The Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp

Welcome this new archive relating and dedicated to the men and women service personnel and the part they played at the Liberation and subsequent Humanitarian Effort of the Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp in 1945: The Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp.
UPDATE: 15th April, 2025. 80th Anniversary.
Thank you to everyone
for submitting a name/details to coincide with the anniversary of the liberation of Bergen Belsen – we’ll go through all your submissions, moderate and add them on. If you have a photo or any more details please email us. Thank you.
liberator@belsen.co.uk

We are now inviting any relatives of service personnel who may have been at the camp to get in touch. Any regiment, service, nationality, volunteer or any snippet of information – we would like to hear from you. We do not believe there are any records of the diverse group of men and women, many completely untrained, who were involved with the camp, after it’s liberation.

Those That Served

Latest | A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z | Submit a name
Showing 10 most recent names in this directory
Menzies, A (Captain)
Celle: There for several weeks, the Nazi war criminal was placed under the charge of Captain A. Menzies from Eaton Road in St Helens Kramer was allowed half-an-hour's exercise in the prison yard each morning and Captain Menzies allowed him to have two blankets, instead of the standard one. "Somebody took them from him, but I got them restored to him because he was in such a state I didn't think he would live to meet his trial, and I wanted him to." In September 1945, when home on leave in Dentons Green
Submitted by: Belsen Archive

Clokey, Kenneth
29th Armoured Brigade of 11 Armoured Division More
Submitted by: Belsen Archive

Green, Fredrick
My grandfather who was part of D Section, 309, Supply & Transport Column, 83 Group 2ns Tactical Air Force. I have a photo of him with his unit lined up in front of military vehicles in May 1945. I understand he was part of one of the first serving group of military personnel to reach the camp in April 1945. I'd be happy to share the photograph. And in a strange twist of fate, I now live in Lower Saxony, only 80km away from Belsen. Hi Howard - thank you for this we'd love to see the photo and add a page for Frederick. Please email us: liberator@belsen.co.uk
Submitted by: Howard Stimpson

Lickman, Cyril John Edward (113th LAA)
113th Durham light AA
Submitted by: Paul Lickman

Kenneth John, Holmes
Tank driver 79th armoured division.
Submitted by: Mike Holmes

Whiteman, Denis John
My late father Denis John Whiteman was in 11 Air Formation Signal, Royal Signals Regiment. They provided communications between the airfield and military headquarters (the first between an airfield and General Montgomery). His unit landed in Normandy on Gold Beach. He helped put in an airfield at Arnheim, provided telephone lines for ground observers to direct bombing and ditto for the Rhine crossing. I did not learn that my father's unit had been in Belsen until well into my teens. He was reluctant to talk about it and I asked him several times before he told me briefly. Dad said that when he arrived at Belsen in spring 1945 (17th April?), a couple of days after it had been liberated by the British, there were no inmates to be seen. Typhus was rife, and they were all locked away in huts being cared for by Red Cross workers. He said that a huge deep pit the size of a football pitch had been dug in the camp, and machines were bringing over and loading bodies into the mass grave. German locals from all around the camp were being forced at rifle-point to walk around the pit and see for themselves what was happening. He saw the crematorium oven at Bergen-Belsen. He had other appalling war memories dating from his time in France and Germany.
Submitted by: Yvonne Whiteman

Spicer, WRC Lt. Col (RAMC)
My father, Lt. Colonel WRC Spicer was an RAMC officer who was in the group which liberated Belsen in April 1945. I attach a letter he wrote from Belsen to his older brother who was serving as a doctor in the Royal Navy. His younger brother was a doctor in the RAF. More to follow...
Submitted by: Richard Spicer

Davies, James Harold
My father, James Harold Davies was serving with an armoured division at the relief of the concentration camp. His job was relieving all the German officers of their insignia, badges, medals etc as they were all reduced to the rank of private thereby avoiding the need to treat them with respect. That apart, he never spoke of the horrors he witnessed. He served in north africa, Burma and other theatres being awarded a BEM for services to his regiment
Submitted by: Kevill Davies

