The best birthday present Harry Ettlinger ever got arrived on the frigid morning of January 28, 1945. The 19-year-old Army private was shivering in the back of a truck bound from France toward southern Belgium. There the Battle of the Bulge, raging for most of a month, had just ended, but the fighting continued. The Germans had begun their retreat with the new year, as Private Ettlinger and thousands of other soldiers massed for a counterassault. "We were on the way east," Ettlinger recalls, "when this sergeant came running out. 'The following three guys get your gear and come with me!' he yelled. I was one of those guys. I got off the truck."
The Army needed interpreters for the forthcoming Nuremberg war trials, and someone had noticed that Ettlinger spoke German like a native—for good reason: he was a native. Born in the Rhine-side city of Karlsruhe, Ettlinger had escaped Germany with his parents and other relatives in 1938, just before the shock of Kristallnacht made it abundantly clear what Hitler had in mind for Jewish families like his. The Ettlingers settled in Newark, New Jersey, where Harry finished high school before being drafted into the Army. After several weeks of basic training, he found himself headed back to Germany—a place he had never expected to see again—where the last chapter of the European war was being written in smoke and blood.
Ettlinger's Nuremberg assignment evaporated without explanation, and he was plunged into a thoroughly unexpected sort of war, waged deep in Germany's salt mines, castles, abandoned factories and empty museums, where he served with the "Monuments Men," a tiny band of 350 art historians, museum curators, professors and other unsung soldiers and sailors of the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives section. Their task, begun with the uncertain peace of May 1945, was to find, secure and return the millions of pieces of art, sculpture, books, jewelry, furniture, tapestries and other cultural treasures looted, lost or displaced by seven years of upheaval.
The conflict swallowed up a massive volume of cultural objects—paintings by Vermeer, van Gogh, Rembrandt, Raphael, Leonardo, Botticelli and lesser artists. Museums and homes throughout Europe had been stripped of paintings, furniture, ceramics, coins and other objects, as were many of the continent's churches, from which silver crosses, stained glass, bells and painted altarpieces disappeared; age-old Torahs vanished from synagogues; entire libraries were packed up and spirited away by the trainload.
"It was the largest theft of cultural items in history," says Charles A. Goldstein, a lawyer with the Commission for Art Recovery, an organization promoting restitution of stolen works. "I've seen figures every which way, but there is no question that the scale was astronomical."
The most systematic looting, at the behest of Adolf Hitler and his reichsmarshal, Hermann Goering, swept up thousands of prime artworks in France, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Germany, Russia and other war-ravaged countries; indeed, in their thorough way of doing things, the Nazis organized a special squad of art advisers known as the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR), which targeted Europe's masterpieces for plunder. Choice works were detailed in some 80 leatherbound volumes with photographs, which provided guidance for the Wehrmacht before it invaded a country. Working from this hit list, Hitler's army shipped millions of cultural treasures back to Germany, in the Führer's words, to "safeguard them there." From the other direction, Soviets organized a so-called Trophy Commission, which methodically picked off the cream of Germany's collections—both legal and looted—to avenge earlier depredations at the hands of the Wehrmacht.
At the same time, state art repositories across Europe crated their prized collections and shipped them away in hopes of shielding them from Nazi looting, Allied bombing and Russian pillaging. The Mona Lisa, bundled into an ambulance and evacuated from the Louvre in September 1939, stayed on the go through much of the war; hidden in a succession of countryside châteaux, Leonardo's famous lady avoided capture by changing addresses no fewer than six times. The prized 3,300-year-old beauty Queen Nefertiti was whisked from Berlin to the safety of the Kaiseroda potash mine at Merkers in central Germany, where thousands of crates from the state museums were also stored. Jan van Eyck's Ghent altarpiece, a 15th-century masterwork the Nazis had looted from Belgium, was shipped to the mines of Alt Ausee, Austria, where it sat out the last months of the war alongside other cultural treasures.
When the smoke cleared, Hitler planned to unearth many of these spoils and display them in his hometown of Linz, Austria. There they would be showcased in the new Führer Museum, which was to be one of the finest in the world. This scheme died with Hitler in 1945, when it fell to Ettlinger and other Monuments Men to track down the missing artwork and provide refuge for them until they could be returned to their countries of origin.
