Gerhard Rundberg EGerhard Rundberg E
13 March

Friedrichsruh

At 12:30 a.m., after a couple of air raid alarms and some navigational errors, mostly due to the blackout, we arrived at Friedrichsruh, which would serve as our main headquarters throughout our stay in Germany. The town is dominated by the magnificent Bismarck Castle, which was handed over to Prince Otto von Bismarck by the German people. In addition, the site includes two inns, Forsthaus Bollow and Gasthaus Kitzing, a small sawmill, and about ten residential houses.

On the first night, as many people as possible were accommodated in the two inns. Gasthaus Kitzing housed all the nurses in a couple of larger rooms. Forsthaus Bollow, which featured a few large halls previously used as a training camp by the world-famous German heavyweight boxer Max Schmeling, took in as many men as could possibly be squeezed into the straw. In a tiny upstairs room, I was lodged together with a priest and an officer.

In this room, which has three beds, up to six people would sleep at times. Some officers were quartered in Bismarck Castle itself. On the first night, several men also slept in the castle’s hall and dining room. I believe, however, that everyone slept soundly, for the exhaustion from this 23-hour bus journey was universal.