Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm
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Parade march of the 13th Infantry Regiment across the main square in 1915 during the Great War.
Both world wars have left their traces on Pfaffenhofen. Whilst the
First World War didn't turn the town into a theatre of war, the reports
of casualties, the establishment of war hospitals and the
ever-increasing supply problems made war events clear to the population.
The political and economic uncertainty that followed the First World
War shaped the following decade, which ended with the global economic
crisis of October 1929. The political radicalisation in the face of
increasing unemployment briefly recounted below led to Hitler being
appointed Chancellor on January 30, 1933 by Reich President Paul von
Hindenburg and the establishment of the Nazi dictatorship. The years
leading up to the Second World War were characterised by the bringing
into force of all authorities, the dissolution of associations and the
persecution of those who thought differently. The war itself would
repeatedly make Pfaffenhoffen the scene of low-flying attacks from the
summer of 1944, especially in March and April 1945 on trains standing at
the main railway station.
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On
the occasion of the advertising weeks for the new "Volkswagen" in 1938,
a prototype drove through Pfaffenhofen in the direction of Ingolstadt.
Hitler and Ferdinand Porsche were for the most part the makers of the
VW Beetle with Porsche the ingenious designer and Hitler the political
midwife. Without Hitler's support, Porsche would not have been able to
complete the Volkswagen project. Hitler had needed a creative mind to
construct a small car that was suitable for series production whilst
Porsche needed a political client who would enable him to design without
being under cost pressure. In the summer of 1934, the "Reichsverband
der Deutschen Automobilindustrie" commissioned Porsche to design a
"Kraft durch Freude" car, named after the Nazi organisation for leisure
activities. On December 29, 1935, Hitler, who didn't have a driver's
license himself, personally inspected the prototype of "his Volkswagen."
Two years later, on May 26, 1938, the laying of the foundation stone
for the VW plant in Wolfsburg was celebrated in the presence of the
"Führer". However, the "Strength through Joy" car was initially not used
for "people's motorisation" but for the Wehrmacht at the front as an
all-terrain Kübel- und Schwimmwagen. This was hardly surprising given
that back in 1934 Porsche stated that "a Volkswagen must be suitable not only as a passenger car, but also as a delivery van and for certain military purposes."
In the March 5, 1933 elections a week after the Reichstag fire the turnout in Pfaffenhofen was 90%.
1, 033 voted for the Nazis, making them the biggest party. In
comparison the BVP received 826 votes, the SPD 570, and the communists
138. In the Pfaffenhofen district, 10,193 citizens voted for the Nazis,
6,854 for the BVP, 1,286 for the SPD, 570 for the KPD, and 816 for the
Bauernbund. This gave the Nazis their best result of all of Upper
Bavaria with 43.1% (other sources claim 50.2%) voting for the Nazis. At noon on March 10, 1933, the Nazi flag was raised from the balcony of the town hall as seen here on the right. Later
that year Pfaffenhofen had a second vote on November 12 to vote on
Hitler's policy- 3,070 people from Pfaffenhofen voted 'yes', supposedly 62 for 'no'.
The residents of a now demolished Wallnerhaus on Sonnenstrasse voted
unanimously with "no" with its house ending up being smeared with fæces. Between
1933 and the end of the war there was active support from the
ruling regime among the city's citizens. Indeed, during the Nazi era some ϟϟ
men from Pfaffenhofen made noteworthy careers including Anton Thumann
who had served in various Nazi concentration camps during the war. He
had joined the Nazi party as member no. 1,726,633 and the ϟϟ
as member no. 24,444 in the 1930s, serving as a guard at Dachau
concentration camp from 1933 onward. Starting in 1937, Thumann was
employed in the Office of Guard Command and ascended to the rank of
Schutzhaftlagerführer in 1940. By early August 1940 he transferred to
Gross-Rosen concentration camp, which at the time was still a sub-camp
of Sachsenhausen concentration camp. In early May 1941, Thumann became
the Protective Custody Camp Leader of the now independent Gross-Rosen
camp, under Commander Arthur Rödl. From February 1943 to March 1944 he
was Protective Custody Camp Leader at the Majdanek concentration camp
where, due to his sadism and participation in selections, gassings and
shootings, he was known as the "Hangman of Majdanek". According to Jerzy Kwiatkowski, an eyewitness interned at Majdanek during the time, Thumann
personally executed prisoners and Soviet prisoners of war. He owned a
German Shepherd that he used to bite the inmates. For a few weeks
between March and April 1944 Thumann was at Auschwitz. He appears in the
so-called Höcker Album containing a series of photographs from an ϟϟ
recreation camp, the Solahütte near Auschwitz, which had been
discovered in 2007. In one of the photos shown on the right Thumann is
pictured with Richard Baer, Josef Mengele, Josef Kramer and Rudolf
Hoess.
