Recollections
of capture by the Germans, imprisonment, and escape of Medal of Honor winner Lieutenant
Edouard Victor Isaacs, U.S.N. in 1918.
Navy
Department, Washington, D. C.
November 13, 1918.
November 13, 1918.
From:
Lieut. Edouard Victor Isaacs, U.S.N.
To: Secretary of the Navy,
To: Secretary of the Navy,
Subject: Report on Imprisonment in Germany
and escape therefrom.
About 1 a.m.
the U.90 cruising at 5 knots speed sighted us distant about 2000 yards. As
she found herself in the direct rays of the moon, she dropped back and trailed
us until she had obtained our base course. She then made a wide detour and
submerging, took up a position intercepting our base course and a few miles in
advance.
At 9 o'clock on
the morning of the 31st, I had gone off watch from my station in after-control
and was just finishing breakfast when the ship was rocked by a double
explosion. I immediately ran aft to my battle station, but before I reached it
another explosion occurred directly under No. 12 lifeboat. The submarine had
fired three torpedoes at us at a distance at about 800 yards, the first two
striking us forward near the bridge and the third one abaft the engine room.
She was 100 yards directly ahead of the Ryndam when she fired at us, so
she immediately submerged to a depth of 60 meters to avoid the Ryndam.
At ten minutes after nine, I received a report from the after repair party that
No. 5 and 6 holds were filled and the water approaching No. 2 deck. I reported
this to the Captain over the phone, and at 12 minutes after nine I received
orders to abandon ship. At 9.15, having made sure that all hands aft had
abandoned ship, I stepped from the quarterdeck upon a life raft floating
alongside.
All this time
the ship had been settling steadily, but practically on an even keel. By means
of the boats near us we were able to pull away from the sinking ship and to tie
together most of our life rafts. At 9.30 the ship went down and from then on,
top-masts and other debris were propelled out of the water amongst us in all
directions. I was on the life raft until 9.45, when one of our boats picked me
up.
About five
minutes later the submarine returned to the surface and made its way through
the nests of life rafts and boats. I lay down in the stern sheets and covered
the stripes on my sleeves with my body but the ruse was probably discovered for
the submarine approached to within 50 yards.
The Captain of
the submarine put his megaphone to his mouth and sang out "Come
aboard." We pulled alongside and I stepped aboard: as I did so a German
sailor came behind me and took my gun. I made my way to the conning tower,
where the captain asked me if I were the Commanding Officer of the President
Lincoln. I told him, "No" but that I thought the Captain had gone
down with the ship. He informed me that he was Captain Remy of the U.90,
and that he had orders to take the Senior naval officer prisoner whenever he
sunk a Navy ship; that I should remain aboard and point out the Captain to him,
or it would be necessary to take me instead. Accordingly we cruised slowly among
all the rafts and boats, and I sung out to different officers asking if they
had seen the Captain. After two or three negative answers I turned to Captain
Remy and told him that I was sure the Captain had gone down with the ship;
whereupon he sent me below, where I was given warm clothing and was allowed to
lie down in one of the bunks. I had previously been given a glass of sherry
when I stepped aboard the submarine.
Captain Remy
then turned away from the boats and rafts and cruised in a north-easterly
direction at 5 knots speed on the surface for the rest of the day. When he
sighted us the night before he was about 300 miles west of Brest on what he
called his cruising ground, so the following day he was back in position again.
This was June first.
Early in the
morning we intercepted a radio from one of our destroyers stating that the
survivors of the President Lincoln had been picked up and that a few
were missing. That afternoon we sighted two American destroyers -- apparently
the ones which had picked up the survivors. Captain Remy told me afterwards he
thought that by putting on speed and running away he might avoid being seen.
Accordingly he signalled "Full speed ahead" but was instantly seen by
the destroyers, who gave chase. He quickly submerged and about three minutes
afterwards we heard depth bombs exploding all about us. Twenty-two bombs were
counted in four minutes; five of them were very close or seemed so to me for
they shook the vessel from stem to stern. The submarine was making about 8
knots speed, zig-zagging, and apparently doubling back on its course. The petty
officer at the microphones sung out continuously to the Captain who was in the
conning tower whether the destroyers were getting closer or farther away,
keeping him informed at all times as to their actions. Soon the man at the
phones could no longer hear the propellers but we remained submerged at a depth
of 60 metres for perhaps an hour longer. Then coming to the surface we
continued our cruising up and down at 5 knots speed.
The following
morning, June 2nd, another American destroyer was sighted, but so far away that
the submarine was not seen. Captain Remy then told me he felt that things were
getting too warm for him in that vicinity, and he intended to return to his
base. I tried to find out which way he came and went, if he got through the
Straits of Dover, if Ostende and Zeebrugge had been seriously damaged by the
British, and other similar points of information. I found out the following:
1. That on his
previous trip he had used the Channel and the Straits of Dover in going and
returning.
2. That it was
only recently the British had taken effective measures to close the Straits,
which was simplified by the use of magnesium lights and the short hours of
darkness which obtained in these latitudes during the summer months.
3. Furthermore
he felt that it was possible for him to get back on this trip through the
Straits; but it was very difficult and he did not dare to take the chance.
We accordingly
left the West coast of France and headed in a north-westerly direction. We
continued along the West coast of Ireland all that day and the next, and on
June 4, early in the morning, they called me to go hunting. They had approached
a small island west of the Orkneys, called North Rona, where Remy was in the
habit of stopping on each trip, weather permitting, and shooting a few of the
wild sheep which were the sole inhabitants of the island. It seems that years
before a hermit had come to live on the island and had begun the raising of
sheep. After his death the sheep had continued to thrive, and on this day I was
able to count at least 150 of them from my position on the deck of the
submarine -- for after I had risen the Captain decided I was not to go hunting
after all. He sent instead one of his officers and two men in the small bateau
which he carried between the inner and outer hull of the submarine. They
approached to within 100 yards of the beach, found a landing place, and a few
minutes later were seen making their way up the side of the cliff. I watched
from the deck of the submarine through my binoculars. They shot 9 sheep, one of
which fell over the top of the cliff and into the water. Remy, telling me that
he knew he was a fool to do such a thing backed the submarine to within three
feet of the cliff where one of the sailors dropped a grapnel and caught the
sheep which had fallen over the cliff. Apparently there was plenty of water
there. A few hours later the sheep were aboard, and we were under way heading
in a north easterly direction around the Shetland Islands.
