Erna Beilhardt
Erna Beilhardt (born 7 February 1907, date of death unknown) was a German female guard at several nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. A member of the SS-Aufseherin, or overseer, Beilhardt was also a nurse affiliated with the German Red Cross during the last year of World War II.[1]
Erna Beilhardt | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | Unknown |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | SS-Aufseherin |
Career
Beilhardt arrived at the Stutthof concentration camp in the fall of 1944, and was trained as an auxiliary guard (Hilfsaufseherin). Beilhardt remained at the central Stutthof camp from 18 September 1944 until 11 October 1944, when she attended an overseer program for six weeks and was then moved to the Stutthof Heiligenbeil subcamp.
On 20 January 1945, Beilhardt accompanied the evacuation of prisoners to Königsberg, where she performed nursing duties on injured German soldiers under the German Red Cross.
Later in 1945, Beilhardt was again present at the main camp at Stutthof. Captured by Soviet troops after the war, Beilhardt was accused during the first Stutthof trials (25 April – 31 May 1946) of maltreatment of concentration camp prisoners. She was sentenced to five years' imprisonment.[2]
Beilhardt's final fate remains unknown, though some sources indicate that she died in 1946.
References
- The Encyclopedia of the Camps, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, p. 1459
- "Stutthof trial and inspection of the camp - Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum". collections.ushmm.org. Retrieved 2020-06-26.