"That's what made our war different," Ettlinger, now 82, recalls. "It established the policy that to the victor do not go the spoils. The whole idea of returning property to its rightful owners in wartime was unprecedented. That was our job. We didn't have much time to think about it. We just went to work."
For Ettlinger, that meant descending 700 feet below ground each day to begin the long, tedious process of clearing artwork from the salt mines of Heilbronn and Kochendorf in southern Germany. Most of these pieces were not looted but belonged legally to German museums in Karlsruhe, Mannheim and Stuttgart. From September 1945 to July 1946, Ettlinger, Lt. Dale V. Ford and German workers sorted through the subterranean treasures, ferreting out works of questionable ownership and sending paintings, antique musical instruments, sculptures and other objects topside for delivery to Allied collecting points in the American zone of Germany. At major collecting points—in Wiesbaden, Munich and Offenbach—other Monuments teams arranged objects by country of origin, made emergency repairs and assessed claims by delegations who came to recover their nation's treasures.
Perhaps the most notable find at Heilbronn was a cache of stained-glass windows from the cathedral of Strasbourg, France. With Ettlinger supervising, the windows, packed in 73 cases, were shipped directly home without passing through a collecting point. "The Strasbourg windows were the first thing we sent back," says Ettlinger. "That was on orders of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme commander of Allied forces, as a gesture of good faith." The windows were welcomed home with a huge celebration—a sign not only that the Alsatian city was free again after centuries of domination by Germany but also that the Allies intended to restore the fruits of civilization.
Most of Ettlinger's comrades had training in art history or museum work. "Not me," says Ettlinger. "I was just the kid from New Jersey." But he worked diligently, his mastery of German indispensable and his rapport with mineworkers easy. He was promoted to technical sergeant. After the war, he went home to New Jersey, where he earned degrees in engineering and business administration and produced guidance systems for nuclear weapons. "To tell you the truth, I wasn't as interested in the paintings as I was in other things over there," says Ettlinger, now retired in Rockaway, New Jersey.


Comments
My father, the late Dale V. Ford, was extremely proud of his military service, particularly the work described in this article. I wish he had lived to see this!
Posted by Elizabeth L. Ford on January 28,2008 | 07:16PM
Mr. Poole should be congratulated for this excellent article on the Monuments Men and their extraordinary contribution to the protection and recovery of the patrimony of Europe. It is, however, not quite correct to say that the scope of the challenge they faced is "only now coming to light." Since the mid-1990's there have been numerous histories that recount their activities and contributions. The bibliography is very long. The landmark Bard Symposium in New York in 1995 brought together, for the first time, the then surviving "monuments" men from the United States, the former USSR and German arts representatives. Media coverage of the subject has been major for the last 10 years both here and abroad. The State Department, the House Banking and Finance Committee, the National Archives, the National Gallery, the Smithsonian and many other organizations private and public have held hearings, international meetings and symposia on the subject. All this interest served to inspire the makers of the film, The Rape of Europa, to tell the whole story. The filmmakers, Bonni Cohen, Richard Berge and Nicole Newnham of Actual Films in San Francisco, working together with a number of historians and Mr. Robert Edsel, found extraordinary documentation, especially in regard to the Monuments Men, and have produced a film which does them proud. Mr. Poole's article, and Mr. Robert Edsels' generous establishment of a Monuments Men foundation will add enomously to the continued recognition of the contribution these men and women, many of whom I knew and know personally, have made to humanity. Lynn H. Nicholas Author of The Rape of Europa
Posted by Lynn H. Nicholas on January 29,2008 | 07:31AM
Well done Mr. Poole. Beautiful! Tears filled my eyes when I read the passage describing the unwrapping of the bust of Nefertitti aka(the beautiful one has come)and the room full of looted Torah scrolls. The fantastic work of the Monument Men continues today in the work of the military and civilians in Iraq desperatly trying to save and restore treasures from our collective heritage, looted from museums and digs in the chaos following the invasion of that country by the US. The main difference today however is that these treasures haven't been looted by a band of murdering megolamanical thugs but an by thieve supplying an international band of rapacious greedy private collectors. Lets hope that our contemporary Monument Men & Women get the legislative and financial support from all quarters they need to acheive their mission.
