1945 Lost German girl

Discussions on the role played by and situation of women in the Third Reich not covered in the other sections. Hosted by Vikki.
Post Reply
User avatar
Adibach
Member
Posts: 55
Joined: 18 Nov 2010, 08:45
Location: Post Falls Idaho

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1426

Post by Adibach » 01 Sep 2014, 02:06

I really hope this is true

brick2
Member
Posts: 149
Joined: 14 Oct 2009, 02:46

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1427

Post by brick2 » 01 Sep 2014, 06:12

Unfortunately not enough information supplied to verify the claim


history1
Banned
Posts: 4095
Joined: 31 Oct 2005, 10:12
Location: Austria

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1428

Post by history1 » 01 Sep 2014, 08:21

Hi Carsten,

your source leads to a dead link (Not Found-Error 404).

mvrichthofen
New member
Posts: 1
Joined: 02 Sep 2014, 03:31

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1429

Post by mvrichthofen » 02 Sep 2014, 03:39

@ Carsten Bergman's post

The first link I believe should be: http://sites.google.com/site/freegermanancestry/

Nonetheless, most of those links are useless, and I searched the couple that work with that name and found nothing!

The second link has two search engines, the one at the top searches myheritage.com and the other one in the page that does basically nothing.

I think he just wanted to create traffic to his site. The fact that he miss-spelled Geneological should be a hint.

Raven(CZ)
Member
Posts: 18
Joined: 05 Jun 2014, 11:45

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1430

Post by Raven(CZ) » 02 Sep 2014, 13:22

I agree with mvrichthofen, not much information, where and how did he get that information. I think it's false information.

Because my idea is now few pages later, I will write it again. If anybody from USA could search National Archives for report of the unit that was operating in the area (specific numbers and names can be found few pages later, or I will write them again). It would help us at least identify the unit of the dead SS soldiers and bring us closer to her identification.

I guess information like, she was my grandmother, her name is... etc. will show up from time to time. It's "Internet"... you know. ;)

billdi
Member
Posts: 13
Joined: 02 Sep 2014, 19:03

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1431

Post by billdi » 02 Sep 2014, 19:35

The information provided by Carsten Bergman needs attention. He gives two data that can be checked. First that she was born in the tiny village of Kollerbach between Passau and Linz on the 3rd Feb, 1921. Second that she has worked for Panam airlines between 1965 and 1985. Those are two concrete data. The city hall and airline company must have records or archives somewhere. Finally we could contact Carsten directly, but for that we need the help of the webmaster.

Raven(CZ)
Member
Posts: 18
Joined: 05 Jun 2014, 11:45

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1432

Post by Raven(CZ) » 02 Sep 2014, 20:44

Because my german language is not so good, I checked only 3 German genealogy and POW sites, no match, according to give data, was found.
Carsten Bergman wrote: No specific information available regarding ww2.
With this given information, how he can be sure about her identity? How did he found the data, how did he identified her, what were the sources he used? Without any more evidence, I won't believe this is true.

User avatar
Dwight Pruitt
Member
Posts: 448
Joined: 26 Aug 2002, 06:53
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Contact:

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1433

Post by Dwight Pruitt » 03 Sep 2014, 18:44

billdi wrote: Second that she has worked for Panam airlines between 1965 and 1985. Those are two concrete data. The city hall and airline company must have records or archives somewhere.
PanAm ceased operations and went out of business in 1991.

uhu
Member
Posts: 405
Joined: 05 Jan 2004, 14:00
Location: US

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1434

Post by uhu » 04 Sep 2014, 22:21

The best way to check this out is to look into the church records, starting with the town she was supposidly born in. If she's not listed I'd stop right there.

billdi
Member
Posts: 13
Joined: 02 Sep 2014, 19:03

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1435

Post by billdi » 04 Sep 2014, 22:58

Just sent an email to the "gemeinde kollerschlag" with this question to look it up in birth archives. Hopefully they give me answer

DD66
Member
Posts: 45
Joined: 25 Jun 2014, 23:36

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1436

Post by DD66 » 06 Sep 2014, 00:24

Even if Lara Bauer really did exist, it doesn't mean she is LGG.

"No specific information available regarding ww2." How can she be linked to LGG then?

ignacioosacar
Member
Posts: 311
Joined: 22 May 2008, 02:36
Location: Argentina

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1437

Post by ignacioosacar » 17 Sep 2014, 02:33

Dear Forum,

I do not understand what is the conection (if any) between Lara Bauer and LGG.

Cheers!

Ignacio

vonAue
New member
Posts: 1
Joined: 17 Sep 2014, 21:34

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1438

Post by vonAue » 17 Sep 2014, 21:39

If Lara Bauer really exist - the only way to check, that she was our LGG is to find her relatives and show them this video. Maybe some parts of her family still live in Kollerschlag - of course firstly we must have a proof, that Lara Bauer is a real person.

billdi
Member
Posts: 13
Joined: 02 Sep 2014, 19:03

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1439

Post by billdi » 21 Sep 2014, 18:19

I received no reply on my email to the town of kollerschag. Maybe the data provided by carsten bergman were false. He didn't reply on my request for contact neither. Gentlemen, it's time to forget about this mysterious and somewhat erotically attractive young helpless lady. It's too late now, she will not be identified anymore. After such long time she's back towards heaven.

goodbye to all

Dusty1945
Member
Posts: 19
Joined: 01 Jun 2012, 03:57

Re: 1945 Lost German girl

#1440

Post by Dusty1945 » 25 Sep 2014, 03:51

Lara Bauer...?

Hey everybody. I recently got in contact with a gentleman whom I thought was Oren Haglunds son. Turned out he is of no relation or so he claims. So bummer on that lead. I'll follow up on a couple other likely candidates...

Just trying to keep interest in this threads topic. Has anyone wondered if the lgg could have been related to the young boy at the bridge...possibly brother and sister or something of that sort. This video made me wonder just because the two individuals are edited back to back @8:20-9:40(link below) it just made me think, they're both civilian/auxiliary in german uniform who were brutalized for some kind of association with the Nazis in the same genaral area. I know it's a very thin possibility but just wondering what yall think.


Neat HD compilation video of LGG related footage.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRhXJs9TmVc

Just trying to keep this thread alive. Cheers.

Post Reply

Return to “Women in the Reich”