On this date, 2 June
1948, 7 of the 23 defendants at the Doctors’ Trials who were sentenced to death were
executed by hanging at Landsberg Prison. I will post the information about this
Doctor Death, Dr. Karl Gebhardt from Wikipedia.
Major General Karl
Gebhardt, brigade commander of the Waffen-SS
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Born
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23 November 1897
Haag in Oberbayern, German Empire |
Died
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2 June 1948 (aged 50)
Landsberg Prison, Landsberg am Lech, Germany |
Cause of death
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Execution by hanging
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Resting place
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Munich Ostfriedhof
Plot 8—Row 5—Grave 1/2 |
Nationality
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German
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Occupation
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Physician
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Known for
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Heinrich Himmler's personal physician
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Political party
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Nationalsozialistische Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei
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Criminal penalty
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War crimes, crimes against humanity
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Criminal status
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convicted in the Doctors' Trial (9 December 1946–20
August 1947), which was part of the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials
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Awards
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Knight's Cross of the War Merit Cross
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Karl Franz Gebhardt (23 November 1897 in Haag in Oberbayern – 2 June 1948 in
Landsberg Prison, Landsberg am Lech) was a German medical doctor. He served as
Medical Superintendent of the Hohenlychen Sanatorium, Consulting Surgeon of the
Waffen-SS, Chief Surgeon in the Staff of the Reich Physician SS and
Police, and personal physician to Heinrich Himmler.
Gebhardt
was the main coordinator of a series of surgical experiments performed on inmates
of the concentration camps at Ravensbrück and Auschwitz. These experiments were
an attempt to defend his approach to the surgical management of grossly
contaminated traumatic wounds, against the then-new innovations of antibiotic
treatment of injuries acquired on the battlefield.
During
the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Gebhardt stood trial in the Doctors' Trial
(American Military Tribunal No. I). He was convicted of war crimes and crimes
against humanity and condemned to death on 20 August 1947. He was hanged on 2
June 1948, in Landsberg Prison in Bavaria.
Career
before World War II
In
his student days Gebhardt had been a supporter of the national
counter-revolutionary movement and was active among other things in the
Volunteer Corps "the Upland Alliance." Gebhardt studied medicine in Munich
beginning in 1919. In 1924, after two years as an unpaid assistant physician he
received a post as an intern at the Surgical Clinic of the University of Munich.
Gebhardt trained under the tutelage of Ferdinand Sauerbruch and later under Erich
Lexer, finally gaining his habilitation in 1932. Gebhardt had a distinguished
career prior to World War II, contributing a great deal to the development of
the field of sports medicine. He wrote articles on physical medicine and
rehabilitation, a textbook on sports rehabilitation and he disseminated his
ideas in Germany and throughout the rest of Europe.
Gebhardt's
Nazi career began with him joining the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP, more commonly known as the Nazi Party) on 1 May
1933. In 1935, he moved to Berlin, where he was appointed associate professor.
That year, Gebhardt joined the Schutzstaffel (SS) and was also appointed
Medical Superintendent of Hohenlychen Sanatorium in the Uckermark, which he
changed from a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients into an orthopedic clinic.
At Hohenlychen Sanatorium, Gebhardt started the first sports medicine clinic in
Germany and developed sports programs for amputees and other disabled people.
Gebhardt was also appointed to the Deutsche Hochschule für Leibesübungen
(German College for Physical Education) in 1935, where he became the first
professor of sports medicine in Berlin.
In
1936 he distinguished himself in his post as a head of the Medical Department
of the Akademie für Sport und Leibeserziehung (Academy for Exercise and
Physical Training) as senior physician of the 1936 Summer Olympics. Hohenlychen
Sanatorium became the sports sanatorium for the Third Reich and served as the
central hospital for the athletes who participated in the 1936 Summer Olympics.
In 1937 he became chair holder for orthopedic surgery at the University of
Berlin. In 1938, Gebhardt was appointed as Heinrich Himmler's personal
physician. He also served as President of the German Red Cross.
Karl Gebhardt |
World
War II
Gebhardt
served as Chief Surgeon of the Staff of the Reich during World War II,
and under his direction the Hohenlychen Sanatorium became a military hospital
for the Waffen-SS.