Posted by David Edler on January 30,2008 | 07:48PM
I saw the movie Rape of Europa and attended the lecture at the Florida Atlantic University (FAU)in Jupiter Florida by Mr. Edsel on January 10th. What I find most distressing is that in the movie,and during Mr Edsel lecture, and in your magazine's artical nothing is mentioned about the original owners of the recovered artworks. The Nazis stole the artworks particualy from five Jewish families in France. Hector Feliciano wrote a book entitled "The Lost Museum, The Nazis Conspiracy To Steal The World's Greatest Works Of Art." Most of the thefts committed by the Nazis were from Jewish victims but only Mr Feliciano indicates that.
Posted by Ralph Wugman on January 31,2008 | 02:39PM
Thank you for a wonderful story! As an Objects Conservator for the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, MO), my husband was only too eager to tell me about the Nelson's upcoming screening of The Rape of Europa. Interesting, knowledgeable speakers set the stage for the movie and then, by the magic of cinema, we were swept up in the plunder of Europe during WWII, its chaotic aftermath, and the astonishing work of the Monuments Men. As the movie ended we were informed that one of those men was seated right behind us in the museum's auditorium! The extraordinary accomplishments of such doggedly determined people is truly inspirational. And by the way --- the magazine is now tucked into a care package headed for our nephew stationed in Iraq. Thank you again.
Posted by Marjorie Benson on February 3,2008 | 09:35AM
With my art history classes many years in my past, I went to the internet to see what the missing Raphael's Portrait of a Young Man looked like. I was hoping that some picture had been taken prior to it being lost. Much to my suprise, a web site claims that it is in the Szepmuveseti Muzeum in Budspest, Hungary. Here is the link: http://www.abcgallery.com/R/raphael/raphael85.html
Posted by Karen Flood on February 3,2008 | 10:19AM
Freeman Koberstein, Monument Man After the liberation of Tienen/Tirlemont in Belgium, my father -- fluent in German, the proper language as well as many dialects because of having been a prisoner of war during WWI -- was helping the Americans to interrogate German prisoners. The Americans in their gratitude invited him to their Officers' club where my father heard this extraordinary pianist play beautiful classical music. That is how my father met Juliard trained Freeman Koberstein. After asking Freeman whether he would agree to give concerts so that the profits would be spent to send the children of political prisoners to Switzerland, my father got the OK from the American authorities to organize such concerts. Freeman gave three concerts, one of which was with the Queen Elizabeth Orchestra. Then, his unit went on, and he wrote how he almost got caught in the Battle of the Bulge and how he gave concerts for the troops in Germany. After his discharge from the Army, Freeman became a piano Professor in Oberlin, Ohio. He visited us in Belgium; we visited him in Oberlin; he visited me in Cambridge and in Washington. Yet, he never ever told any of us that he was one of the Monument Men. In fact, he never talked about the war. By chance, I heard Robert M. Edsel talking about the Monument Men on the Radio. I went to hear him at the Archives. I bought five of his books. I lugged two of them to Belgium because I felt that story should be known by everybody. Before giving those books away to some friends, my sister went through the book and found out that Freeman, one of "our three boys" as my mother always referred to them, had been a Monument Man! He never told us. Greta Swinnen Crais Alexandria, VA
Posted by Greta Swinnen Crais on February 7,2008 | 03:30PM
Are there more listings of items recovered or not recovered? Since I am a collector of various historical items, namely antique weapons and religious artifacts, I would like to hear from you on these areas, if possible. Thank you. I was hoping that going on line for more images related to the Feb. 2008 Smithsonian's "Monumental Mission" would net more photos. However, it was mainly a repeat of the article with just a few more photos than in the article. Excellent photography in the article and on line. Thanks very much. Nicholas B. Gerage
Posted by Nicolas B. Gerage, Antique Consultant on February 8,2008 | 11:17AM
My Father, the late Lt. Col. Cecil L. Hay was also a part of this recovery operation and told us many times over the years of his important job in Germany and helping to recover this stolen art. I too wish he had lived to see this article. We thank these men. Say a prayer for my Dad and the other men and women who he worked with.
Posted by Nancy Hay Persin on February 13,2008 | 10:12AM
An excellent read, Mr. Poole. I liked it some much I posted a link here. http://ww2file.wordpress.com/ I may run a humble site, but I hope a few come here and read this gem.
