Alexander's background Because of Alexander's tendency to be outspoken, and because his wife was of
Jewish ancestry, his brothers refrained from telling him about their plot to assassinate the Führer. On 11 August 1937 at
Berlin-
Wilmersdorf, Alexander had married the
aviator and aeronautical engineer
Melitta Schiller, who had been released from Germany's
DVL institute in 1936, probably due to her criticism of the regime and her lack of full Aryan status. Although she had been reinstated and was very active developing and testing war planes, she might nevertheless have been under surveillance.
Post-plot In 1944, after the
20 July Plot failed, Alexander von Stauffenberg did not take the opportunity to escape to Egypt but returned to Berlin to defend himself. He was arrested, as his wife and all others bearing the family name had been. After his arrest, Stauffenberg told the Gestapo that he "took the view that the Jewish question should have been dealt with in a 'less extreme manner' because then it would have produced less disturbance among the population". Alexander von Stauffenberg's brothers were executed. He and the rest of the adult family members were held in concentration camps. However, Alexander's wife,
Melitta Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg, was released on 2 September 1944, because of her importance in the development of aircraft. She was now called "Gräfin Schenk", since Hitler wanted to erase the name Stauffenberg. She still maintained contact and support for the imprisoned members of the family. In the final weeks of the war, Melitta was looking for her husband in the concentration camps, and got a
Gestapo authorisation to visit the commandant at
Schönberg where he had been taken. During the visit, her aircraft was shot down by an American fighter; she died hours later of injuries from the attack and crash-landing. In late April 1945, Alexander Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg was
transferred to Tyrol together with about 140 other prominent inmates of the
Dachau concentration camp, where the
SS left the prisoners behind. He was liberated by the
Fifth U.S. Army on 5 May 1945. ==Postwar==