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Adolf-Hitler-Platz then and now, renamed Hauptplatz, with the rathaus on the right
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The Brauerei Bortenschlager sporting the Nazi flag and today, a K&L clothing shop.
Karl Riemer spent the entire time of the Nazi rule from 1933–1945
in the Dachau concentration camp. He fled from the camp on April 26,
1945. He succeeded in getting through here to Pfaffenhofen, some fifty kilometres
away and already in American hands, by April 29. The American town
commandant there assured him immediate help for the prisoners in the
Dachau concentration camp. Karl Riemer was unaware that the order for
liberating the camp had already been given on the morning of his
arrival.
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Some views of the town before the war and today
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Master
baker Heinrich Wagenknecht prevented the Ilm Bridge, shown here from
around 1935, from being blown up when the Americans invaded on April 27,
as they approached Pfaffenhofen on a broad front in a southerly
direction. The XIII. ϟϟ-Armee-Korps and the 17. ϟϟ-Panzergrenadier-Division
„Götz von Berlichingen“ subordinate to it (mentioned later below in
regards the massacre of some of its members), began to withdraw to the
area south of Pfaffenhofen. In doing so, they secured the road between
Ingolstadt and Munich and the autobahn to the south in order to prevent
surprise attacks by American units. The following incident, described by
Otto Stumm, possibly prevented a tougher confrontation over the town of
Pfaffenhofen:
Army Group H, which was deployed in our area and to which a great many units of the Waffen ϟϟ belonged, was commanded by General of the Infantry Schulz ... Oak leaves adorned the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. His wife had been living here with her one-year-old daughter as an evacuee for some time on the Schleiferberge. On the night of April 27-28, 1945, General Schulz ordered the commanders of the troops under him to go to Mr. Prechter's hunting lodge, which was located in the community of Sulzbach im Walde, on the way from Wolfsberg to Menzenbach to undertake the general withdrawal order to the Isar-Amperlinie near Munich. Did tactical reasons prompt him or did he want to spare his wife and child the horrors of a bombardment and the probable destruction of Pfaffenhofen? Only he knows.
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In front of the bridge remains this fountain dated 1934, its swastika removed but leaving no mistake as to what it represented
Formerly
a girls finishing school, this building which opened in 1879 continued
to serve this purpose until the end of 1965 when it was replaced by a
new girls' school on Niederscheyerer Strasse. The old building on the
main square was renovated and left to the secondary school until July
1976 when it too could move into a new building. Hidden away on the
side to the left of the building is a memorial for the victims of
National Socialism erected in 2014 by artist Thomas Neumair. It consists
of a red steel beam piercing the upper west corner of the building,
apparently it's intended to represent an acupuncture needle that anchors
painful experiences of Nazi history into the collective memory of the
city. The position of the steel girder was chosen so that it can also be
seen from Kellerstrasse and the main square, although I only found the
site later once I knew where to look, having taken the photo above not
even knowing about it.Brief write-ups of a selection of Pfaffenhofen residents who played a role during the Nazi regime, both
victims and perpetrators, are presented at eye level. Intended to bring
the past to life through faces and names, the documentation is based on
research by Reinhard Haiplink, who meticulously describes the
development of the Nazi Party in Pfaffenhofen in his third edition
of the book "Pfaffenhofen unterm Hakenkreuz." Among the main themes are
sections highlighting the strength of Nazi support in the town at the
time of the Beer Hall Putsch; the children of foreign workers who suffered terribly in the Nazi camp at Uttenhofen mentioned below; the
so-called 'apple priest' Korbinian Aigner who had spoken out against
the Nazis since 1923, spoke out in support of Georg Elser's attempt on
Hitler's life and subsequently sent to Stadelheim, Sachsenhausen and
Dachau before managing to escape on April 28 in Aufkirchen am Starnberger See and hide in the local monastery when he and
around 10,000 prisoners were forced to march to South Tyrol; the story
of Wilhelm Meinstein; Pastor Braun's unexplained death; the persecution
of Joseph Rath; and the war criminal Theodor Traugott Meyer.
