12th April 1945
Channel Islanders liberated from prisons across Germany
Channel Islanders sentenced during the Occupation to anything but the shortest prison term were routinely shipped out to mainland Europe. They were initially held in France before being transported east to prisons or camps in Germany itself.
Many remained in custody at the end of the war, and Allied forces liberated them as they continued their push across central Europe. For many Channel Islanders, freedom finally arrived on 12 April 1945, just short of a month before German forces on Jersey and Guernsey signed the Allies’ instrument of surrender.
Prisoners split up
Prisoners from Jersey, Guernsey and Sark were sent, variously, to Seigburg, Saarbrucken, Naumburg, Magdeburg, Shonebeck and Gommern prisons, and camps at Wille and Kirschau-Bautzen. Seigburg and Saarbrucken remain in use to this day as conventional prisons.
Although many Channel Islanders entered the German prison system through the same small number of channels, there was little chance of them remaining together throughout their sentence, or of new inmates being sent to prisons or camps where other Channel Islanders were already serving sentences. Even those who had been tried together, such as the members of the St Saviour Wireless group or the Guernsey Underground News Service members who had been similarly convicted of disseminating BBC news reports after the confiscation of all radios, were split up and detained in ones or twos across Germany and France.
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Other events that occured in April
The States starts dismantling Jersey Railway
- After a fire, and facing stiff competition from road transport, Jersey Railway was sold to the States, which began demolishing the track.
- Read more…
Children discover a body in the sand dunes
- Alan and Ann Heath found the body of 45-year-old John Perree, who had been killed when he was shot in the face.
- Read more…
The St Saviour wireless case show trial
- By 1943, the war was turning against Germany, and its forces realised they needed to control the flow of information. They banned radios.
- Read more…
Historian George Balleine is born
- George Balleine was honorary librarian of the Société Jersiaise, which gave him the opportunity to produce written works on Jersey’s history.
- Read more…