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Julius Erasmus (1895/1971), a German Cpt, returned to Hürtgen Forest in 1945, having lost his family and home to the war. Erasmus was shocked to find so many fallen soldiers bodies abandoned and decided to bury them in Vossenack cemetery, Germany.
The war took his family and his home. In 1945 Julius Erasmus returned to the Hürtgen Forest. On his own initiative he started to salvage the bodies of the soldiers who had died during the fighting. Altogether he buried 1569 German soldiers who nowadays rest in the military cemetery in Vossenack.
“I returned to Vossenack in the summer of 1945â€, he reported afterwards, “the war had taken everything from me. Then I saw them, lying by the roadsides, on the edge of the woods and under fallen trees. I just wasn’t able to ignore these bodies, unburied and forgotten. They preyed on my mind.†Erasmus decided to give them a respectful grave.
After burying about 120 corpses on the edge of the woods, the local authorities provided him with some space in the public cemetery. Men from the village started helping Erasmus, who became known as the ‘undertaker of Vossenack’. One of them was the local parish priest, Father Eschweiler, who became a close friend, and together they searched the forest. By August 1949, nearly 800 soldiers had been given a final resting place. But Erasmus didn’t stop.
He salvaged 1569 German bodies from the forest. He collected as much personal data as possible and carpentered simple wooden crosses for every grave. When the Vossenack public cemetery ran out of burial space, the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge established today’s war cemetery on Hill 470, a scene of fierce fighting. Erasmus was employed by the organisation. Being known as somewhat idiosyncratic, he spent his next 15 years living alone in a cottage near the cemetery. Julius Erasmus left Vossenack in the 1960s. In 1971 he died in Nideggen-Abendenen and was largely forgotten by people.
A memorial stone dedicated to Julius Erasmus is on display at the Soldatenfriedhof Vossenack.
The war took his family and his home. In 1945 Julius Erasmus returned to the Hürtgen Forest. On his own initiative he started to salvage the bodies of the soldiers who had died during the fighting. Altogether he buried 1569 German soldiers who nowadays rest in the military cemetery in Vossenack.
“I returned to Vossenack in the summer of 1945â€, he reported afterwards, “the war had taken everything from me. Then I saw them, lying by the roadsides, on the edge of the woods and under fallen trees. I just wasn’t able to ignore these bodies, unburied and forgotten. They preyed on my mind.†Erasmus decided to give them a respectful grave.
After burying about 120 corpses on the edge of the woods, the local authorities provided him with some space in the public cemetery. Men from the village started helping Erasmus, who became known as the ‘undertaker of Vossenack’. One of them was the local parish priest, Father Eschweiler, who became a close friend, and together they searched the forest. By August 1949, nearly 800 soldiers had been given a final resting place. But Erasmus didn’t stop.
He salvaged 1569 German bodies from the forest. He collected as much personal data as possible and carpentered simple wooden crosses for every grave. When the Vossenack public cemetery ran out of burial space, the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge established today’s war cemetery on Hill 470, a scene of fierce fighting. Erasmus was employed by the organisation. Being known as somewhat idiosyncratic, he spent his next 15 years living alone in a cottage near the cemetery. Julius Erasmus left Vossenack in the 1960s. In 1971 he died in Nideggen-Abendenen and was largely forgotten by people.
A memorial stone dedicated to Julius Erasmus is on display at the Soldatenfriedhof Vossenack.
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