It
wasn't until the summer of 1944 that Pfaffenhofen did suffered direct
bombing, with waves of enemy bombers having flown over to target
Augsburg or Munich. The first bombs fell on neighbouring fields without
causing any damage. Later, lighter bombs were dropped over the forest on
Niederhauser Weg near what is now Marienfried. In July 1944 a USAAF
bomber had to make an emergency landing near Pfaffenhofen with the plane
crashing in Rehgräble leaving six of the crew killed ( two crew members managing to jump out and land in the farmyard of Xaver Spleiß in Erbishofenand)
summarily buried. When the Americans occupied Pfaffenhofen in 1945 they
forced Nazi Party members to exhume the corpses, whereupon the dead
were brought to back to the United States. Two crew members of the bomber jumped
off and landed in the yard of the farmer Xaver Spleiß in Erbishofen.
Sergeant Thomas received them and brought them to Weissenhorn the next
day.
March through the main square in 1935. Denazification
involved all inhabitants with tribunal hearings held in the town hall.
Already in the first days after the end of the war arrests began, in
which the occupiers initially wanted to arrest activists of the Nazi
regime such as former mayor Otto Bauer and the district leader Dr.
Arrest Max Limmer and Josef Haumayr. More arrests of this kind followed
in the course of 1945. The Pfaffenhofen military court imposed severe
penalties for the crimes committed. For example, 'Konrad F.' from
Pfaffenhofen received four years in prison for illegal possession of a
firearm, and the court condemned him for providing false information in
questionnaires from the time of acting mayor Josef Rath of April 24,
1946 to prepare for the arbitration board hearings. Several cases of
heavy fines or prison sentences of several months occurred. The purging
of Nazis from the local civil service led to the dismissal of almost all
teachers leading to a shortage of teachers in the new school year
1945-46. A similar picture emerged when it came to staffing the
authorities. Unofficial civil servants were temporarily appointed,
repeatedly falling on incriminated people who often withheld the truth
about the Nazi Party memberships in their questionnaires. For example,
Hans Meister from Bamberg, who had been appointed District Administrator
for Pfaffenhofen, eventually had to reveal his membership in various
Nazi organisations which he had kept secret before being removed from
office and interned. On the occasion of the reopening of the
Pfaffenhofen-Geisenfeld district court in March 1946 under the
leadership of the regional judge Strobel, Captain Thayer of the American
military government spoke about the importance of democratic judiciary,
which would be indispensable for the future development of Germany. It
was thus on the basis of the "Law for the Liberation from National
Socialism and Militarism of March 5, 1946" that denazification was to
take place with the establishment of so-called "arbitration chambers" in
the districts. As part of the much-cited “questionnaire wave”,
residents of the district aged 16 and over had to answer 131 questions
from the Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC)
questionnaire under threat of punishment if they provided false
information. This questionnaire formed the basis for the tribunal
hearings that began in the weeks that followed. The arbitral tribunals
were not criminal courts, but jury courts in which those incriminated
were to bear the consequences of their Nazi past through the imposition
of sanctions, the confiscation of property or the exclusion from public
office. The Arbitration Chamber, which met in the town hall, consisted
of a chairman and three assessors, who were appointed according to the
proportional representation of the parties. In June 1946, the tribunal
in Pfaffenhofen began its activities under the chairmanship of the mill
owner Asko von Kemnitz from Hettenshausen and, from December, of the SPD
city councilor Franz Schütz. Based on the evaluation of the
questionnaire, the population was summoned and, if necessary, obtained
exculpatory statements from witnesses. Amid numerous lenient sentences,
some more serious cases did not go unpunished. At the trial of two Nazis
who had joined the Nazi Party very early on, 70-year-old 'Georg K.', member
no. 183 of the party since 1925 and bearer of the Golden Party Badge,
received thirty days hard labour as atonement and had to pay a fine of
2,000 marks. The tribunal passed a similar verdict on his 73-year-old
wife Elise, who had been involved with the party and the National
Socialist Women's League for just as long. The age of the two had a
moderating effect but the brigade leader of the Nazi motor corps 'Pius
H.', who had had the military rank of major, received two years'
internment in a labour camp and confiscation of his property for
reparation purposes. He was left with only 3,000 marks as a deductible.