The following
day we rounded the most northerly point of the Shetlands, his sight giving him
61.10 N. I was surprised that he did not attempt to go through between the
Shetlands and the Orkneys, but I found out a few days later from a French naval
officer captured a few days before by the U.35, that had Captain Remy
done so he would have had to cut through the patrol which is maintained there,
and which the U.35 had actually penetrated and passed through submerged
with only his periscope showing.
From this point
on, Captain Remy requested that I question him as little as possible because of
the confidential character of the information I would be likely to desire.
However, on the 6th of June we were passing along the coast of Norway as near
as I could find out, all the time trying to get into communication with Kiel.
On June 7th, we
got in touch with another U-boat which was running short of fuel. I could not
find out its number. The captain came aboard the night of June 7, talked awhile
with Captain Remy, and then returned to his boat lying a few hundred yards
away. It was rather rough so he did not take on fuel, but said he would try to
make it into Kiel with what he had.
The following
morning, June 8, we passed to the north of Jutland into Skaggerrack, hugging
the Danish coast. That morning we fell in with another U-boat and for three
hours both submarines manoeuvered at high speed up and down past a lighthouse
and a fixed buoy. I took a bearing of the two objects and found the fixed buoy
bore 139 degrees and the lighthouse 169 degrees as close as I could observe.
About noon time
we continued on apparently into the Kattegat. I had asked Remy if he ever
rested on the bottom, so that afternoon he submerged and rested on the bottom
for about three hours. He told me that the submarine which was short of fuel
had finally run out and had asked Kiel for instructions. Kiel replied by
sending 4 submarines which were apparently in that vicinity to give him oil.
Remy intercepted these radio calls and went himself to the assistance of the
submarine. After resting on the bottom in the afternoon he came to the surface
after dark and gave them the fuel they needed.
On June 9th
when I awoke we were under way and continued so until about 9 A.M. We then
submerged until about noon time, making probably 5 knots speed. About noon we
came to the surface for a few minutes only when we again submerged and remained
so, making about 5 knots speed until 11 P.M. About 7 o'clock we approached the
surface when Remy promised us a smoke on deck; but through his periscope he
must have seen something not to his liking for he immediately submerged again,
and we remained thus until after dusk. It was then about 11 P.M. I went up on
deck to smoke and found myself in a little bay with the lights of Sweden on one
side those of Denmark on the other. I think this is in the vicinity of
Helsinger. We were probably four or five miles from land and remained in the
centre of this bay cruising at six knots speed on the surface. The sun had long
since set but it was still twilight. There is practically no night there at
this time of the year -- at least no real darkness.
I had been on
deck about 5 minutes when about a quarter of a mile away I saw another
submarine come to the surface. Fifteen minutes later still another submarine
emerged making three of us in all. The three submarines continued under way at
low speed, moving backwards and forwards apparently using up time. Finding that
I was finally at their rendezvous and that I was not far from a neutral
country, I determined to try to make a getaway.
I had my life
jacket which had never been taken from me, and I waited around on deck hoping
it would get dark enough so that when I was in the water I would not be seen
and picked up again. However, it was 12.30 and would apparently become no
darker so I decided now was the time to jump. While I was moving over towards
the side of the platform abaft the conning tower, a German destroyer was
sighted bearing down on us from the east at high speed. She was also making the
rendezvous in order to escort us through the sound. Just as I was going over
the side, Captain Remy, who was never more than two yards from me, caught me
before I could jump. He ordered me below. Just before I passed through the
hatch in the conning tower I took one last look around and saw that the
destroyer was placing herself at the head of the column, the 3 submarines were
following and we were heading westward through what appeared to be a small
channel into which I had seen several small fishing boats sailing half an hour
earlier. All the ships in these waters -- and there were several that passed us
at a distance of a few miles -- were burning their running lights. I was up
early on the morning of the 10th, and was allowed to go up on deck. I found
that we had passed into the Baltic and were heading in a south westerly
direction. There was no sign of the destroyer nor of the other submarines,
though later in the morning I saw one proceeding towards Kiel distant from us
about 2 miles. We ran past the island of Fehmarn and on to Kiel at about 12
knots speed.
Before reaching
Fehmarn we passed the battle cruiser Hindenburg and two other battle
cruisers apparently of the same type, holding individual maneuvers; also 4
other armored cruisers. All the morning the crew were busy taking out the
breech blocks, cleaning the guns, taking the shell cases out of their tanks
from the racks in which they are stowed on deck, shining brass work and
preparing the ship in all respects for port. I noticed that several of the
tanks were not watertight, for upon taking the shells from the tanks, a large
quantity of water was usually found inside. I sat out on deck with my
binoculars and observed all the movements of the ships in the neighborhood. We
passed three or four steamers apparently on their way to Danish or Baltic
ports. They must have come from Kiel.
We entered Kiel
Harbour, which was protected by a net, at 3 P.M. on June 10th. We tied up at
the landing near the entrance to the canal and I was allowed to go ashore for a
few minutes’ walk with one of the officers. I noticed that there were probably
a dozen destroyers of rather small type outside the net and in the harbour.
Also tied up alongside docks were about 9 armoured and light cruisers. There
were probably 8 submarines in port or manoeuvering outside the net, all of the
same type as the U.90; but there were also two large submarines probably
350 feet long each mounting a 6" gun forward and painted a dark green,
lying in the harbour. Remy told me that they were the new minelayers -- a fact
which I had previously heard mentioned by one of the petty officers to some of
the men, for I had learned several German words during my time on board the U.90.
Later in the afternoon another submarine tied up alongside us, but I could not
find out its number. The Captain appeared to be a friend of Remy's, and later
on Remy told me that this friend of his had sunk the Celtic and one
other large transport the name of which he had forgotten. At 7 o'clock we
shoved off and in company with this other submarine proceeded down the Canal. I
turned in about midnight, and we were at that time about one hour from
Brunsbuttel. We had made approximately nine miles an hour down the canal.
