Bernstein |
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Bernstein is a small village about 80km south of Vienna, in a region of rolling hills and woodland known as Burgenland. The village is dominated by the Castle.
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Map of Austria. |
As a curious historical side note, the Baron's younger brother, Count Ladislaus Almasy, is the real life character upon whom the book and film, 'The English Patient' is based. Ladislaus was a mysterious figure who spent much of his life on mapping expeditions in North Africa and may have been a German agent during the war.
The Almasy family still own the castle, which is now a hotel. For more information on the hotel and the Almasy family, visit the Burg Bernstein Web Site
In August 2002, I visited Bernstein Castle with Chris, my son. Frau Berger-Almasy (who is the granddaughter of the baron and now runs the hotel with her husband) was kind enough to take the time to show us around the grounds and to point out many of the locations of the war-time photographs that I had brought along. With the exception of the trees which had grown taller in the intervening years, very little, if anything, had changed since 1944. It was a very strange feeling to be standing on exactly the same spot as my father had 58 years ago.
This photomontage was made as a Christmas Card in 1943. It includes pictures of all of the members of Arbeitskommando (Work Party) 99/L, taken on one occasion during 1943.
(Click on selected images or a name below for a larger picture or more information.)
On the back of the card are the following names:
Ron Tudor - Birkenhead
"Jacko" Jackson - Manchester
Stan Hockley - Portsmouth
Bill Thorpe - Walsall
Ernie Jackson - Baldock, Herts
Arthur Kemp - Sheffield
Tom Boyle - Otago, N.Z.
Tommy Hales - London
Jock Brown - Greenock
Ken Hudson - Leeds
Ron Harvey - London
Eddie Hopwood - Wrexham
Arbeits Kommando 99/L were first kept in a small compound in Bernstein but were soon transferred to a room in the Castle. This was where the POW's would be kept for the night. During the day they would be taken out to work wherever it was needed, usually on the local farms. My father and Arthur Kemp, another POW, were sent to work on a farm owned by a Herr Funuvits situated about 2 miles outside Bernstein.
The room in the castle was locked at night and the window was barred. On the far side was the castle wall. The guard slept, with his wife, in the room above but this did not prove to be much of a deterrent. Behind a large wardrobe in the room, the POW's discovered a door which opened into the next room. Here the window was not barred and it was possible to get out into the castle grounds and then down a metal pipe by the swimming pool and out of the castle into the village to spend the night fraternizing with the local girls, before climbing back into the castle in the morning.(The photograph of the swimming pool shown above was taken by Bert Jackson in 1967.)
Unfortunately, in 2002, the room previously occupied by the POWs was now occupied by a hotel guest! However, Herr Berger-Almasy did show me the room underneath which the POWs used as a kitchen. Behind the building is a deep well, and Herr Berger-Almasy told me that it is still possible to find the contents of Red Cross parcels at the bottom of the well and in the woods beyond the castle walls.
Pictures taken at Bernstein Castle | ||
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| Group in the garden | Arthur Kemp outside the Castle | Group in the garden |
| (Click on a picture for a larger image.) | ||
Comparison pictures taken in 2002 | ||
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| The garden wall | Chris outside the Castle | Chris in the garden |
| (Click on a picture for a larger image.) | ||