Sumitted by
his son Dwight W. Berglin
My father
Wilton H. Berglin served in WWII during November 1944-til VE Day. He
was assigned to Company K, 157th Infantry Regiment of the
45th Infantry Division. This Regiment was one of the
divisions that liberated the Dachau Concentration Camp on April 29,
1945. This camp housed 300,000 prisoners between 1933 and 1945. My
father rarely talked of his war time experiences, but he told us about
seeing 40 railroad cars filled with dead bodies and left on the siding
by the camp. The stench of decaying bodies that permeated the area
was terrible.
While my father was guarding an area in
the camp, one of the emaciated prisoners motioned to him. This man was a
Jewish engraver by trade, and he could speak some English. He asked my
dad if he would allow him to engrave his watch for the sausage that my
dad was carrying in his back pocket. The prisoner picked up a rusty
nail from the ground of the compound, and he engraved three initials on
the watch -WHB.
When my brothers and sister were
growing up, we were told of the watch story and at times he would show
the watch to us. Most of the time he kept it in a jewelry box. When my
father died in 1988, we found it in his belongings. Now we are telling
our children and grandchildren the story of a man who was so
malnourished that he would do anything for a scrap of food. We will
never know the man's name, but this gentleman will always be a part of
this fascinating story about liberating the prisoners from Dachau.
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