On
27 May 1942, Himmler ordered Gebhardt dispatched to Prague in order to attend
to Reinhard Heydrich, who was wounded by an anti-tank grenade during Operation Anthropoid earlier that day. Heydrich was SS-Obergruppenführer and General
der Polizei, and the acting Reichsprotektor of the Protectorate of
Bohemia and Moravia. When Heydrich developed a fever after surgery for his
extensive wounds, Theodor Morell, personal physician to Adolf
Hitler, suggested to Gebhardt that he should treat Heydrich with sulfonamide
(an early antibiotic). Gebhardt refused Morell's advice, expecting Heydrich to
recover without antibiotic therapy. Heydrich died of sepsis on 4 June 1942,
eight days after the attack. Gebhardt's refusal to prescribe sulfonamide
contributed to Heydrich's death and had many unfortunate implications for
concentration camp prisoners, upon whom he later conducted medical experiments.
In
early 1944, Gebhardt treated Albert Speer for fatigue and a swollen knee. He
nearly killed Speer until he was replaced by another doctor, Dr. Friedrich
Koch, who intervened on Speer's behalf. Gebhardt eventually rose to the rank of
Gruppenführer in the Allgemeine SS and a Generalleutnant
in the Waffen-SS.
By
22 April 1945, the Soviet Army was massing to the immediate east of Berlin and Joseph
Goebbels brought his wife and children into the Vorbunker. German
dictator Adolf Hitler and a few loyal personnel were present in the adjoining Führerbunker
to direct the final defence of Berlin. Gebhardt, in his capacity as leader of
the German Red Cross, approached Goebbels about taking the children out of the
city with him, but he was dismissed by Goebbels.
The main gate at the
former German Nazi death camp of Auschwitz II (Birkenau). Note that this is
inside the camp looking back from the loading ramp to the "Gate of
Death".
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Medical
experiments in concentration camps
During
the war, Gebhardt conducted medical and surgical experiments on prisoners in
the concentration camps at Ravensbrück (which was close to Hohenlychen
Sanatorium) and Auschwitz. At Ravensbruck he had initially faced opposition
from camp commandant Fritz Suhren, who feared future legal problems given the
status of most camp inmates as political prisoners, but the SS leadership
backed Gebhardt and Suhren was forced to cooperate.
Gebhardt
was blamed for the death of Reinhard Heydrich, which some believed could have
been prevented had Heydrich been treated with sulfonamide. Himmler suggested to
Gebhardt that he should conduct experiments proving that sulfonamide was
useless in the treatment of gangrene and sepsis. In order to vindicate his
decision to not administer sulfa drugs in treating Heydrich’s wounds, he
carried out a series of experiments on Ravensbrück concentration camp
prisoners, breaking their legs and infecting them with various organisms in
order to prove the worthlessness of the drugs in treating gas gangrene. He also
attempted to transplant the limbs from camp victims to German soldiers wounded
on the Russian front. The Ravensbrück experiments were slanted in Gebhardt’s
favor; women in the sulfonamide-treated experimental group received little or
no nursing care, while those in the untreated control group received better
care. Not surprisingly, those in the control group were more likely to survive
the experiments.
Photograph of Karl
Gebhardt as a defendant in the Doctors' Trial at Nuremberg. Courtesy of the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum.
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Doctors Trials [PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.holocaust-history.org/hirt/] |
Trial
and execution
During
the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Gebhardt stood trial in the Doctors' Trial (9
December 1946–20 August 1947), along with 22 other doctors. He was found
guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to death on 20
August 1947. He was hanged on 2 June 1948, in Landsberg Prison in Bavaria.
Two
of Gebhardt's assistants were also tried and convicted at Nuremberg. Fritz
Fischer worked in the hospital of the Ravensbrück concentration camp as a
surgical assistant to Gebhardt, and participated in the surgical experiments
carried out on the inmates.
He was initially condemned to life imprisonment, but his sentence was reduced
to 15 years in 1951 and he was released in March 1954. Fischer
subsequently regained his medical license and resumed his career at the
chemical company Boehringer Ingelheim, where he remained employed until his
retirement. He died in 2003 at the age of 90.
Herta
Oberheuser was another of Gebhardt's assistants at the Ravensbrück
concentration camp. She was the only female defendant in the Doctors' Trial,
where she was sentenced to 20 years in prison. She was released in April
1952 and became a family doctor in Stocksee, Germany. She lost her position in
1956 after a Ravensbrück survivor recognized her, and her medical license was
revoked in 1958. She died on 24 January 1978 at the age of 66.
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