November 1, 2007

National Archives Announces Discovery of "Hitler Albums" Documenting Looted Art

Washington, DC . . . Today at a National Archives press conference, 
Allen Weinstein,
Archivist of the United States, Michael Kurtz, Assistant Archivist 
for Records Services
and Robert M. Edsel, author of Rescuing Da Vinci and President of the 
Monuments Men
Foundation for the Preservation of Art, announced the discovery of 
two original leather
bound photograph albums documenting art that was looted by the Nazis 
during World War II,
both of which Mr. Edsel will donate to the National Archives under 
separate terms.

These albums were created by the staff of the Third Reich's 
Einsatzstab Reichsleiter
Rosenberg (ERR).  This special unit was organized in the summer of 
1940 under Reich Leader
Alfred Rosenberg, initially to collect political material in occupied 
countries for
exploitation in the "struggle against Jewry and Freemasonry." The ERR 
established its base
of operations in Paris in July 1940 and on November 5, Hermann 
Goering assigned the ERR
the responsibility for the confiscation of "ownerless" Jewish art 
collections.  On
November 18 of that year, Adolf Hitler ordered that all confiscated 
works of art be
brought to Germany and placed at his personal disposal. During the 
next several years, the
ERR would be engaged in an extensive and elaborate art looting 
operation in France that
was part of Hitler's much larger premeditated scheme to steal art 
treasures from conquered
nations.

The Archivist hailed this discovery as "one of the most significant 
finds related to
Hitler's premeditated theft of art and other cultural treasures to be 
found since the
Nuremberg trials.  It is exciting to know that original documents 
shedding light on this
important aspect of World War II are still being located, especially 
so because of the
hundreds of thousands of cultural items stolen from victims of Hitler 
and the Nazis that
are still missing.  Documents such as these may play a role in 
helping to solve some of
those mysteries and, more importantly, helping victims recover their 
treasures. The
National Archives is grateful to Mr. Edsel and the Monuments Men 
Foundation for today's
donation of Album 8, which will allow scholars and historians 
immediate use of these
materials."  (Mr. Edsel intends to donate the original Album 6 at a 
future time, and until
then, to make this volume or images of it available to researchers 
upon request.)

These two photographic albums were in the possession of heirs to an 
American soldier
stationed in the Berchtesgaden area of Germany in the closing days of 
World War II. Mr.
Edsel, understanding the importance of these albums, worked closely 
with these heirs to
acquire them, thereby assuring their preservation and, by way of 
these gifts to the
Nation, availability to the public.

Mr. Edsel stated that the "Hitler Albums" are not only evidence of 
the premeditated effort
of Hitler and the Nazis to rob Europe and Russia of its greatest 
cultural treasures, they
also demonstrate just how obsessed and personally involved Adolf 
Hitler was with building
the world's greatest museum*the Führer Museum, in his hometown of 
Linz. "With the
increasing pace and visibility of restitution claims, and important 
discoveries such as
the 'Hitler Albums,' that story is finally becoming more widely 
known," said Mr. Edsel.

Soon after the German occupation of France in 1940, the German 
military, and subsequently
the ERR, focused their art confiscations on the world renowned 
Jewish- owned art
collections from families such as the Rothschilds, and the 
Veil-Picards, Alphonse Kann,
and Jewish dealers such as the Seligmanns and Georges 
Wildenstein.  According to the
German ERR documents from 1944, the art seizures in France totaled 
21,903 objects from 203
collections. There were 5,009 items confiscated from the Rothschild 
family collections,
2,687 items from the David-Weill collection, and 1,202 from Alphonse 
Kann's collection.
The first shipment of confiscated art objects sent to Germany from 
Paris required 30 rail
cars and consisted primarily of Rothschild paintings intended for 
Hitler's Linz Museum.
Among the first fifty-three paintings shipped to Hitler was Vermeer's 
Astronomer from the
Édouard de Rothschild collection, today in the Musée de Louvre in Paris.

As the ERR staff looted and catalogued the French collections, they 
created photograph
albums specifically intended for the Reichschancellery and Adolf 
Hitler in an effort to
keep them apprised of their work in France, and more importantly, to 
provide a catalogue
of items from which Hitler and his curators could choose art 
treasures for the Führer's
Art Museum in Linz, Austria. A group of these photograph albums were 
presented to Adolf
Hitler on the occasion of his birthday on April 20, 1943, by Alfred 
Rosenberg to "send a
ray of beauty and joy into [his] revered life." ERR staff stated that 
nearly 100 such
volumes were created during the years of their art looting operation.

"More importantly to our world today is the story we don't know, the 
role of the men and
women of 13 nations, known as 'Monuments Men,' [the staff of the 
various Monuments, Fine
Arts, and Archives units]. These courageous individuals rescued and 
returned more than 5
million cultural items to the countries from which they had been 
stolen, including many of
the paintings featured in these 'Hitler Albums,' in what became the 
greatest treasure hunt
in history," Edsel stated.

"The Monuments Men set the standard for the protection of artistic 
and cultural treasures
during armed conflict.  It is my hope, and the goal of the Monuments 
Men Foundation,
that their rich legacy will finally be used in a manner befitting 
their contribution to
our world.  Their legacy belongs not just to Americans, but to people 
of good will in all
countries who believe these treasures should be protected from armed 
conflict and
preserved for the benefit of civilization," Edsel stated.

During the latter part of April and first part of May 1945 elements 
of the United States
Army recovered some of the ERR photographic albums.  These albums 
were turned over to the
Monuments Men and were subsequently stored at the Munich Central 
Collecting Point where
they were used in identifying art work to be restituted.

Today the National Archives has custody of the 39 original ERR 
photograph albums that were
discovered at Neuschwanstein, where the Germans, in April 1945, had 
placed them for
safekeeping. In late 1945, this set of 39 albums was used as evidence 
at the Nuremberg
trials to document the massive Nazi art looting operations.

Until now it was believed that the missing ERR albums had been 
destroyed during the latter
days of World War II.  But thanks to Mr. Edsel's efforts two more 
albums have been
recovered and will undoubtedly serve as useful sources for 
documenting not only Nazi art
looting but also establishing the provenance of art works and, 
perhaps, in facilitating
the restitution of long-alienated works of art.

*   *   *

For press information, contact the National Archives Public Affairs 
staff at 202-357-5300.

08-22

http://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2008/nr08-22.html



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