During the time
I was on deck I noticed that at every 2 or 3 kilometers along the length of the
Canal there was a guardhouse with several sentries and patrols walking along
the bank every few hundred yards. The Canal is well lighted and has bollards
about every 200 yards on both sides. There is no debris or rubbish of any kind
in the canal, and no impediment to navigation except a few bridges with a high
arch, and every few kilometers a little ferry. In most places the banks are
cemented for at least part of the way up the side of the steep slopes. Where
there is no cement there is a gravelly shingle.
When I came on
deck the morning of June 11th we were in the German Bay (Heligoland Bight). I
noticed a Zeppelin hanging probably 2000 metres above us apparently patrolling.
We entered the mouth of the Jade River and could see Wilhelmshaven, where we
arrived at 11 o'clock in the morning. About 9 o'clock we had passed a division
of battleships, of whom two were the Grosser Kurfuest and Konig II;
the other one was probably a sister ship. They were sailing north at high speed
escorted by four large destroyers. Everywhere along the river and in the German
Bay there were destroyers, repair ships and tugs. The channel is well buoyed so
we had no pilot.
Both at
Wilhelmshaven and at Kiel we passed through locks in a very good state of
preservation and with everything in ship-shape order. After passing through the
locks at Wilhelmshaven the Captain asked me to go below, where I stayed until
we had tied up alongside the mother ship Preussen. He apparently did not
want me to see the shipping in the harbour: however, when I went to the
flagship two days later I passed by several of the docks at which were tied
ships of all kinds. As soon as we were tied up to the mother ship I was sent
aboard and put in a room with a barred port, the door locked and an armed
sentry placed outside, although we were lying in some backwater from which it would
have been impossible for me to escape to the mainland; even had I done so I
would have had to pass through the "most intensely guarded city of
Germany," as they call it. One of the German Officers told me it was
practically impossible even for him in uniform to get out of Wilhelmshaven
without passing through an enormous amount of red tape.
The U.90
is a submarine built in 1916, approximately 200 feet long, carrying two 10.5
c.m. guns -- one forward and one aft of the conning tower. Captain Remy boasted
that he could make 16 knots speed on the surface, and that he had demonstrated
the superiority in speed that German submarines have over the American
submarines when, sometime previously, he had had an encounter with the A.L.4;
that they had manoeuvered in trying to get a shot at each other; that both
submerged two or three times; and that finally he was able to fire a torpedo at
the American submarine after getting into position owing to his superior
surface speed; that just as he was firing the A.L.4 dove and his torpedo
passed a few feet over her. While I was aboard we never submerged to a depth
greater than 70 metres, although Captain Remy told me he could go to 100
metres. That last day while passing through the Kattegat when we were submerged
for over 10 hours, we travelled most of the time at a depth of 70 metres. He
seldom made more than 8 knots speed submerged -- I doubt if he could make much
more. He carried a crew of 42 men and 4 officers. Another officer, Captain
Lieutenant Kahn, was aboard for purposes of instruction, having had his request
granted to command a submarine of his own. While I was at Wilhelmshaven
Kaptain-Leutnant Kahn came to see me in prison and told me he had just received
orders to proceed to Kiel and take command of one of the new submarines.
Of the crew of
42 men, two were warrant officers -- one the navigator, the other the
machinist. The Captain's three assistants were Lieutenants corresponding to our
grade of Ensign. One was a Naval Academy man who entered the navy in 1913 -- he
was a deck officer; another was a reserve ensign from the merchant fleet by the
name of Wiedermann, who spoke English very well having been in America and
England in peace times on various steamers; the other officer was a regular who
had gone to their school for engineers and who was responsible for the
efficiency of the machinery -- he did not stand deck watch. The watch on deck
was stood by the navigator (warrant officer) and the two ensigns (Leutnants).
The Captain, Kaptan-Leutnant Remy, took the conn when ships were sighted and in
passing through narrow waters. He had entered the navy in 1905 and had
travelled considerably, having been to America in 1911 on a cruiser which put
in at Charleston, South Carolina, and into New York, in both of which places he
had been hospitably entertained. He liked America but could not understand why
America had entered the war. He believed as all Germans are taught to believe
by the governmental propaganda, that our entry into the war must have as its
motive the rendering safe of the millions we loaned to France and England
earlier in the war.
When I was
captured the Germans were nearing Paris. On the submarine we received radio
reports every day and it did look bad for the Allies. Remy and his officers
were absolutely confident that the war would be over in a few months, and would
end in a big German Victory, for as they said:
"France
will soon be overrun by our
"armies and there will be no place for
"the American troops to land. Besides
"you are coming over so slowly that the
"war will be ended long before you have
"a sufficient number of troops in
"Europe to affect the result."
"armies and there will be no place for
"the American troops to land. Besides
"you are coming over so slowly that the
"war will be ended long before you have
"a sufficient number of troops in
"Europe to affect the result."
The U.90
carried 8 torpedoes. At the beginning of this last cruise she had sunk two
other ships, both of them of about 2500 tons and apparently had used one
torpedo on each ship. I believe she had three torpedoes left when we arrived at
Wilhelmshaven. They seldom fire their torpedoes at a range greater than 1000
metres, and if possible they approach to within 500 metres of their prey.
Remy would not
admit it, but had their torpedoes been as good as ours he would probably have
torpedoed us, or at least one of the ships of the convoy, when he fell upon us
in the darkness of early morning on May 31st, for he told me that he could not
have been at a greater distance from us than 2000 metres.
The submarine
rolled a little in the Atlantic though we had no very rough weather. In the
North Sea the choppy seas seemed hardly to affect it; and under the surface
there was no sensation of being in motion. The air inside the submarine when we
were submerged on the last day for 10 hours was becoming disagreeable. However,
several tanks of Oxygen were carried which Remy told me he would use in case of
necessity. The watertight doors between the different compartments were kept
closed at all times after entering the North Sea. The officers and crew smoked
in the conning tower or on deck, but nowhere else. The wardroom was about 6
feet wide and 7 feet long. Here we ate at a small table, and in the lockers
along the bulk head the wardroom food was kept. Here also they installed
hammock hooks and swung a hammock for me to sleep in alongside two bunks used
by Kahn and one of the other officers.