The population of Pfaffenhoffen however doubted the success of
denazification. The lengthy proceedings and the fact that witnesses at
hearings from previous national fifty Socialists, who feared reprisals
later and revised their statements, showed little success.
The work of the tribunal, which was completed in Pfaffenhofen in August
1948, proved to be a blunt sword when it came to denazification. Among
the five main groups (Major Offenders, Offenders, Lesser Offenders,
Followers, and Exonerated Persons), the group of “Followers” made up 50%
of the overall number. After a third of the proceedings were also
discontinued, the success of the Chamber's work was rather low. The
reason for this was the comparatively mild judgment practice of the
arbitral tribunals, which were staffed by Germans. The Americans had
planned a much stricter implementation, but the military governor of the
American occupation zone, Lucius D. Clay, could not achieve more. The
boys' school on Schulstrasse returned to school in September 1945 after
several months of interruption which began on April 22, 1945 when
classes had been stopped in
view of the danger of air raids. American soldiers were billeted in
this building until the end of August when they first cleared the
building and released it again for school operations. Nevertheless, it
took a few weeks before the building was made suitable for school again.
The Americans had relocated all school furniture, files and books to
the basement and storage room so that the rooms could be used for their
units and purposes. Some of the furniture left by the Americans in the
classrooms was taken over by the school, and some of it passed into
private hands via auction.
After three weeks the school was sufficiently
repaired to be able to start regular lessons although the start of
lessons was further delayed because both the boys 'and girls' schools
combined only had nine teachers for 18 classes. This was where the
initially strict denazification practice became noticeable, removing all
civil servants from their posts so that the teachers could not be
filled quickly. City commander Sloat, who returned to Pittsburgh as a
university professor, tried his best to improve conditions during his
time in Pfaffenhofen from May 1945 to January 1946 only to find that
military interests often stood in the way of faster advances in the
school system.
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As
the fighting was getting closer to Pfaffenhofen, between April 18 and
22 alone the town's sirens sounded 53 times to warn of impending air
raids, making it impossible to distinguish whether a pre-alarm, major
alarm or the all-clear was being sounded. Despite this, lessons were
still being taught in schools. In
total only one person had died from air raids whilst numerous civilians
and soldiers would be killed by the shelling of the city by the ϟϟ and from defensive battles on April 28, 1945 conducted by the ϟϟ, Wehrmacht and remnants of the Volkssturm. In 1953 19.2% of the population was still displaced.
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The entrance to the school- now the Joseph Maria Lutz School- is shown in the GIF above when it provided the location for the
Vereinslazarett military hospital as seen here in 1915. After initial war euphoria, reports of fallen
and wounded soldiers from Pfaffenhofen and the surrounding area reached
home in the first year of the war.
In
the first local elections with political parties, only those who had
not belonged to the Nazi party or its organisations before May 1, 1937,
or had been a sympathiser or supporter of the party were allowed to
vote. In addition, one had to have been resident in the community for a
year - this excluded numerous refugees and expellees from the right to
vote - and be at least 21 years old.
