What did German families do with orders and medals after the death of a Wehrmacht veteran?

G

Gottlieb94

Gast
I've read a couple of stories about people finding their grandfather's awards in a box in the attic. Is there any research or opinion on this? I personally saw some documents and awards at a flea market in Berlin. So, the descendants didn't keep these items. Interesting, actually. Thank you!
 
For many relatives, it's just rubbish from the past. And, honestly, in which German or France families did the remains of the Napoleonic wars survive?

My grand-grand father's sabre, signal trumpet with a bullet from the battle of Mars la Tour in 1870, and all the medals of honour were plundered by honorable British officers.
So what?
 
Once, during a visit to my grandparents in the GDR, my father whispered „ … try to find me a shovel in the shed ! „. Then he took it to the rear of the house and was just about to start digging, when suddenly my grandad appeared on the scene and said, obviously annoyed „You won‘t find anything there !“.
Later my father explained to me, that he had seen his dad, just before the Soviet troops appeared, burying his party membership book, and the awards and medals he had. My grandad wasn‘t at the front, nor had an active role in any fighting organisation, as he was working for the BEWAG (power supplier), so being „indispensable on his job“, but that status certainly was somehow coupled to his membership, and the latter not a very good recommendation back then. Burying such items didn‘t seem a good idea to me back then, but with hindsight, burning medals just in your fireplace probably wouldn‘t have destroyed them neither, so hiding them actually may have been a suitable way to get rid of them.
And though I had several family members, who may have had similar disposal problems, on family meetings I never heard anything about the NSDAP, or the Nazis in general, except that it was a „riesiger Sauhaufen“ ( big mess).
I don‘t think, that evidences about a closer, than absolutely necessary affiliation to the government back then were kept by too many people. … and that‘s, what makes them expensive items on fleamarkets today !
 
You know the German writer Günter Grass?
In his 1959 satiric novel "The Tin Drum", the protagonist's father tries to hide his party badge, "the Bonbon", in his mouth, when the Russians arrive in his home town of Danzig, and he then dies from suffocation after aspirating that tiny tin badge.
You will discover the "Parteiabzeichen" on many family pictures of that time, worn on the left side of the jacket.
 
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Pardela_cenicienta, I've heard of Günter Grass, especially in the context of his service in the SS, but I haven't read his works, unfortunately. It's been a long time since I saw the film "The Tin Drum." You've retold a very interesting story, thank you!​

Jemiba, Now it's clearer to me why thematic auctions in some countries (especially the US and UK) feature a significant number of awards and documents from the Third Reich. People in Germany didn't want to keep such things.​

 
Actually, militaria, such as medals, side arms etc, often end up at local auctions, antique or curiosity stores.
With one significant exception: the VICTORIA CROSS, it is hundred times more worth than it's weight in gold. In fact, the highest price yielded at an auction for a VICTORIA CROSS was £930,000 (€1,073,355).[1]

Sometimes I think, had Germany won either or both world wars, the table might have been turned, i.e. German military decorations may have been incredibly valuable, for instance the one that 'General der Gebirgstruppe' Hans Keysing for his work at Millerowo wore : 'Ritterkreuz m. Schwerter und Eichenlaub'. Maybe it slumbers somewhere in some private collection .....
Btw, on April 1st 1969, Hans Keysing had been buried with full military honours in Oldenburg.

[1] Victoria Cross won by Irishman sells for more than €1m at auction
 
wäre interessant, wo überall noch der Plunder vergraben ist. (ich schreibe deutsch, denn der Ersteller hat sich verabschiedet.)
 
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