, but total desperation."
"Because, of course, he knew what it meant?"
"Yes. It was over. And I stood there on the other side, in the same desperation, with my huge stomach. Well, what could you do?"
Shortly thereafter, Count Heinrich Lehndorff was initially transferred to Königsberg prison for his first "harsh" interrogation in custody.
The third profile stems from Count Carl-Hans Hardenberg and was written down on “New Year's Eve, 1945.” Carl-Hans Hardenberg was a gnarled conservative Prussian monarchist who had been a friend of Lehndorff's even before the war and had repeatedly hosted him at Neuhardenberg, his estate. Early in the war, he and Lehndorff had made a joint effort to enlist Fedor von Bock for the resistance. Later, von Bock would advance to General Field Marshal and Commander of the Army Group Center; Lehndorff and Hardenberg served as his aide-de-camp and adjutant respectively. That they did not succeed was no fault of their own. "Even during the first discussions we conducted with individual field marshals and four-star generals, it became clear that not a single one of them was of a mind to take steps against any of us. Almost to a man, they had toyed with the thought, recognized the necessity, expressed their willingness to participate if someone else assumed the responsibility."
In his memoirs, Hardenberg mentions personally and with great respect two close friends from the circle surrounding Henning von Tresckow, namely, Fabian von Schlabrendorff, a relative of Tresckow’s and later justice of the Federal Constitutional Court, and Count Heinrich Lehndorff.
[photo caption p. 20: General Field Marshal von Bock with aide-de-camp Heinrich Lehndorff.]
"Heini Lehndorff, that outstanding son of the East Prussian soil with whom I enjoyed a bond of genuine friendship from our mutual posting at the Army Group, had apparently escaped from them at first but was then unfortunately apprehended again. During the war years he matured in a strange way and developed from a carefree officer into a person with the highest sense of responsibility. He was a true man, and he died a hero's death."
[marginal note p. 20:
Carl-Hans Hardenberg, Patrioten im Widerstand. Erlebnisbericht. 1945.
(Patriots in the Resistance. An Experience Report. 1945),
in: Countess Reinhild von Hardenberg: Auf immer neuen Wegen
(Always Breaking New Ground), p. 163 ff.)
[photo caption p. 21: Lehndorff's brother Ahasverus]
Marion Dönhoff, publisher of DIE ZEIT, grew up and for periods of time was educated together with the Lehndorff children, Heinrich, Karin (Sissi), and Ahasverus. She recalls the following farewell scene: "In August 1939 we all met in Königsberg and had a sense that this might well be the last time. There could be no doubt that Hitler was bent on war and war alone. I will never forget the moment when we were standing in front of Hotel Berliner Hof, and Heini's younger brother was bidding farewell to my brothers. He was 23 years old at the time, a tall, serious youth of well-nigh classical beauty who was serving as a lieutenant in the 1st Infantry Regiment. His parting remark was, ‘We’ll meet again on the barricades!’ – with his eyes aglow as I hadn't seen since his childhood days.
He (Ahasverus) had established ties to the nascent resistance movement very early, even before the war broke out, and was completely taken with the task of liberating Germany from the scourge of Hitler. He fell in Estonia as a company commander in June 1941, two months after the war against Russia had begun.
For Heini Lehndorff, losing his only brother was a bitter blow that he was barely able to overcome. There can be no doubt that the sense of having to fulfill the task his brother had set for himself was a contributing factor in his decision to establish contact with the opposition.
[marginal note p. 22:
Countess Marion Dönhoff, Um der Ehre Willen
(For the Sake of Honor), p. 143f.]
Count Hans Lehndorff, cousin to the resistance fighter and the later author of Ostpreussisches Tagebuch (East Prussian Diary), provides the following description of the young farmer who assumed control of the huge but extremely rundown Steinort estate in 1936: "Heini, who had studied agriculture, took a passionate approach to the task of setting the grossly neglected estate in order again. By nature, he was the right man for the job. He combined a sense of the practical with a great sense of humor and a tangible zest for life. The feminine element played an important role in his life, allowing him to create a much more easy-going, less critical impression than, for example, his significantly younger brother Ahasverus. (…) When I visited him and his wife in October 1940, I noticed as I drove through the Mauerwald Forest that many old spruces had been stripped bare by insects. The forest looked desolate. In the assumption that Heini would be very upset over this, I greeted him somewhat hesitantly. Yet he was the same as ever, and when I mentioned the enormous damage he replied, ‘Yes, it disturbed me very much at first. But in the meantime I've calmed down again because over the next few days the forest is going to see something far worse. Eight thousand laborers from Organisation Todt[7] are supposed to come in and build an ammunition depot. Of course, we seriously doubt whether it will be limited to an ammunition depot. The commercial airliner from Moscow to Berlin has already changed its flight path and has been flying over our forest for several days.’ Eight months later our troops marched into Russia, and it turned out that they had not built an ammunition depot but the Army High Command for the Russian Campaign" – right on the Lehndorff estate.
[upper marginal note p. 23:
Count Hans Lehndorff, Menschen, Pferde, weites Land
(People, Horses, Open Country), p. 283f.]
[lower marginal note and photo caption p. 23:
Front: von Ribbentrop with the Lehndorff children.
Background: Heinrich, his sister Karin (Sissi), and Gottliebe.]
In conclusion, a photo that reflects the tensions of living a conspiracy: taking a walk in the park surrounding Steinort, beginning from the rear terrace, passing by the park's ancient oaks, heading toward the small Schinkel-style teahouse. The smiling man in the foreground wearing an elegant white jacket is Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hitler's foreign minister. As of 1941, he had taken up residence in the left wing of the Lehndorff's castle where he resided with his administrators, cooks, servants, military officers and Gestapo security agents. He leads two little girls by the hand, left and right: Nona and Vera Lehndorff at the ages of roughly six and four. The girls with their pageboy cut blond hair are wearing pretty little white summer dresses, knee socks, and shoes with straps. The children are pulling away from the “nice man,” they’re unwilling, don't want to be led by the hand and turn toward their parents, Heinrich and Gottliebe Lehndorff, seeking help. The parents are looking at the children with concern, calming, soothing them, conveying security. In the row behind we see Heinrich's sister Sissi, on either side there are military officers from Ribbentrop’s retinue and diplomats in riding boots. The young Countess is lovely, slender, and radiant, she wears a long narrow string of pearls. When Ribbentrop encountered her in private, he would kiss her hand; when Gestapo men were present, he greeted her with "Heil Hitler." The photo could be a still from a film: Last Year in Steinort or The Last Time I Saw Masuria.
[marginal note p. 24: Not shown in the detail on p. 23.]