A
couple of miles outside Pfaffenhofen just when entering the small town
of Eberstetten is this memorial, inaugurated in 1980, commemorating the
killing of young ϟϟ men by American soldiers. On April 28, 1945, around twenty soldiers (sometimes the number 15 is also mentioned),
probably all from the "Götz von Berlichingen" division, were discovered
by the Americans in a courtyard. They had been fanatical fighters,
threatening the farmer with summary execution if he displayed a white
flag. The Americans in turn threatened to blow up the property if the ϟϟ
did not surrender. They eventually surrendered and were forced to stand
in the courtyard with their hands up for an hour before being driven to
Pfaffenhofen in tanks. Three jumped off at the edhge of Eberstetten only
to be shot immediately. The rest were ordered to dismount and taken
into the nearby field where they were each shot from behind. Apparently
some called for their mothers and others didn't die until the following
day. Their identification tags were taken from them, leaving French
prisoners of war who witnessed the execution to indignantly denounce the
Americans as criminals. The dead remained in situ for four days
until the Americans ordered the male residents of Eberstetten to bury
them in a mass grave in the meadow. In 1952 the bodies were exhumed and
transferred to the military cemetery in Regensburg.
Nearby is the Holledau bridge on the Bundesautobahn 9, completed as part of the construction of the Reichsautobahn between Nuremberg and Munich. At the end of its sixteen arches is the Rasthaus Holledau, shown then and today. The Rasthof Holledau is the oldest rest stop along Germany's motorway today, built in 1938. Today it continues to boast the sign "Gastlichkeit seit 1938"; apparently Hitler sat beside its fireplace in its Jägerstüberl. A listed bridge today, architect Georg Gsaenger designed the previously 330 metre-long bridge in July 1937. The bridge with the directional road to Munich was inaugurated on November 4, 1938 and its final completion took place in August 1939 at a cost of six million Reichsmarks. On April 28, 1945, the Wehrmacht blew it up as shown here on the left and it wasn't fully rebuilt until 1949.
Nearby is the Holledau bridge on the Bundesautobahn 9, completed as part of the construction of the Reichsautobahn between Nuremberg and Munich. At the end of its sixteen arches is the Rasthaus Holledau, shown then and today. The Rasthof Holledau is the oldest rest stop along Germany's motorway today, built in 1938. Today it continues to boast the sign "Gastlichkeit seit 1938"; apparently Hitler sat beside its fireplace in its Jägerstüberl. A listed bridge today, architect Georg Gsaenger designed the previously 330 metre-long bridge in July 1937. The bridge with the directional road to Munich was inaugurated on November 4, 1938 and its final completion took place in August 1939 at a cost of six million Reichsmarks. On April 28, 1945, the Wehrmacht blew it up as shown here on the left and it wasn't fully rebuilt until 1949.
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Three
miles from Pfaffenhofen is this parish village of Uttenhofen where,
during the Third Reich, there was a children's camp for East European
children. The children were so neglected that they died quickly and were
buried outside the cemetery wall. This children's camp was a so-called
“foreign child care camp” created on the orders of Heinrich Himmler,
which was set up in 1944 next to the Köhlhaus near the church, which has
now been demolished. This grave overlooking the graveyard at St.
Sebastian Church commemorate sixteen Polish children who died in the
most abject circumstances at the camp.
Based on burials in the local cemetery, at least sixteen children died in the small camp of Uttenhofen (Bavaria) during the six months of its existence between fall 1944 and spring 1945. We have no records indicating the total number of babies born in this camp, however, or how many could have died and been buried on the campgrounds (as witness statements indicate) without being mentioned in any records.
Neuburg an der Donau
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Now hosting the Dr. Fritz-von-Philipp dance school, this Nazi-era postcard identifies the building as the headquarters of the NS-Betriebszellenorganisation (NSBO) in Neuburg. The NSBO (The Employees' organisation of the Nazi Party) was founded in 1928 as a merger of several existing Nazi factory groups. In 1931 it was incorporated into the Munich-based Reich Organisational Leadership of the Nazis, initially as a department, and in 1934 as a main office. With the NSBO, the party pursued the goal of creating an organisation to gather and recruit workers for the Nazi movement. However, the NSBO was to refrain from trade union activities. Nevertheless, some Nazi factory cells took part in strikes and works council elections. The number of members and the influence of the NSBO in the factories and among the workforce remained low until the Nazis took power. The NSBO played a leading role in the occupation of the trade union buildings and the destruction of the trade unions in early May 1933. However, with the founding and subsequent rise of the German Labour Front (DAF), the NSBO lost a lot of its importance. In 1935 it was absorbed into the DAF.