Just forward of
this room was a smaller compartment known as the captain's cabin, in which he
had his desk and bunk -- with scarcely room for either. Forward of this cabin
was a sleeping compartment for the men, and forward or this was the forward
torpedo room. I was never allowed in the torpedo rooms. Abaft the wardroom on
the starboard side was a small cabin about 4 feet wide and 6 feet long occupied
by the other two officers. Across the passage on the port side was the radio
room. Abaft these two small compartments was the control room. Here there were
always two men on watch. Abaft the control room was the other living
compartment for the men. Here the food was cooked and the men ate their meals.
Abaft this was the engine room and then the after torpedo room. The men slept
in hammocks and on the deck. They were very dirty for there was no water to
wash with. In the wardroom we had enough to wash our hands and faces every day,
but that was all. A little wine was carried for the officers, who also had eggs
two or three times while I was on board. They had sausage at every meal, canned
bread and lard, which they called marmalade and used on their bread. Remy told
me however that the people on the submarines were the only ones who had an
unlimited amount of meat and the like. We had practically four meals every day;
at 8 A.M. breakfast, at 12 o'clock noon dinner, at 4 P.M. what they called
"Kaffee," and at 8 P.M. supper; but practically every meal was the
same, at least until we had the fresh mutton shot on North Rona Island.
"Kaffee" at 4 P.M. apparently corresponded to our tea, but the
sausage (or, as they call it, "Wurst") was placed on the table every
meal. After supper every night we played cards, sometimes Bridge and sometimes
a new game with the secrets of which I was soon acquainted. Captain Remy tried
in every way possible to make things pleasant for me, and when I asked an
impossible question he invariably told me he did not think he ought to answer,
so I have great confidence that what he did tell me was the truth.
The U.90
and most of the other German submarines were out usually not more than five or
six weeks, and then in port about three weeks. The service was not severe for
Remy got leave as often as he cared to have it, and indeed it was deemed the
height of good fortune by regular officers to be assigned to a submarine. The
crew seemed happy and well fed. After making I think three round trips, they
were entitled to the Iron Cross and to leave, which leave covered the duration
of the stay of the submarine in port. They receive extra money and they get the
best food in Germany; besides which, for every day that they submerge, both
officers and men receive extra money. For all of these reasons it is a popular
service. On this trip of the U.90 she arrived back at Wilhelmshaven the
thirty-third day after leaving Kiel.
On the trip we
received the news of German submarines being in American waters from the Radio
Press. Remy was chagrined that he had not been allowed to go to America with
the U.90; he told me he had previously requested it.
I was in my
prison room on the Preussen two or three days. Twice I saw the
Commanding Officer who brought me a tooth brush and a comb. Remy came to see me
twice before he went on leave and gave me cigarettes. He also changed into
German money a $5 bill which I had found on my clothes. I had him get me some
tooth paste and a few other toilet articles.
After the two
visits from the Commanding Officer of the Preussen I saw no more of him,
and he apparently left my rationing and entertainment to my guards. Sometimes
they brought me food and sometimes they didn't. Practically all the time I had
only sour black bread which was almost impossible to eat, and some warm water
coloured with Ersatz Kaffee which we afterwards found out was made of roasted
acorns and barley.
Two other
submarines came alongside the Preussen in the next two days -- the U.91
and the U.101. I found that the Preussen was the mother ship of
about 6 or 8 submarines. One day I was taken in a launch to the Chief of Staff
on the Kaiser Wilhelm II and questioned. He, like Remy, could not
understand why America had entered the war. He belittled the result of our
entry into the war, and while he was very courteous he showed by his manner
that, were it in the power of the Navy, America would one day regret that she
had cast in her lot on the side of England. "Why," he said, "We
expected you to enter on the side of Germany." Finally he asked me if we
knew what we were fighting for, and why we had entered the war. I told him in a
few short and concise sentences, and in a way that made his ears burn, why
America had entered the war. I asked him if he thought America would ever
forget the Lusitania, or would ever consider becoming an ally of a
nation which had adopted the famous "Hymn of Hate." After a
conversation which lasted about an hour I was sent back to the Preussen.
On the way we passed many ships. I saw tied up at the docks probably 6 or 8
ships of the type of our three stackers; also about 20 or 30 destroyers
apparently partially manned but with no steam up.
The following
day I was taken to the prison on shore, to what they call the Commandatur. I
was escorted through the streets by a warrant officer wearing side arms and a
guard of about 4 men. We landed from a launch and walked rapidly through the
streets for about 45 minutes. At the Commandatur I was placed in a room which
opened off a corridor. There was a guard in the corridor outside of my door,
the door was kept locked at all times, and there was another guard outside my
window. The guards were armed with rifles which I noticed they kept loaded.
Here they searched me and took my identification tag. They also took my gun and
left me my binoculars. Up to this time I had had my gun. On board the submarine
I cleaned, oiled and loaded it, keeping it on Remy's desk. I could have reached
it at any time, but I had only 20 cartridges. The crew consisted of 42 men so
resistance was useless.
I was in the
prison at Wilhelmshaven two days. A naval officer visited me twice and
questioned me. My food was the same as it had been on the Preussen. At 5
o'clock the morning of the third day a young naval officer and two men came for
me and took me to the station where we boarded a train for Karlsruhe. It was
then I realized how fortunate I was to have the $5 bill, for I had nothing to
eat on the trip except a sandwich which the officer gave me from his lunch.
However at the station in Hanover he allowed me to buy a meal when he found
that I had some money. We came by way of Hanover, Frankfort, Mannheim, to
Karlsruhe. Near Wilhelmshaven there were large herds of Holstein cattle
apparently for the fleet. Those were about the only cattle in any numbers that
I saw in all Germany.
When we arrived
at Karlsruhe I was taken to what prisoners call the "Listening
Hotel," and there turned over to the Army Authorities. The procedure in
this hotel is as follows; An officer is placed in a room alone; the doors and
windows are locked; he cannot see outside, and he is in communication with no
one. After a day of this he is placed with an officer who speaks the same
language. In this room there are dictaphones hidden under tables, in
chandeliers and in similar places. In this way the Germans try to get
information of military value.