Brooks, Leslie (63rd ATR)
My grandad Lance corporal Leslie Brooks was among the first to liberate the camp, he was a medic attached to the 63rd regiment. I’ve been doing research and I’ve found my grandad in part of some footage for the liberation of the camp. I’ve applied for his army records and I’m just waiting to receive them. Unfortunately my grandad passed away when I was 12 but my dad heard all of his stories and shares them with us. I have his medals and pictures of him in the blood transfusion hospital in Bristol, I’ve found his name in the London gazette on the 8th November 1945 for an act of heroism.
Submitted by: Emma Brooks

Freer, Arthur (39 Kinema section)
My father, Arthur Freer, pte number 14205665 of R.A.O.C. visited the Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp at the end of ww11 with his unit 39 Kinema section. My mother told me that he never spoke about it. My father died in 1964 and being a child then,I did not have those conversations with him that I might have had later in life. He was posted ultimately to Ploen in Schleswig Holstein where he met my mother. They married in Peterborough in 1947. Love conquers all! Just wanted to share this after the Holocaust Memorial Day.
Submitted by: Rita E Cole, nee Freer


Submit a name

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Liberation of Bergen Belsen
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
Lilian Levy, Helen Bamber, Sara Kraus-Lefkovitz, Lady Zahava Kohn and Mirjam Finklestein remember Bergen-Belsen. Source: AJR Refugee Voices Testimony Archive Read more
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
My grandpa Joe Stone, who was a Jewish doctor in the British Army division that liberated Belsen, becoming heavily involved Read more
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Tribute paid to 101-year-old WWII veteran Hector Duff. Hector Hugh McDonald Duff OBE, BEM, MM, TH, husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, Read more
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
A super photo of B Troop, Anti Tank Regt. 249 Battery. (Oxford Yeomanry). The unit were ‘first in’ Belsen. 15th Read more
M.G. Morrison
Reverend Leslie Henry Hardman MBE HCF (18 February 1913 – 7 October 2008) was an Orthodox Rabbi and the first Read more
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
Members of 370 Battery of the 113th DLI - LAA (Light Anti-Aircraft). Can you help recognise anyone here? G Troop, Read more
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
A photo discussing the terms of the truce. Richard. I. G (Dick) Taylor, (Lieutenant-Colonel) (63rd ATR) (left on pic) Commanding Read more
Liberation of Bergen Belsen
I am responding to your request for information about the liberation of the Bergen Belsen camp in May 1945. My Read more

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Liberation of Bergen Belsen

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This site will progress and I’d encourage anyone with any info to get in touch. My granddad, Reg Price served with the 113th Durham Light Infantry*, as part of 369 Battery. As a signwriter, he produced this sign…

Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp
The Sign at the Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp

And this was kept in the family for years – so for the 75th anniversary of the Liberation of Belsen in 2020, subsequent VE Day and VJ Day, I thought it’s about time I’d try to find out more about Reg – his comrades (many of which are names, simply written on the back of photos), what they did together and for a way to remember them all, properly.
Read here about The Heroes of Belsen.

*Just 113th Durham Light Infantry? No we are interested in all Service and Medical personnel who took part during the humanitarian effort at Belsen Concentration Camp. Their roles and names are largely forgotten, as many were too horrified to ever speak of what they had to do, so this archive seeks to form a tribute to ALL those that were there, to find out more and to remember them.
If you have a relative, or any info, on the relief effort at Belsen, we’d love you to please get in touch. Email us: liberator@belsen.co.uk – Thank you

***

UPDATE: 2025. Apologies for the ridiculous amount of Google adverts within the site. We are looking into changing this, to a more appropriate level. That said, the adverts do generate income to keep this site going.

The Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp

Any 113th Durham Light Infantry friends or family are encouraged to get in touch via 113th@belsen.co.uk

** In 1938 the old 5th Battalion DLI changed its role to Searchlights and then in 1940 to Anti-Aircraft. This 113th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment went to Normandy in June 1944 and joined the advance into Germany in early 1945.
Official designation – Brigade: 100 AA • Division: 30 Corps. • Unit: 113 LAA Regt. RA (DLI) TA.

The Liberation of Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp
Names of British soldiers who liberated Belsen

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