The story of the Hungarian Gold Train
In December 1944, as the Third Reich entered its final death
throes, Adolf Eichmann, the architect of the Final Solution,
ordered a train to be prepared. This was to be no ordinary
train, however - twenty-nine of its fifty-two carriages were
heavy-duty and, in some cases, specially reinforced freight
cars, the best that the Nazis could lay their hands on at
the time.
Its purpose was to carry the vast amounts of gold, art and
other valuables stolen by the Nazis from Hungary's murdered
Jewsish population across a hostile and smouldering landscape
to the safety of neutral Switzerland.
It was a journey that was to end more than sixty years later,
in an air-conditioned Miami courthouse.
***
A train is prepared
In December 1944, with the Eastern Front crumbling and overwhelming
Russian forces almost totally encircling Budapest, Adolf Eichmann
ordered a train to be prepared.
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Adolf Eichman |
Eichmann is famous now as the architect of the Final Solution
and the man kidnapped off the streets of Buenos Aries by Mossad
agents to face trial and eventual execution in Israel. At
the time, however, Eichmann was in charge of the Office for
Jewish Emmigration in Vienna, with direct responsibility for
organising the deportation and murder of over 550,000 Hungarian
Jews in the death camps of Aushwitz and Bergen-Belsen.
The train he had commandeered was to carry the gold and other
valuables stolen from Hungary's murdered and deported Jewish
population to Switzerland, where Eichmann no doubt hoped he
and his Nazi comrades would one day be able to access its
riches.
The fruits of murder
The train was fifty-two carriages long, of which 29 were
heavy-duty and, in some cases, specially reinforced freight
cars - the best that the Nazis could lay their hands on at
the time.
These freight cars were loaded with 1,560 cases, each carefully
recorded and classified. The contents included more than five
tons of gold ranging from ingots seized from national banks
to teeth broken out of their owners' mouths. The wedding bands
alone, stripped from the fingers of their victims, filled
three crates, each requiring four men to lift them.
Beyond gold, the train also contained nearly seven hundred
pounds of diamonds and pearls, one thousand two hundred and
fifty paintings, five thousand Persian and Oriental rugs,
over eight hundred and fifty cases of silverware, seventeen
bundles of walking sticks with silver handles, fine porcelain,
rare stamps, coin collections, furs, watches, alarm clocks,
cameras, top coats, typewriters and, bizarrely, silk underwear.
A fraught journey
The train left Budapest on the fifteenth of December and
then stopped in Györ where its load was increased by
a hundred old masters from the local municipal museum.
Yet over the next three months it travelled barely a hundred
miles, its journey hampered by the battles raging around it
and ten unsuccessful robbery attempts - nine of them by rogue
elements of the SS - which the Hungarian soldiers detailed
to protect the train's special cargo successfully fought off.
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A Nazi freight train |
By the time the train reached the outskirts of Salzburg,
the war was almost over. And although it had successfully
outrun the Russians, the Allies were making rapid progress
into Austria.
On April 21, the 405th Bombardment Group of the Fifteenth
Air Force destroyed the railway bridge at Brixlegg and a few
days later the Seventh Army joined up with the Fifth Army
at the Bremner Pass. Austria was effectively split in two
and the train's route to Switzerland blocked.
A stunning discovery
Rather than give themselves up, the train's passengers and
military escort abandonned the train and melted away into
the Austrian countryside. It was discovered on May 16, 1945,
by the 3rd Infantry Division, 15th Regiment, A Company, commanded
by Lieutenant Joseph A. Mercer, in the Tauern Tunnel, 60 miles
south of Salzburg.
The 1945 estimated value of the contents of the train was
$206 million - which would translate into several billion
dollars today.
Requisition
The American forces moved the train to Werfen and then on
to Camp Truscott on the outskirts of Salzburg, where its freight
cars were unloaded into secure warehouses. French forces also
took control of the contents of two freight cars.
On examining the train, the Americans decided that it was
not possible to identify the ownership of the property on
the train and that the territorial changes in Hungary made
restitution to the Hungarian government unfeasible.
Instead, they declared the cache to be enemy government property,
making it available for requisition by high-ranking U.S. officials.
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Major General Harry J Collins |
Among the officials who took advantage of this was Major
Gen. Harry J. Collins, commander of the 42nd Division in western
Austria. In 1945, he requisitioned valuables "of the
very best quality and workmanship available" for his
home and office including a complete dinner service for 45
people, 30 sets of table linens, 12 silver candlesticks, 60
bath towels and 13 rugs.
Other goods from the Gold Train were simply stolen from the
poorly guarded warehouse and shipped home as trophies.
The error is compounded
Although the French returned to Hungary the portions of the
Gold Train's contents that it had intercepted, the United
States ignored repeated pleas to do so. Instead, major parts
of the haul were put up for auction in 1948 in New York to
support war-relief efforts despite protests from both the
Jewish Community and the Hungarian government.
In addition, in 1949, the U.S. government transferred 1,181
paintings to Austria in violation of international treaties
stipulating that "cultural property" looted during
World War II should be returned to "the country of origin,"
in this case Hungary. Precisely what happened to the artwork
after 1952 is still a mystery, with Austrian officials claiming
that a portion of the property was restituted, but not yet
providing any details as to how.
Despite continued pressure from both the Hungarian government
and the Jewish community, the U.S. government continuously
denied any wrongdoing, claiming instead to have been acting
within international law. In fact, U.S. government records
show that the Truman administration decided in 1948 to change
its policy on returning looted artwork to the country of origin,
in order to prevent such treasures from falling into the hands
of Communist regimes in eastern Europe.
The US comes clean
Throughout the 1980s and 90s, the U.S. took a dominant role
in driving settlements reached with Swiss banks over dormant
Holocaust-era bank accounts, and in putting pressure on German
industry to compensate Holocaust-era slave labourers.
It also, through the U.S. Presidential Advisory Commission
on Holocaust Assets, examined its own record with regard to
assets taken from victims of the Holocaust that came into
the possession of the U.S. Federal government.
In 1999, it published a report on the Gold Train in which
it identified several US generals (including Collins) as having
appropriated valuables, and described the Army’s behaviour
as “an egregious failure of the US to follow its own
policy regarding restitution of Holocaust victims’ property
after World War II.”
The survivors take action
As a result of this report, a class action lawsuit was mounted
against the U.S. government on behalf of all Jewish Hungarian
victims of Nazism and heirs of Hungarian Nazi victims. The
case, known as Rosner v.United States, was originally filed
in May 2001 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District
of Florida.
The American Department of Justice vigorously opposed the
survivors' attempts at compensation from the moment the suit
was filed, at first denying the charges, then saying that
the events were too long ago for a contemporary court to consider.
Judge Patricia Seitz ruled against this argument, however,
saying that "no limit applies when the government has
hidden its behavior for more than 55 years".
A settlement is reached
Finally, in March 2005, a settlement was reached. Under the
terms of the deal, a total of $25.5 million was awarded to
the class, of which approximately $21 million was to be used
to fund social service projects benefiting eligible class
members, many of whom are still in Hungary.
The Gold Train had finally reached the end of its painful
journey, although for many the money has come to late, and
is, in any case, small compensation for the loss of entire
families in the Nazi death camps.
Click here for links to other sites which
provide a more detailed account of the Gold Train than that
contained here.
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