My second day
at this hotel I was placed with 8 Frenchman in another room, and on the third
day in a room with three British officers. While we were there three
dictaphones were found by the officers, and little time was lost in tearing
them out and destroying them. The first day I had been questioned by one of the
Intelligent Department. He had typewritten sheets of questions which he put to
me and filled in the answers I gave him. I tried to make him believe that I was
giving him very much valuable information, but our Navy would have to be
increased to a permanent strength of at least a million men in order to man the
ships I claimed; and as for the troops we had brought over the battle line
would have had to be extended to hold them all.
On the fourth
day I was sent to the Officer's Camp in the Zoological Gardens at Karlsruhe.
Here I found about 20 Italians, 10 Serbs, 100 French and 50 British Officers.
Among this number were one French Naval Officer by the name of Domiani and a
British Warrant Officer. From them I got some valuable information which
checked up the information I had picked up on the U.90. Domiani was
captured by a submarine which sunk his tank steamer west of Brest and arrived
at Wilhelmshaven about three days before I did. They proceeded after the
sinking of his ship to the mouth of the Channel where they fell in with another
submarine, who, being senior, ordered him to patrol the waters to the North,
probably Bristol Channel and St. George's Channel. After two or three days of
this they proceeded to the West of Ireland and fell in with another submarine
to the north of Ireland; So Domiani thinks that the Germans probably have one
submarine always patrolling the west end of the channel; another just to the
north guarding the southern approaches to the Irish Channel, and a third one to
the north of Ireland guarding the northern approach to the Irish Channel. His
submarine came through between the Orkneys and the Shetlands, across the North
Sea into the Skaggerack, the Kattegat and the Sound. He also rendezvoused with
three other submarines at some place in the vicinity of Copenhagen he thinks
and then were escorted by a destroyer through Danish waters into the Baltic. He
also came through the Kiel Canal, but on the way to Wilhelmshaven stopped at
Heligoland and put off 5 torpedoes. Domiani was told that the number of the
submarine was U.235, but he found out it was U.35 and that the
Germans were in the habit of putting a "2" in front of their numbers,
probably to pretend they had a greater number of submarines than was actually
the case. He also said that in the Cattegat the Captain of the submarine told
him he would have to waste a day for he had orders to look for a British
minelaying submarine which they had heard was laying mines in the Cattegat.
The British
Warrant Officer had been in command of a trawler armed with a small gun, on
duty mine sweeping north of Ireland. In accordance with orders he always
escorted convoys out, but as he could only make 7 or 8 knots the convoys
usually left him behind. On his last trip he lost the convoy during the night;
they had drawn far ahead of him so he put back to port. About daylight the U.101
intercepted him and commenced firing at him with his forward gun at a range of
about three miles. He answered with a small gun until he and two others of his
crew were wounded and the rest killed. He then surrendered. The U.101
came through practically the same waters as the U.90 as far as I could
find out, although this British Warrant Officer was not so well informed as
Diomiani. He recognized, however, that the little bay I described to him as the
rendezvous of the submarine on which I was, was the same place where his
submarine was joined by another, and the two then escorted through Danish waters
by a destroyer.
All of this
information checked with mine and strengthened me in my determination to escape
at all costs. I was the only American at Karlsruhe, but the British and French
treated me as one of themselves, and when they heard I intended to escape they
provided me with maps, a compass, money and food. For two weeks I worked on
plans for my escape. Two plans failed; the third (in which I was associated
with some British and French Officers) failed when a letter written by one of
the French officers to a woman in Karlsruhe fell into the hands of the
Commandant of the camp. The aviator had been in Karlsruhe before the war and
had many friends there. Through one of the guards he had communicated with one
of these, a woman, and she had assisted in our plans. When the Commandant found
the letter he suspected a big camp delivery, so Berlin was notified
immediately.
The following
day orders came from Berlin to clear the camp of all officers. In the forenoon
all the British left except the aviators; these were followed in the afternoon
by all the aviators and the French Officers. There then remained only a few
Italians (who I believe have never been shifted, for they were undoubtedly
Germanophile, and were so considered by all the other nationalities) some
Serbian Officers, two British Generals and myself.
I found the
Generals real live wires, and with one of them I made plans for a fresh
attempt. We could not try that night, and anyway it looked as if we were to be
left there indefinitely and so could wait for a better opportunity. The
following morning at 6 o'clock one of the interpreters woke me and told me to
be ready to leave the camp in half an hour. I dressed and hid my compass and
maps as best I could in the short time, and passed through my search without
any thing being found.
Upon entering
and leaving a camp each officer is searched thoroughly. If any suspicion is
aroused the officer is required to take off all his clothes, and each garment
is separately inspected, kneaded to see if the rustle of paper can be heard,
and finally the hems are ripped open, gold stripes and insignia cut off to see
if a map or some other contraband is secreted within. Even the soles and heels
of the shoes are cut off in their search -- as happened in my case.
I had no regret
in leaving that camp for I felt that I could not be much worse off, and I might
possibly find conditions better at the next camp. Besides we considered a
journey the best time for attempting to escape. At Karlsruhe we had no
breakfast. At noon we had soup made out of leaves, and a plate of black
potatoes or horse carrots, or something similar. At night the same kind of soup
again, and that was all, except the 240 grammes of black bread which we
received every day.
At Karlsruhe I
spent about three weeks and in all that time the soup was never changed. It was
absolutely tasteless. It was hardly possible to exist on that ration, but the
British and French Red Cross committees had enough food to considerably
ameliorate conditions. The French committee had orders from France to take care
of Americans, and while they had very few supplies I was given what they did have
in like manner to their own countrymen.
