Horst Spies

Born: Biblis, Germany, 25 June 1922

Profession in country of origin: Joiner

Arrived in Britain as a refugee from Germany – one of the ‘Dovercourt Boys’ from the Kindertransport – in 1939

Documents

Male enemy alien - Exemption from internment - Refugee  
                         
Surname: Spies
Forename: Horst
Alias: -
Date and place of birth: 25/06/1922 in Frankfurt-on-Main
Nationality: German
Police Regn. Cert. No.: 710 179
Home Office ref:
Address: Turners Court Colony, BENSON, Oxfordshire
Normal occupation: Joiner
Present occupation: Trainee
Name and address of employer: Under the care of the Movement for the care of Children from Germany, Bloomsbury House, Bloomsbury St, London WC1
Decision of tribunal: Full exemption
Date 30.10.1939
Whether exempted from Article 6(A): Yes & Article 9 (A)
Whether desires to be repatriated: No

Tribunal District: Oxford

Source: National Archives, Home Office: Aliens Department: Internees Index, 1939-1947.

Editor’s note: We are not allowed to reproduce National Archives (UK) images, but we are permitted to reproduce the material from them, as shown above.

Memories

My father was born in Biblis – a village near Worms – on 25.06.1922. His name was Horst Spies but he had to change his name to Harry Spiers when he joined the army. He did not join the Pioneer Corp; he joined the Royal Armoured Corp (RAC) and fought in a tank regiment in the Normandy Campaign and was required to disguise his German origins as much as possible.

My father was imprisoned in Buchenwald following Kristallnacht. He was released on 12 December 1938. His parents (who did not survive the war) managed to secure his release by obtaining a Kindertransport place for him: he arrived in Dovercourt via the Kindertransport on 8th February 1939. If you read pages 98 to 99 of Clare Ungerson’s book, Four Thousand Lives, you will read about the Dovercourt boys who were transferred to Turner’s Court near Wallingford in Oxfordshire on 13 June 1939. I must assume that my father was in that group, for as much as we heard nothing about Buchenwald and very little about Kitchener Camp, my father really enjoyed his stay in Turner’s Court and he often referred to it, as well as his time in the army.

Submitted by the Spiers family for Horst Spies

Photographs

  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys, Social evening, Turner's Court, 8 March 1940
  • Kitchener camp, Horst Spies, Dovercourt Boys, Chiltern camp, 1940

Photographs submitted by the Spiers family for Horst Spies