German
Spies Invade Ponte Vedra
Jacksonville's First Municipal Baseball
Stadium
In
June 16, 1942, four German spies stepped ashore at Ponte Vedra Beach.
In
the pre-dawn hours, a German submarine surfaced, a raft was launched,
and
the four men rowed to shore with a cache of materials. After burying
boxes
of explosives, they walked to highway 140 and caught a bus to
Jacksonville.
Once
in the city, they split up. Edward John Kerling and Herman Neubauer
checked
into the Seminole Hotel. Herbert Hans Haupt and Werner Thiel registered
at the Mayflower Hotel – all using assumed names. These German
saboteurs
were part of a larger plan known as Operation Pastorius.

The
actual site of the saboteurs’ landing, shown at left, is 4.3 miles
south
of today’s Ponte Vedra Inn.
Operation
Pastorius and German landings on the U.S. eastern coast during World
War
II are the subject of the 2003 publication, They Came to Destroy
America:
The FBI Goes to War Against Nazi Spies and Saboteurs Before and During
World War II. Author of the book, Stan Cohen is speaker for the
society’s
Thursday, November 6 program.
Cohen’s
book recalls life on the Ponte Vedra coastline during the war years:
Blackouts
curtains were required for every household to deceive the German
submarines
patrolling off the Atlantic coast. Ponte Vedra residents were among the
very few stateside Americans to witness acts of war firsthand as German
submarines sank ships within sight of the shore, and oil from torpedoed
tankers blackened the beaches.
Four
other German saboteurs, also part of Operation Pastorius, had landed a
few days earlier at Amagansett, New York. The operation’s mission was
to
destroy American aluminum and metal industries, railroads, and utility
plants. There were also plans to plant explosives in crowded public
locations
as bus terminals and department stores.
Unknown
to the four German spies in Jacksonville, the FBI had learned of the
operation,
but the group escaped the city the next morning without notice.
Kerling,
the ringleader, was eventually brought back to Ponte Vedra to pinpoint
the burial site; among the items were blocks of TNT shaped as laundry
soap,
a device appearing as a pen that could start fires, and a watch that
could
be set for detonation watch.

The
spy informants who landed in New York were imprisoned. The Ponte Vedra
foursome were electrocuted within two months of their June 1942 landing.