The morning I
left Karlsruhe, I noticed that all the Serbians and about 20 Frenchmen who had
come in the night before, were also leaving camp. They were guarded by four
sentries. I had two. I was marched through the town to the station and on to
the train. The guards then told me we were bound for Villingen and would get
there about 3 p.m. I saw a time table and planned to jump from the train at the
first opportunity, but preferably as far south as possible in order not to have
so far to walk to reach the Swiss frontier. But never once had I the least
opportunity of breaking from the guards. They sat on either side of me with
their guns (which were loaded) pointed at me all times. Finally we were only a
few miles from Villingen, the train had already reached and passed the crest of
the mountains and was on the down grade making good speed. I knew it had to be
now or not at all. So watching my chance I caught one guard half dozing and the
other with his head turned in the other direction, and jumping past them I dove
for the window. It was very small probably 18 x 24 inches. On the outside of
the car there was nothing to land on so I simply fell to the ground. Just as I
disappeared, the guards who had been wondering what it all was about, jumped to
their feet with a shout and pulled the bell cord. The train was making about 40
miles an hour and came to a stop about 300 yards farther on.
In the meantime
I had landed on the second railway track. The ties were of steel and in falling
I struck my head on one and was stunned for a few seconds. But the injury that
did the damage was to my knees which struck another tie and were cut so badly
that I could not bend them. I struggled to my feet and tried to shuffle off
towards the hills and forest a few hundred yards away. But by this time the
guards were out of the train and firing at me. I kept on going as long as I
could, and then turned around and found that the guards were only 75 yards
away, so I held up my hands as a sign that I surrendered. One of the guards had
just fired. The shot passed between my hat and shoulder, and had they continued
firing they must surely have hit me. When I turned they were on me in a few
seconds. The first guard turned his gun and grasped it by the muzzle, and
struck me over the head as I half lay and half sat on the side of the hill. I
remember rolling downhill gaining additional impetus from their boots. They
kicked me until I got up, and when I was up they knocked me down again with
their guns. I noticed many people working in the fields who came over to look
on. Finally in knocking me down the seventh or eighth time one of the guards
struck me across the back of the head and his gun broke in two at the small of
the stock. Villingen was about five miles away. They marched me down the road
at as near double time as I could make shuffling along. They were beating and
kicking me continuously. We finally arrived at the prison camp and I collapsed
on the Guardhouse porch. I was greeted by the Commandant, a porkish looking
individual, and typically Prussian, who bellowed at me in German that if I
attempted to escape again I would be shot. An interpreter told me what he said.
They sent for the German doctor and he bandaged me from head to foot with the paper
bandages they use.
Then I was put
on a bed in one of the guard house cells.
For three days
I could not move and the vermin that infected the place made it almost
unbearable. Later when I had recuperated enough to move my arms and upper body,
I was able to keep most of the vermin away while I was awake. My body was
covered with large red eruptions, for the German fleas are as poisonous as
German propaganda.
About my sixth
day in the cell, I was given a court-martial or at least I would call it such.
There were three officers; and after questioning me they decided that I should
be given two weeks solitary confinement in my cell. They never stopped the food
and books that the American officers sent into me, so I was not so badly off as
I might have been. When I came out of the cell however I weighed only 120
pounds -- I had lost 30.
Thereupon I
began to consider fresh plans for escape. Thanks to Red Cross food I built up
and got myself in good physical trim. Three plans failed due to treachery.
There must have been some spies among the Russian Officers who gave our plans
to the Germans. We were very much handicapped there because all the orderlies
were Russian and the Russian officers themselves included every variety from
the Regulars captured in 1914 to some Bolsheviki. We could trust no one. Our
own officers included more than 25 combatants, about 20 doctors and 5 merchant
officers taken by the raider Solf. Among the combatant or line officers
there were a few live wires, but most were content to sit back, eat the food
that the Red Cross sent, and after 18 months (as they hoped) be interned in
Switzerland for the duration of the war. This lethargy was very disappointing
to me for I found it entirely lacking among British and French Officers with
whom I came in contact. I did not wish the Navy any hard luck, but I could not
help wishing for a few Navy Officers whom I knew could be depended upon to set
a good example to the Army. I was senior officer at the camp for some time, and
I assured the officers in no uncertain terms what their duty was. Some had been
in the trenches as long as three days. Of course they were not regular army
officers and knew nothing about their duty, their privileges, their right, and
so forth as prisoners of War. I tried however to make it clear to them that
they were a potential asset to their country as long as they were prisoners and
tried to escape, but once interned they became instead a burden. The British
airmen told me they had regular lecture courses covering their conduct if taken
prisoner, as to what their duty was, and in what their rights and privileges
consisted. Americans could profit by some of the same instruction.
At Villingen
the food was practically the same as at Karlsruhe, probably a little better. At
least we did not notice that it was so bad because we seldom ate it, having
instead our regular parcels from the Red Cross.
The people of
Baden being principally of the agricultural class have more food than most of
the other people of Germany. At the same time, as I learned from different
guards I had bribed, practically the only food their families had was the
produce out of their own gardens which they were able to hide from the officers
who came around once a week to collect their harvest. They have no lard nor
butter nor grease of any kind. The bread is rationed (as is practically
everything else) and that forms their chief article of diet. They make a soup
of some kind of herbs and grow immense quantities of cabbage and similar
vegetables. The few guards who were friendly to us assured me that they were
heartily sick of the war, as were all the people of Baden. Every month they
expected to see the end of the war. They had finally passed the stage where
they expected to win, and some appeared eager to see Prussia properly
chastised. The people as a whole, however, are the most submissive race that I
have ever seen. They go on the assumption that if the Kaiser says a thing is
true, it must be true. They would never dream of questioning any orders
emanating from the Government. They appeared to me like an oppressed race,
ground down under the heel of their rulers for so long that finally they got a
certain amount of pleasure out of this condition, and looked for nothing
better. The faces of the women all looked drawn and careworn. I seldom saw a
woman smile, and even the children seemed to have forgotten how to play. The
country is overrun with children, the size of the families being immense, but
they do not play as other children do, and even the sixteen year old lads in
training never scuffled and romped as American boys do. They had at an early
age already acquired what we call the Hindenburg scowl.
Across the road
from the Prison camp was the caserne of the Training battalion. The Villingen
newspaper called it the Ersatz battalion. Early in September most of the boys
forming the battalion (which we understood were the 1920 class) left for the
front to the number of 500. They were accompanied to the station by the
townsfolk with flags waving and bands playing. The Caserne was immediately
filled with a younger class of boys apparently 16 years old, and their military
training was begun. Our guards at the camps were made up of these boys (who
however were never placed on important posts) and older men back from the front
for recuperation. There were about 150 Russian officers in our camp and 75
Americans. The Russians were not guarded because they were called
"friends" by the Germans. Therefore the guards were kept for the
Americans only. We had between 65 and 70 guards in the camp, and their regular
tour of duty was two hours on and four hours off.
