NEUENGAMME

'Neuengamme' is a district in Hamburg. Before and during World War II a concentration camp was established by SS. Since this concentration camp was located in the district Neuengamme, the name of the concentration camp became 'KZ Neuengamme' (KZ = Konzentrationslager = concentration camp). [1].
Reconstructed railway wagon at the Neuengamme memorial in which prisoners were transported

The memorial tower at the former concentration camp Neuengamme

The site is one of the few concentration camps in Germany where most of the buildings have been conserved and serves as a memorial today. It is situated 15 km southeast of the centre of Hamburg at Jean-Dolidier-Weg in the Vierlande area.

Contents
History
Inmates census
Wellknown inmates
See also
External links

History


The camp existed from December 13 1938 through May 4 1945 and had a total of 106,000 inmates during this time. These were spread over the main camp (213,000 m²) and 96 outposts across the north German area. Inmates were from 28 nationalities [Russians (34,350), Poles (16,900), Frenchmen (11,500), Germans (9,200), Dutchmen (6,950), Belgians (4,800), Danes (4,800), ...] and also from the local Jewish community, but also included communists, homosexuals, prostitutes, Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, prisoners of war and many other groups. 55,000 succumbed to the subhuman conditions in the camp consisting of hard manual work with insufficient nutrition, very unhygienic conditions and violence from the guards.
Work at the mother camp was centered on the production of bricks. This included the construction of a canal to transport the bricks to and from the site. Inmates had to excavate the heavy, peaty soil with inadequate tools and regardless of weather conditions or their health state.
Several original buildings of the camp continued to serve as a prison (for example Building Number 9). There is a good museum located at the south end of the site.
In late 1943, most likely November, Neuengamme recorded its first female prisoners according to camp records. In the summer of 1944, Neuengamme received many women prisoners from Auschwitz, as well other camps in the East. All of the women were eventually shipped out to one of its twenty-four female subcamps. Female guards were trained at Neuengamme and assigned to one of its female subcamps also. There were no SS women stationed at Neuengamme permanently. Many of these women are known by name, including Kaethe Becker, Erna Dickmann, Johanna Freund, Angelika Grass, Kommandoführerin Loni Gutzeit (who also served at Hamburg-Wandsbek and was nicknamed "The Dragon of Wandsbek" by the prisoners), Gertrud Heise, Frieda Ignatowitz, Gertrud Moeller, who also served at Boizenburg subcamp, Lotte Johanna Radtke, chief wardress Annemie von der Huelst, Inge Marga Marggot Weber. Many of the women were later dispersed to female subcamps throughout northern Germany. Today it is known that female guards staffed the subcamps of Neuengamme at Boizenburg, Braunschweig SS-Reitschule, Hamburg Sasel, Hamburg Wandsbek, Helmstedt-Beendorf, Langenhorn, Neugraben, Obernheide, Salzwedel, and Unterluss (Vuterluss). Only a few have been tried for war crimes, such as Anneliese Kohlmann, who served as one of only six woman guards at Neugraben.
Three of the camp's outposts also serve as public memorials. These are located at Bullenhuser Damm, Kritenbarg 8 and Suhrenkamp 98. The first of these is a memorial to the murder of 20 children from Auschwitz concentration camp that had been taken to Hamburg and abused for medical experiments.
Aerial shot of the Neuengamme camp taken by British aviation on April 16, 1945.

On April 20, 1945, only weeks before the war was over, they were killed to cover up that crime. The second is an outpost of Neuengamme concentration camp where Jewish women from the Łódź Ghetto in Poland were forced to do construction work. The third one is located inside the gatehouse of the Fuhlsbüttel penitentiary. Parts of this complex served as concentration camp for communists, opponents of the regime and many other groups. About 450 inmates were murdered here during the Nazi reign.
On April 26, 1945, the SS Cap Arcona was loaded with about 10,000 prisoners from the Neuengamme concentration camp, together with Thielbek and Athen, was brought into the Bay of Lübeck.
On May 3, 1945, the Cap Arcona, the Thielbek, and the passenger liner Deutschland were sunk in four separate attacks by RAF planes.

Inmates census


'Country'' Men ''Women'' Overall '
Soviet Union28 4505 90034 350
Poland13 0003 90016 900
France11 00050011 500
Germany8 8004009 200
Netherlands6 6503006 950
Belgium4 5003004 800
Denmark4 800'-'4 800
Hungary14001 2002 600
Norway2 200'-'2 200
Yugoslavia1 4001001 500
Czechoslovakia8005801 380
Greece1 250'-'1 250
Italy 850'-'850
Spain750'-'750
Austria30020320
Luxembourg50'-'50
Other countries1 3003001 600
'Overall ''87 500''13 500''101 000'
not officially on the lists'-''-'5 000
'Global overall''-''-''106 000'
'Dead in deportation''-''-''55 000'

There was about '52% of dead people ' in all kommandos depending on Neuengamme between December 13rd 1938 and May 4th 1945.

Wellknown inmates



Claude Bourdet (1909-1996),

Fernand Demoustier (1906-1945),

Andre Duromea (né en 1917),

Michel Hollard (1897-1993),

Roger Jardelle (1894-1959),

Raymond de Lassus, son of Étienne de Lassus Saint Geniès (1887-1979)

Jean Le Corre

Roland Malraux (1912-1945),

Louis Martin-Chauffier, (1894-1980),

André Migdal, (1924-2007),

Allan Henry Muhr (1882-1944),

Henry Noirot (1879-1972),

Fritz Pfeffer (1889-1944)

Albert Réville (1883-1949),

Albert Rohmer (1913-2006),

David Rousset (1912-1997),

Jacques Sourdille (1922-1996),

Johann Trollman (1907-1943),

Louis de Visser (1878-1945)

See also



List of subcamps of Neuengamme

SS Cap Arcona

External links



Official website of the concentration camp Neuengamme

More information

More information

Stichting Vriendenkring Neuengamme (Dutch)

★ Axis History Factbook: SS personnel serving at Neuengamme. [2]

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