North America

Six Nazi spies were executed in D.C. White supremacists gave them a memorial — on federal land.

A team of power company workers was trudging through a seldom-visited thicket in Southwest Washington when they spotted something odd in a ditch. Protruding from the grass was a rectangular slab of granite. They looked closer, and an inscription on the surface came into focus. What they saw astonished them. It was a memorial. In […]

A team of power company workers was trudging through a seldom-visited thicket in Southwest Washington when they spotted something odd in a ditch.

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Protruding from the grass was a rectangular slab of granite.

They looked closer, and an inscription on the surface came into focus. What they saw astonished them.

It was a memorial. In honor of Nazi spies. On U.S. government property.

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“In memory of agents of the German Abwehr,” the engraving began, “executed August 8, 1942.”

Below that were six names, and below those was another cryptic line: “Donated by the N.S.W.P.P.”

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News of the unsettling discovery soon reached Jim Rosenstock, who worked in resource management for the National Park Service and also happened to be a local history buff. He was curious, but also skeptical. How could someone have planted such an item there? And why? And — above all — who?

Rosenstock needed to see it for himself, so he, too, made the hike into Blue Plains, a woody area known best for a wastewater treatment plant and an abundance of mosquitoes. And that’s when he saw the stone.

 

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Read the whole story from The Washington Post.

Featured image courtesy of The National Park Service.

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