The Germans had
finally decided to make Villingen an exclusively American camp. On October 7th
all the Russian officers were to be shifted to the north of Germany. We knew
that meant a thorough search for the following day. Once before we had
undergone a search but fortunately the Germans were deceived by the exemplary
conduct of the men in my barracks, and passed us by. I had a complete set of
tools, over 100 large screws taken from all the doors in the camp, and four
long chains made out of wire, which, a few days previously, had enclosed the
tennis court. All these things were necessary in almost any plan of escape that
we might devise, and I could not afford to lose them. In the other barracks
they found several compasses, maps and other contraband. On one aviator they
found a map sewed inside the double seat of his trousers. This cost him six
days solitary confinement. But we had suffered one disaster in this search; that
was the loss of our material for ladder building which we had prepared out of
bedslats after prolonged efforts.
On Sunday,
October 6th, the day before the Russians were to leave camp, I called a meeting
in my barracks of the 12 other officers whom I knew were interested in getting
away. I insisted that we go that night. Our plan was to try and go over or cut
through the fences in different parts of the yard simultaneously. We divided up
into four teams, I had the first team, consisting of two aviators and myself;
Major Brown the second team, consisting of one of the aviator and two infantry
officers; Lieutenant Willis of the Lafayette Escadrille the third team,
consisting of three other aviators; the fourth team was composed of two
aviators who decided to go at the last minute.
The defensive
works of the camp consisted first of the barred windows in the barracks which
ran along parallel to the outer fences; then a ditch filled with barbed wire
and surmounted by a 4 ft. barbed wire fence. This was about 8 feet outside the
line of barracks. About 7 feet outside the ditch was the last artificial
defence -- a barbed wire fence about 8 or 10 feet high with top wires curved
inward out of the vertical plane of the rest of the fence. This was to prevent
anyone from climbing over, which would have been simple with a fence straight
up and down. Outside the outer fence was a line of sentries about one for every
30 yards, and inside the yard there were two sentries who patrolled at their
discretion.
The plan of the
first team was to cut the iron grating of the window in my barracks and launch
a bridge through the opening out to the top of the outer barbed wire fence. We
were to then crawl along the bridge and drop down outside the wire. The second
team had wire cutters and were to cut through the outer wire. The third team
were to go out of the main gate with the guard off duty when it rushed out in
pursuit of the other teams. The fourth team were to build a small ladder and
climb over the outer fence.
At 10:30 the barrack
lights were turned out as usual. Shortly afterwards the signal was given and a
team consisting of doctors threw the chains and short circuited all the
lighting circuits in the camp.
I have never
been able to find out how the other teams fared, except to know that Willis of
the third team and one of the fourth team got out of the camp. My team were
more successful. The night before one of the officers and I stole out to the
tennis court and brought into my barracks the two long wooden battens used as markers.
We hid them under the beds. They were about 2 1/2 inches wide, one inch thick,
and were 18 ft. long. I had had my eye on them for a long time because they
were the only things in the camp to reach from the window ledge to the outer
barbed wire fence. They were very light and of course would not hold any
weight, but I had a plan to remedy that. Two Army officers who did not care to
go were to launch the bridge through the window to the outer fence, leaving the
three foot over-lap on the inboard side. When we crawled over the bridge they
would then put their weight on the ends that overlapped and this would
neutralize the great bending moment at the middle of the span.
I had stolen
Red Cross food boxes and with the boards from these I made little slats which
when screwed to the long battens (nailing would have attracted the guards)
would make a very passible bridge. In the afternoon one of my team and I cut
and filed the grating in my window. It had to be done when the guards were at
the end of their beats outside, but we finally finished by dark. After last
muster at 7 P.M. we began on the bridge and finished it by 10 o'clock. I then
blackened it with shoe blacking so it would not appear white in the darkness.
As the lights
went out the bridge was thrown across and the smallest in the team of three
crawled out. I was second and the heaviest man third. When the bridge struck
the outer fence, the nearest guards ran to the spot singing out:
"Halt-Halt." As the first man reached the end of the bridge and dropped
to the ground outside, I was beside him before he could straighten up and
coaching him I dashed past the guards who were then within a few feet of us
preparing to fire. As we passed them they fired, and the flash of the gun on my
right almost scorched my hair. Then I heard the third man jump to the ground.
We continued to run directly away from the camp and the whole side opened fire.
It was a starlight night, but so dark they could not see to fire so although
the bullets were singing all around us, we were not hit. By our thus drawing
the fire, the other teams had a fine opportunity to cut their way out.
A few minutes
later the guard of about 40 men sleeping in the guard house rushed out of the
main gate in answer to the firing, and Willie came out with them, was fired on,
but finally kept his rendezvous with me about two miles away. Knowing that in a
few minutes the battalion of at least 300 men together with hounds would be on
our trail we headed across country and put several miles between us and the
camp. We continued thus for six days and nights, walking mostly in the night
time, never on roads and bridges, which are patrolled, but through the rivers,
fields and mountains, and finally on the 7th night we came to the Rhine.
We had
travelled about 120 miles, although the distance as the crow flies is perhaps
only 40 miles. We had a little food in our pockets, but lived mostly on the raw
vegetables in the fields. When we came to the Rhine we spent about four hours
trying to get past the sentries, and finally had to crawl the last half mile on
our hands and knees down the bed of a mountain creek.
About 2 A.M.
Sunday, October 13, we were crouching in the water at the mouth of this creek
where it flows into the Rhine. The hardest fight was still before us. In
whispers we discussed the next move and then took off most of our clothes. As
we steeped farther out, the current caught us and swept us away. The stream at
this point is 200 meters wide and has a current of 12 kilometers an hour. The
water was like ice and when I had been carried to the center of the stream I
couldn't get out. After fighting for ten minutes, I made one last effort and
managed to get past the worst of the center, and then just as the last of my
strength had gone my feet touched the rocks.
