Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 03 Nov 2008

The Heringen Collection of the US Geological Survey Library, Reston, Virginia

Page Range: 242 – 265
DOI: 10.17704/eshi.27.2.y1vq1168q51g1542
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A special collection of German, Polish, and Russian language books, maps and reports in the US Geological Survey Library has an interesting and unusual history. The so-called ‘Heringen Collection’ came from Nazi Germany. Many of these items were captured from libraries, offices and even private homes as the German Army advanced into neighboring countries. In the last days of the war, these maps, reports, photos and other records were sent from the Military Geology offices in Berlin to the safety of a deep potash mineshaft in Heringen (Werra), in Hessen, Germany. A group of US Army soldiers found these lost records of the Third Reich. When removed from the Heringen mine, those records that dealt with the earth sciences, terrain analysis, military geology and other geological matters were sent to the USGS, and eventually came to reside at the USGS Library. The printed papers and books were mostly incorporated into the main collection, but a portion of the materials have never been cataloged, calendared or indexed. These materials have many current uses, including projects of value to citizens in their nations of origin.

Anon. 1945. Industrial News. Chemical and Engineering News. 10 September 1945, volume 23.

Anon. 1945. SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Forces): Intelligence Directive No. 7, Counter-Intelligence Handbook April 1945. (The various sections of the directive were issued between 5 February 1944 and 28 April 1945.)

Anon. 1946. 90th Infantry Division. The History of the 90th Division in World War II. No place of publication stated: The 90th Division.

Anon. 1946. Evaluating German data; and German copyright interest seized. Chemical and Engineering News. 10 April: 24.

Anon. 1946. German Patent Office documents. Chemical and Engineering News. 25 May: 1393.

Anon. 1948. Library (US. Geological Survey Annual Report). Annual Reports of Bureaus and Offices-Part II. Washington: Government Printing Office.

Anon. 1992. All over the map. The Economist, 11 July, 324 (No. 7767): 83.

Busterud, John A. 2001. Below the Salt: How the Fighting 90th Division Struck Gold and Art Treasure in a Salt Mine. No place of publication stated: X libris Corporation.

British Sulphur Corporation Ltd. 1975. World Survey of Potash Resources. London: British Sulphur Corporation Ltd (2nd edn, 1st edn 1966).

Anon. 1946 (October). Civilian scientists sent to Germany. Chemical and Engineering News 24: 10.

Collins, Donald E. and Herbert P. Rothfeder. 1984. The Einsatzstab Reichleiter: Rosenberg and the looting of Jewish and Masonic libraries during World War II. Journal of Library History 18: 21-36.

Corum, James S. 1994. A clash of military cultures: German and French approaches to technology between the World Wars: a paper for the USAF Academy Symposium. September 1994. Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University. USAF School of Advanced Airpower Studies.

East, J. H. 1947. Potash mining in Germany. Information Circular, IC 7405, May. Washington: US Bureau of Mines.

US Army Corps of Engineers Office of History. 1995. Engineers in World War II—1945. Bridge to the Past. No. 2, January. See: http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/history/bridge2.htm

Gellately, Robert (ed.). 2004. The Nuremberg Interviews: An American Psychiatrist's Conversations with the Defendants and Witnesses, conducted by Leon Goldensohn. New York: Knopf.

German Patent and Trademark Office (DPMA). 2002. Annual Report. See: http://www.dpma.de/veroeffentlichungen/jahresbericht02/jb2002.pdf


Gimbel, John. 1990 Science, Technology, and Reparations. Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

Goudsmit, Samuel Abraham. 1947 (20 October). Nazis' atomic secrets. Life 23: 123-124.

Goudsmit, Samuel A. 1946 (24 August). The Nazis came close—but. Chemical and Engineering News 25: 2176 and 2263.

Harvey, Miles. 2000. The Island of Lost Maps: A True Story of Cartographic Crime. New York: Random House.

Harclerode, Peter and Pittaway, Brendan. 2000. The Lost Masters: World War II and the Looting of Europe's Treasurehouses. New York: Welcome Rain Publishers.

Hunt, Charles Butler. 1946. Geology applied to military intelligence in time of war. No place or date of publication given. 160 leaves. Carbon copy of typescript. Notes: USGS Library.

Lamont, F. G., Goldschmidt, P. and Merlub-Sobel, M. 1946. The Mining and Refining of Potash Minerals in the Western Zones of Germany: Refining Section, Part II. London: HMSO. British Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee (BIOS) Final Report, No. 1616, Item No. 22.

Military Government Regulations. 1945. Title 18: Monuments, Fine Arts, Archives. 18-101.

Murphy, Walter J. 1945, The job is still unfinished: some thoughts on the collection and dissemination of technical and scientific information from occupied countries. Chemical and Engineering News 23: 1528-1531.

Monmonier, Mark. 1991. How to Lie with Maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (2nd edn 1996).

Nicholas, Lynn H. 1994, The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Art Treasuries in the Third Reich and the Second World War. New York: Knopf.

Nicholas, Lynn H. 1997 Statement of Lynn Nicholas … before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services, U. S. House of Representatives. In: The Eizenstat Report and Related Issues Concerning United States and Allied Efforts to Restore Gold and Other Assets Looted by Nazis During World War II: A Hearing before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services. Serial 105-118: 291-295.

Pear, Robert. 1988. In the West, map makers hail shift in Soviet stance. New York Times 3 September: 4.

Posté, Leslie Irlyn. 1958 (revised 1964). The Development of US Protection of Libraries and Archives in Europe During World War II. PhD dissertation, The University of Chicago.

Reinhardt, H. Richard. Private communications. 2002-2005.

Rice, George S and Davis, John A. 1927. Potash mining in Germany and France. US Bureau of Mines. Bulletin 274. Washington: US Government Printing Office.

Richards, Pamela Spence. 1985. German libraries and scientific and technical information in Nazi Germany. The Library Quarterly 55: 151-173.

Rorimer, James J. and Gilbert Rabin. 1950. Survival: The Salvage and Restoration of Art in War. New York: Abelard Press.

Rose, Edward P. F. and Willig, Direk. 2004. Specialist maps prepared by German military geologists for Operation Sealion: the invasion of England scheduled for September 1940. The Cartographic Journal 41: 13-35.

Rubin, Meyer. 2004. Personal communication. 12 February.

Sayer, Ian and Botting, Douglas. 1984. The Story of the World's Greatest Robbery and its Aftermath: Nazi Gold. New York: Congdon & Weed Inc.

Simpson, Elizabeth (ed.). 1997. The Spoils of War: World War II and its Aftermath: The Loss, Reappearance and Recovery of Cultural Property. Papers of a Symposium by the Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, held in New York, January 1995. New York: Harry Abrams, Inc.

Stubbings, Hilda U. 1993. Blitzkrieg and Books: British and European Libraries as Casualties of World War. Indiana: Rubena Press.

Walker, C. Lester. 1946. German war secrets by the thousands. Harper's Magazine (October): 329-336.

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