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Irma Grese was executed by the British hangman Albert Pierrepoint at Hameln prison on 13th December 1945. She was a female guard at Auschwitz and Belsen concentration camps.
Pierrepoint writes in his autobiography: "She was the bravest prisoner, man or woman, whom I ever hanged"
In Pierrepoint's biography, he describes the events leading up to Irma's execution and the hanging itself as follows :
"At last we finished noting the details of the men, and RSM O'Neil ordered 'bring out Irma Grese'. She walked out of her cell and came towards us laughing. She seemed as bonny a girl as one could ever wish to meet. She answered O'Neil's questions, but when he asked her age she paused and smiled. I found that we were both smiling with her, as if we realised the conventional embarrassment of a woman revealing her age. Eventually she said 'twenty-one,' which we knew to be correct. O'Neil asked her to step on to the scales. 'Schnell!' she said - the German for quick."
"The following morning we climbed the stairs to the cells where the condemned were waiting. A German officer at the door leading to the corridor flung open the door and we filed past the row of faces and into the execution chamber. The officers stood at attention. Brigadier Paton-Walsh stood with his wristwatch raised. He gave me the signal, and a sigh of released breath was audible in the chamber, I walked into the corridor. 'Irma Grese,' I called.
The German guards quickly closed all grills on twelve of the inspection holes and opened one door. Irma Grese stepped out. The cell was far too small for me to go inside, and I had to pinion her in the corridor. 'Follow me,' I said in English, and O'Neil repeated the order in German. At 9.34 a.m. she walked into the execution chamber, gazed for a moment at the officials standing round it, then walked on to the centre of the trap, where I had made a chalk mark. She stood on this mark very firmly, and as I placed the white cap over her hand she said in her languid voice 'Schnell'. The drop crashed down, and the doctor followed me into the pit and pronounced her dead. After twenty minutes the body was taken down and placed in a coffin ready for burial."
Irma Grese was just 22 years old.







It portrays Irma as a very proud person, unwilling to show remorse or guilty conscience. This leads me to conclude, either;
a. She was a fanatic nazi and a sadistic one at that,
b. the charges where blown out of proportion.
Ofcourse one should not take this single source, make conclusions like that and expect getting away with it.

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germangirl wrote:There is also a ghost story that surrounds Fraulein Grese's hanging. Something about she haunts Krema IV where she worked, like the Russian watchman who was put there after the war saw her ghost in the Krema and he didn't go back to the camp. A team of researchers also tried to spend the night in the Krema, but left before the night was out. There is also a supposed photo of the ghost in between two crematorium ovens, but looks rather fake to me.
What were the prisoners supposed to do when the whistle went?
(Irma's answers)
-- Fall in fives, and it was my duty to see that they did so. Dr. Mengele then came and made the selection. As I was responsible for the camp my duties were to know how many people were leaving and I had to count them, and I kept the figures in a strength book. After the selection took place they were sent into "B" Camp, and Dreshel telephoned and told me that they had gone to another camp in Germany for working purposes or for special treatment, which I thought was the gas chamber. I then put in my strength book either so many for transfer to Germany to another camp, or so many for S.B. (Sonder Behandlung). It was well known to the whole camp that S. B. meant the gas chamber.
Were you told anything about the gas chamber by your senior officers?
-- No, the prisoners told me about it.
You have been accused of choosing prisoners on these parades and sending them to the gas chamber. Have you done that?
-- No; I knew that prisoners were gassed.
Was it not quite simple to know whether or not the selection was for the gas chamber, because only Jews had to attend such selections?
-- I myself had only Jews in Camp "C."
Then they would all have to attend the selection for the gas chamber, would they not?
-- Yes.
As you were told to wait for the doctors you would know perfectly well what it was for?
-- No.
When these people were parading they were very often paraded naked and inspected like cattle to see whether they were fit to work or fit to die, were they not?
-- Not like cattle.
You were there keeping order, were you not, and if one ran away you brought her back and gave her a beating?
-- Yes.
Examination by her defense council (p. 251):

germangirl wrote:There is also a ghost story that surrounds Fraulein Grese's hanging. Something about she haunts Krema IV where she worked, like the Russian watchman who was put there after the war saw her ghost in the Krema and he didn't go back to the camp. A team of researchers also tried to spend the night in the Krema, but left before the night was out. There is also a supposed photo of the ghost in between two crematorium ovens, but looks rather fake to me.


michael mills wrote:Interestingly, the first of the documents written by Irma Grese, number 7 in the material linked by Der Alte, is a simple poem dated 13 September 1945, the date of Grese's arrival at the trial venue in Lüneburg, written in rhyming couplets.
In the poem, Grese shows herself to quite spirited, even to have a wry sense of humour. For example, she refers to the fact that she and the other defendants will be sitting in the dock for an estimated five weeks, and comments that her little bottom will be left rather sore!
The poem and letters show Grese to be a fairly normal, bright young woman, quite different from the perverted monster as which she has been portrayed.

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