Not wanting to draw attention to herself, Ida Siekmann decided to forgo waiting for help, instead throwing bedsheets onto the ground below, hoping to cushion her fall. Misjudging her leap, she hit the pavement.
Badly injured from the fall, she died on her way to the nearby Lazarus hospital – one day before her 59th birthday.
The West Berlin fire brigade – not around to assist in her escape – removed her body from where she fell. The blood stain she had left behind was then covered in sand before being swept away.
Today, a memorial plaque marks the location of Ida Siekmann’s deadly leap to freedom. Although not murdered by the East German border guards whilst trying to escape, she is still classified as the first victim of the Berlin Wall – her death a result of the absurdity of its construction.
The first person killed by the East German government whilst trying to escape to the West was Günter Litfin – who tried and failed to escape on August 24th 1961. Two days after Siekmann’s attempt.