I'm pretty deep into WWII history, but I have never heard of this until today.
Props to 60 Minutes for doing a throwback to when they did actual journalism.
Reader's Digest version:
May 2, 1945
War is nearly over, SS and Concentration Camp Nazis are planning to flee to Norway. And Nazis being Nazis, they planned to take POWs, political prisoners, and Jews from concentration camps, with them.
To this end, the former German luxury liner Cap Arcona, and other derelict ships anchored in the Bay of Lbeck, in the Baltic Sea, became prison ships.
The British, not knowing the ships were loaded with prisoners, and hoping to cut off the escape of SS men and women, attacked the ships.
Some 7,000 prisoners died. Few escaped.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Cap_Arcona
60 Minutes story link
Oddball fact: Cap Arcona stood in for Titanic in the 1943 Nazi propaganda movie of the same name, for the exterior shots.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic_(1943_film)
Props to 60 Minutes for doing a throwback to when they did actual journalism.
Reader's Digest version:
May 2, 1945
War is nearly over, SS and Concentration Camp Nazis are planning to flee to Norway. And Nazis being Nazis, they planned to take POWs, political prisoners, and Jews from concentration camps, with them.
To this end, the former German luxury liner Cap Arcona, and other derelict ships anchored in the Bay of Lbeck, in the Baltic Sea, became prison ships.
The British, not knowing the ships were loaded with prisoners, and hoping to cut off the escape of SS men and women, attacked the ships.
Some 7,000 prisoners died. Few escaped.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Cap_Arcona
60 Minutes story link
Oddball fact: Cap Arcona stood in for Titanic in the 1943 Nazi propaganda movie of the same name, for the exterior shots.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic_(1943_film)