Posted by ww2file on February 23,2008 | 07:16PM
That was an especially intriguing article, but it brought up a question for which I have never been able to find an adequate answer. According to many art books and gallery web sites, the paintings of the Kaiser Friedrich Museum in Berlin were destroyed during the bombing in the 1940s. How is it possible that the German leadership that was expert at hiding away and protecting stolen art works would allow one of its foremost collections to be destroyed? Or are the art works in reality still hidden away somewhere either in Germany or perhaps Russia? I would be grateful for any insights the author or anybody else might provide.
Posted by Peter D. Weigl on March 26,2008 | 05:32PM
I read the article by Robert Poole in your February Smithsonian Magazine. As Executor of an Estate, I have found two paintings that originated in the early 1900s. These paintings are by Franz Wallis and a Josef Kugler. Both of the men were born in Austria in the late 1800s. Their works were shown in Vienna and Munich in the 1900's. After reading Mr. Poole's article I began to wonder if these paintings could have been sequestered away by the German War Machine, in the 2nd. World War. How they would come into my Deceased Friends possession I have no idea. I would appreciate any comments about my comments. Iam Yours Truly, GS Gray
Posted by GS Gray on April 15,2008 | 01:17PM
In relation to the question asked by Gs Gray, I also have a Josef Kugler painting and am curious about its possible origin and relation to the war. If you had any info or response for GS gray, I would like to know what ever I can find out. Thank You, sinceriely Andrew Weaver
Posted by andrew weaver on July 23,2008 | 09:41AM
I would like to buy the book "Monument Men", is it available? Where would you suggest that I look/ Thank you, Doris Brown
Posted by Doris Brown on September 7,2008 | 08:09AM
i also have a beautiful kugler landscape and wondered if any more information has been uncovered about his work. my painting is signed: J. Kugler, SEN i read that kugler was responsible for some of the cathedral restoration in europe (unless that was his son) i am interested in any information on this artist. thanks, john mount
Posted by john mount on October 17,2008 | 04:25PM
I also have a Josef Kugler Sen. Original painting. It is Quite large and very beutiful. There is an original tag on the back that says this: This is an original Oilpainting by the Artist Josef Kugler Born in Vienna, Austria in 1913, where he attended the Academy Of Fine Arts. He lived for some years in Linz, then moved to Munich, where his paintings were exhibited. His pictures - landscapes and espesially forestscenes - are highly appreciated by the public in Europe as well as in overseas-countries. The front is signed be Josef Kugler Sen.
Posted by larry Miller on January 28,2009 | 02:33PM
I as well have a Josef Kugler Sen. Original painting. It is very beutiful. This is an original Oilpainting by the Artist Josef Kugler Tis pictures is a landscape / forestscene - The front is signed be Josef Kugler Sen. in the right lower corner. I would appreciate any information of the artist any one can provide.
Posted by Kurt Bassett on March 2,2009 | 10:16AM
I have an oil painting signed J Kugler SEN 35x32 it is a forest setting with a stream and the blue sky through the trees. Can anyone give me information about this? Thank you
Posted by patty spangler on March 6,2009 | 01:16PM
i also have a large forrest oil painting with the signature of j kugler sen . im requesting any information as well
Posted by rita garber on June 18,2009 | 07:20PM
I have a large oil of the North Sea painted by Franz Wallis ( Waldner) purchased by my father in New Orleans, LA in May 1962. I am trying to find out more about the artist and the painting.
Posted by Elo Buenger on August 6,2009 | 04:40PM
I recently inherited a Josef Kugler oil painting from my grandmother who recently expired. It is simply titled "landscape". I is a forest scene with a water wheel. I have always loved it. It gives a few details such as his 1913 birth in Vienna. I am hoping to know more. Can anyone help? I could not find this artist on artcyclopedia.com.
Posted by Jennifer Stepanek on September 23,2009 | 10:47AM
I have a large Oil painting signed J Kugler Sen. A large forest scene. I acquired it at an antique shop in Virginia. They gave me no information on the artist at the time of purchase. I'm interested in any info on the artist and possible value and demand for his work.
Posted by Karen Bryant on November 20,2009 | 05:43AM