Devizes Plot

The Devizes plot was a plan for approximately 7000 German prisoners of war held at Le Marchant Barracks to escape and attack London. Conspirators planned the breakout for a date close to Christmas 1944, in the belief that Le Marchant would have less guards due to Christmas festivities. The plot was foiled after german-speaking American soldiers visited Le Marchant and overheard a prisoner talking about the "arms store" of the camp. The conspirators were subsequently sent to Cultybraggan Camp in Comrie where they murdered Feldwebel Wolfgang Rosterg, who they wrongly believed had been an informant of their plans to the British authorities. Six prisoners were convicted of Rosterg's murder, of which five were hung at Pentonville Prison in the last such mass-execution of Britain.
Background
Britain had seen its PoWs attempt to escape numerous times; the vast majority of these ended in failure. 97 Italian PoWs had escaped from a camp in Ayr close to the time of the Devizes plot, but were recaptured.[1]
Plot
The leadership behind the Devizes plot is disputed among sources. Many attribute leadership to Warrant Officer Erich Pallme-Koenig. This version was used by The Guardian and the Gazette and Herald in their descriptions of the plot.[1][2] However a 1996 account of the plot by Roderick de Normann disagrees, naming the prisoners Obergefreiter Wunderlich and Korporal Hermann Storch as the main conspirators.[3] Normann was only able to find official documents containing Koenig upon his involvement in the lynching of Feldwebel Wolfgang Rosterg at Cultybraggan camp.[4]

A group of prisoners was sent to survey the surrounding area for usable airfields that could be seized after the escape. They successfully cut through the perimeter fence with homemade wire cutters. Upon return to the camp two days later, the group claimed to have been lost in the local countryside due to a the removal of roadsigns.[5]
The escape was planned for a date close to Christmas 1944.[1][2] The conspirators believed that there would be less guards in the camp, and the remaining guards would be distracted due to the festivities.[1] It was estimated that 7,000 PoWs could escape from Le Marchant, who would proceed to seize RAF Yatesbury and gain access to equipment such as aircraft and armoured vehicles.[2] The prisoners would then liberate more PoWs held at another camp in Sheffield.[2]
The ultimate goal of the plot was to attack London, thereby stalling the Allied advance on Germany.[2]
Discovery and British response
The British first became aware of the plot through two German-speaking Americans who were visiting Le Marchant, who overheard Koenig say "The arms store is the key."[2] The Americans reported this to the chief interpreter of the camp, who ordered the re-interrogation of the prisoners in the scouting group.[6] Covert listening devices placed around the camp were re-activated, which gave away details of the plot to the camp's commanders.[2]
Aftermath

Anyone suspected of involvement in the Devizes plot was sent to Cultybraggan Camp,[2] one of two maximum-security PoW camps in Britain at the time.[7] Approximately 30 prisoners were transferred from Le Marchant to Cultybraggan by bus.[8] Among the people sent to Cultybraggan was Feldwebel Wolfgang Rosterg, who worked as an interpreter at Le Marchant.[1] Rosterg was a prisoner with known anti-Nazi views who had deserted in France, who openly spoke out against the Nazi Party,[1][9] and it is likely that he was moved to Cultybraggan due to a clerical error.
Lynching of Wolfgang Rosterg
Prisoners involved in the Devizes plot incorrectly believed Rosterg had informed the British of their plan and had been sent to Cultybraggan to continue spying on them. Their suspicions were further raised after he asked for a copy of "die Wochenpost", a PoW newspaper which was produced by the foreign office and widely regarded by other prisoners as British propaganda.[10] Rosterg's was made to face a kangaroo court in hut 4 of compound B. His documents were seized and distributed amongst bystanders as evidence of treason.[11] He beaten to death by prisoners after failing to respond questioning, some armed with with iron bars, and his body was hung in a toilet block.[12][13]
Conviction of murderers
Rosterg's body was discovered by authorities at the camp's 8:30 AM roll call. Medical staff at the camp believed they saw vital signs and attempted resuscitation but were ultimately unsuccessful.[14] An autopsy of Rosterg's body determined he had died to strangulation.[15]

Twelve prisoners were initially indicted over the murder of Rosterg, but charges were dropped against four of them because of insufficient evidence. On 2 July 1945, the remaining eight were tried in a military court at the London Cage. All defendants pled not guilty.[16] The prisoners argued that Rosterg deserved to be killed for being a traitor to Germany, with the defending officer referencing a similar case where British PoWs held at Breslau had killed an officer they believed had betrayed escape plans to the German authorities. No action had been taken against the British PoWs involved in the Breslau lynching.[1] The judge preceding over the case accepted that Rosterg would have been seen as deserving of contempt from the Germans' point of view. Two prisoners were acquitted, one was sentenced to life imprisonment and the remaining five were sentenced to death.[1] The executions of prisoners Pallme-Koenig, Karl Zühlsdorff, Joachim Goltz, Josef Mertens and Heinz Brüling were carried out at 9 AM, 6 October 1945 by Albert Pierrepoint in Pentonville prison. This was the largest mass-execution in the United Kingdom since 1883, when the perpetrators of the Phoenix Park murders were hung,[17] and the last mass-execution in Britain.[1]
In popular culture
The Devizes plot was first publicly described in "The London Cage" by Alexander Scotland.[18] Scotland had been commander of an MI19 facility of the same name, which was used to interrogate PoWs.[CN] Scotland's account of the plot differed from what had been written by his staff at the time of the plot.[18] The death of Rosterg formed part of the plot of "Black Camp 21", a 2018 novel by Bill Jones. Jones was inspired to write the book because he had slept in a Nissen hut at Cultybraggan as a child.[19]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i McKie, David (2004-12-23). "A grisly Christmas tale". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-05-09.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Cowen, Lewis (10 July 2008). "Grisly tale of revenge". The Gazette and Herald. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. 84–85, 88–89. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. p. 121. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2017). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittles Publishing. p. 81. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2017). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittles Publishing. p. 82. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Comrie, Cultybraggan Former Cadet Camp, Huts 19 and 20 (Guard's Block) and 44, 45, 46 (Category A Listed Building LB50471)". Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2017). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittles Publishing. p. 80. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. p. 118. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. 118–119. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2017). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittles Publishing. p. 85. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2016). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittles Publishing. pp. 85–86. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. 123–129. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. 129–130. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ Campbell, Valerie (2016). Camp 21 Comrie. Whittle Publishing. p. 87. ISBN 9781849952279.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. 158–159. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ a b De Normann, Roderick (1996). For Führer and Fatherland: SS Murder and Mayhem in Wartime Britain. Sutton Publishing. pp. ix. ISBN 9780750917261.
- ^ Bryce, Tracey (22 October 2018). "Writer unravels mystery of Nazi's death behind the wire in little known Scottish prisoner of war camp". The Sunday Post. Retrieved 9 May 2024.