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Helmbrechts concentration camp

Encyclopedia : H : HE : HEL : Helmbrechts concentration camp


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The Flossenburg camp founded a women's subcamp near Hof, Germany in the summer of 1944. The first prisoners who came to the camp were politicals from the Ravensbruck camp in northern Germany.

In the beginning, no barracks were completed so the women slept in the factory hall. Eventually twelve barracks were completed, but only four were for prisoners living quarters. Fifty-four guards served at the camp; twenty-seven men and twenty-seven women. Most of the women guards served at other camps; many trained at Flossenburg, two at Gross Rosen and two in Ravensbruck before they arrived at Helmbrechts. The male guards however, were mostly older Germans or ethnic Germans who were no longer combat worthy.

Herta Haase, Erna Achtenberg, Erna Achtenberg, Ellia Mains, Ingeborg Schimming, Ruth Hildner, were just some of the female SS troops stationed in the camp. The male guards profiles however are unknown by the most part. According to a postwar testimony of overseer Elli Mains, relations between the male and female guards were "very good." The camps population was mainly non-Jews, but in March 1945, a group of over 500 Jewish women arrived on foot from the Gruenberg subcamp in Poland.

Many died as a result of beatings due to lack of productivity. In early April 1945 the front closed in on Germany. Commandant Doerr ordered the women to depart on a death march to Dachau. Along the way the Nazi guards learned that the US army liberated the camp and turned the march into Czechoslovakia. Along the way many prisoners died. The Germans left all the non-Jewish women at the Zwodau subcamp on the seventh day of the march but took with them the 167 Jewish women. The march ended on May 8 in a small farming village in Czechoslovakia where the US staged an air raid on the group, killing a pregnant SS woman and injuring two other female guards. The US army found the inmates the next day. The camp at Helmbrechts was liberated the same day as Bergen Belsen, April 15, but no inmates remained behind. The non-Jews had been left at the Zwodau camp in what is today Czechoslovakia.

 


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