I was then in
Switzerland. After a rest I crawled up the bank and in a few minutes found a
house where I was taken in and put to bed. The next morning I was turned over
to the gendarmes. They had also located Willis in a house about three miles further
down where he found himself after his swim.
The Swiss were
elated when they heard we were Americans. They look us to Berne and turned us
over to the American Legation on October 15th, where we were provided with
passports. While there, we were interviewed by the American Commission for the
exchange of prisoners of war. We borrowed money from the American Red Cross and
proceeded to Paris and there awaited orders from October 18th to 21st. I was
ordered to London where I had asked to be sent, arrived October 23rd, and
reported to Vice Admiral Sims to whom I gave my information in the form of a
detailed report. The British Admiralty asked for me for three days and it was
November 2nd before I left England, being then ordered to report to the Bureau
of Navigation, Washington, D.C., where I arrived November 11, 1918.
In my many
plans for escape, I had primarily before me the desire to accomplish something
in the way of checking the activities of the German submarines. In the First
place I wanted to recommend that convoys in crossing the war zone should
frequently change or zig-zag the base course itself. Second, that each ship
have two depth bombs in a power boat, which upon the approach of the submarine
after the sinking of the ship could be dropped alongside. I would have had an
ideal opportunity to sink the U.90 had I known before my capture what I
know now. Unfortunately the President Lincoln had not a single power
boat, although we had fought for one for six months previous to this. Third,
that steps be taken to set a "plane" guard at North Rona Island to
attack U.boats when they visited the island, and Fourth, to plot the path of
the submarine and identify the rendezvous which I was sure I could find again
were I able to get back and lead one of our own submarines over the same
ground.
It seemed to me
that the Straits of Dover were to[o] well guarded for submarines to get back
that way -- that the North Sea around Heligoland was so well mined that there
was no longer a safe entrance there, and that the one way left was through
Danish waters; either the Great Belt, the Little Belt, or the Sound. When I was
sure it was the Sound, I felt if we could effectively plug that up, we would
have them contained. My confidence in the correctness of this estimate of the
situation was such that I did not hesitate to risk my life in getting back with
the information. My only regret is that it has taken me so long to accomplish
my purpose.
SUPPLEMENT
APROPOS OF THE
TREATMENT OF PRISONERS
The French and
the British have an agreement with the Germans covering the treatment of
prisoners of war. A British officer who feels that his treatment is not in
accordance with what he is entitled to, insists upon his rights, and usually
gets them. The Americans, however, appear to have no rights which the Germans
are bound to respect. For any infraction of the German rules of discipline we
were punished as they saw fit. For example, one Infantry Officer was given six
days solitary confinement for having written the word "Boche" in his
diary while lying wounded in a German hospital. Another who had tried to escape
by jumping from the train and had been recaptured before he had gotten more
than 100 yards away, was beaten by guards with their guns until he was safe
again on the train. The officer in charge of the transport watched the
proceedings with a smile on his face. Several aviators who were caught after
trying to escape were locked up in solitary confinement for two or three weeks,
until their punishment was awarded by the Munich Government; and although it
called for only 8 days solitary confinement, and they had already served more
than their sentence, they were held in their cells eight more days. Two
aviators who were suspected of having the intention of escaping were put in
cells and kept there until after nine days of threatening and letter writing to
the Danish, Swiss and Spanish Embassies, they were released. The Germans fear
nothing but reprisals. They know no law but that of force, and like all bullies
they were easily bluffed when we threatened like punishment to their prisoners
-- especially when the Allies were winning.
Up to the first
of August their arrogance was intolerable. They destroyed my official letters,
written as by the Senior Officer at the camp to the Red Cross and to the
Spanish Ambassador; at least the letters were never received, and we had reason
to believe that they were destroyed. They refused us every request. We had no
Chaplains, but they would not allow us to go out to the church in Villingen although
we gave our parole. They gave us Russian soldiers as orderlies, although we
asked for American, British or French, who were just as easy to get, and with
whom some of us at least could talk. No one of course could speak Russian. They
gave us only one latrine, which was also used by the Russian orderlies, some of
whom were so ill with disease they could hardly walk. This latrine was the
filthiest and most insanitary place I have ever seen. The barracks in which we
lived had 20 officers in each room and the fleas thrived in spite of all our
efforts to get rid of them. We asked the Commandant and finally the doctor to
give us sulphur or cyanide or something to act as a disinfectant, but they paid
no heed to our requests. They stole some of the food and clothing out of our
Red Cross parcels, and even refused to give us the wooden boxes in which the
food was sent -- we needed these badly as firewood to cook up the little food
they allowed to reach us. All these may seem mere trifles, but they were affairs
of considerable magnitude to us in our struggle for existence.
I
have mentioned only a few of our troubles. It would be impossible to enumerate
the thousand little annoyances the Germans practiced on us. But this will give
some idea of our condition there as prisoners of war and will partially explain
why every prisoner of war will be the avowed enemy of Germany and everything
German to the day at his death.
Reverse of Izac's Medal of Honor. He received the
"Tiffany Cross" version of the medal.
Rank and organization: Lieutenant, U.S. Navy. Place and
date: Aboard German submarine U-90 as prisoner of war, May 21, 1918. Entered
service at: Illinois. Born: December 18, 1891, Cresco, Howard County, Iowa.
Citation:
When the U.S.S. President Lincoln was attacked and sunk
by the German submarine U-90, on May 21, 1918, Lt. Izac was captured and held
as a prisoner on board the U-90 until the return of the submarine to Germany,
when he was confined in the prison camp. During his stay on the U-90 he
obtained information of the movements of German submarines which was so
important that he was determined to escape, with a view to making this
information available to the U.S. and Allied Naval authorities. In attempting
to carry out this plan, he jumped through the window of a rapidly moving train
at the imminent risk of death, not only from the nature of the act itself but
from the fire of the armed German soldiers who were guarding him. Having been
recaptured and reconfined, Lt. Izac made a second and successful attempt to
escape, breaking his way through barbed-wire fences and deliberately drawing
the fire of the armed guards in the hope of permitting others to escape during
the confusion. He made his way through the mountains of southwestern Germany,
having only raw vegetables for food, and at the end, swam the River Rhine
during the night in the immediate vicinity of German sentries.