She was indicted for concealing, since October 1945, a pair of important Nazis by a military court of the United States. She confessed to knowingly sheltering FrauGertrud Scholtz-Klink and her spouse, former SS Maj. General August Heissmayer.[2][3]
The Princess was aware that Frau Scholtz-Klink was the head of the Nazi women's organizations, but she denied that she had been aware of Heissmayer's SS position.[3]
Princess Pauline was bailed out of custody but scheduled for trial in March 1948.[3] She stated that she came to know Frau Scholtz-Klink during the years when both women headed significant institutions under the Nazis, the Princess asserting that she had then been the director of the German Red Cross for Hesse, Nassau, the Rhineland and Westphalia.[3]
Herr and Frau Scholtz-Klink informed the French that they asked for Princess Pauline's aid in 1945,[3] Princess Pauline arranged for them to stay inconspicuously in Bebenhausen, where they were arrested by Allied authorities.[2]
Prince Dietrich of Wied (30 October 1901 – 8 June 1976), married Countess Antoinette Julia von Grote, and had issue. The Countess was a niece of Countess Thyra von Grote, who married German diplomat Martin Rücker von Jenisch, in 1905,[5] She was also a niece of American expatriate Harry Van Bergen and a granddaughter of businessman Anthony T. Van Bergen.[6]
Descendants
Through Prince Dietrich, she was a grandmother of Maximilian, Prince of Wied (1929–2008), Ulrich, Prince of Wied (1931–2010) and Ludwig-Eugen, Prince of Wied (1938–2001). Her grandson Ulrich married Ilke Fischer and they were the parents of Ulrich, Prince of Wied (b. 1970), who married Clarissa Elizabeth Makepeace-Massingham (b. 1971); and Marie, Princess of Wied (b. 1973), who married Duke Friedrich of Württemberg (1961–2018), eldest son of Carl, Duke of Württemberg and heir to the House of Württemberg.[7] Duke Friedrich died in a car accident in 2018 and his funeral was attended by King Philippe and Queen Mathilde of Belgium, Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein, and Bernhard, Hereditary Prince of Baden.[8]
Ancestry
Ancestors of Princess Pauline of Württemberg (1877–1965)[1]
^ abGeorgia Commission on the Holocaust. Fashioning a Nation. retrieved 12 December 2018.
^ abcdeNew York Times. 3 March 1948. Princess indicted for helping the Nazis.
^C. Arnold McNaughton, The Book of Kings: A Royal Genealogy, in 3 volumes (London, U.K.: Garnstone Press, 1973), volume 1, page 226. Hereinafter cited as The Book of Kings