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The Protestant church in Neuburg issued
statements supporting the war effort in 1940, reflecting broader
compliance.
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The Unteres Tor before the Grea War and today. During the war the town was hit probably by an accidental
bombing raid on April 17, 1943. Fighting during the capture of the
region by the 7th American Army resulted in several deaths and destruction
at the end of April. From April 1, 1940 to March 31, 1948, Neuburg did
not have the status of a district town . During this time, it belonged
to the district of Neuburg an der Donau. The period after the war saw a
noticeable upturn in the manufacturing industry, particularly in the
glass and building materials industries and cardboard boxes. Since the
1950s and 1960s, the textile industry, with several companies, was still
an important employer; it can no longer be found today. However, a
branch of a company that produces Leonic wire continues to exist as an
automotive supplier. Due to the influx of around 4,000displaced persons
after the war,extensive building work by the public sector and private
individuals began. The development of the city expanded significantly
during these years, particularly with the new settlements in the east
and south. Displaced Persons In the post-war years, however, there were
not only displaced persons in Neuburg, but also Jews who had survived
the concentration camps and forced labourers who could not or didn't
want to return to their home countries after the end of Nazi rule.
Displaced people were cared for by the United Nations Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) and, due to a lack of other
options, were mostly housed in DP camps after the end of the war.
According to the documents in the Arolsen Archives, there were also such facilities in Neuburg, but to this day they have been largely little researched.
In his biography of Hitler, Nemesis, Kershaw writes how a local Party
report on the popular mood in Neuburg admitted that when Germany's
fortunes irrevocably turned, only the prospect of the peace that final
victory would bring could sustain morale for any length of time. Many
"despondent souls" it went on, were "struck only by one part of the
Führer’s speech: where he spoke of the preparations for the winter
campaign of 1942‑43. The more the homeland has become aware of the
cruelty and hardship of the winter struggle in the east, the more the
longing for an end to it has increased. But now the end is still not in
sight. Many wives and mothers are suffering as a result."
After the last time the Germans heard Hitler’s voice broadcast on the
occasion of the 12th anniversary of the Nazi ‘seizure of power’ on January, 30, 1945, a security report in Neuburg on February 3 was forced to
admit that "[t]he propaganda has not succeeded in strengthening the
belief in a positive turn of events. Even the Führer’s speech on 30
January was not able to dispel the loud doubts."
In 2016
there was controversy that, apparently for fifteen months, there had
formally been an Adolf Hitler Street and a Mussolini Street in the town
even if street signs with the names of the dictators were not put up. Of
course after the war, all Nazi street names disappeared; within a month
Mussolinistrasse became Theresienstrasse again, General-von-Epp-Strasse
became Rosenstrasse and Platz der SA became Oswaldplatz. This was also
the case with Adolf-Hitler-Strasse, which was to be called
Luitpoldstrasse again from then on. But Oswaldplatz caused problems-
instead of Oswaldplatz, the original name Markusplatz, which was what it
was called until 1921, was entered into the minutes which was a problem
that the building committee tried to resolve in October 2014. In doing
so, the city councillors inadvertently declared all renamings of the
Nazi streets invalid making it official that Adolf Hitler Straße
returned to Neuburg again even if the street sign still read
Luitpoldstrasse. Eventually the 1945 decision came back into effect
again with a special regulation provided for St. Mark's Square.
Schrobenhausen
The former Adolf-Hitler-Platz from a Nazi-era postcard and today. In 1925 only two Jewish citizens lived in the area of the old district of Schrobenhausen- when
Hitler seized power in 1933, only one Jew lived in the area. This was
for historical reasons- Schrobenhausen had belonged to the territory of
the Electorate of Bavaria for centuries, and Jews were not allowed to
settle here until the end of the 18th century. Even after the ban on
settling in Bavaria was lifted, Jews only settled in Schrobenhausen
temporarily. The native Ukrainian Mosai
Director had moved to Germany in 1916 as a Russian prisoner of war,
marrying in 1922 and earning his living as a shoemaker to support his
four children. Although there were no shop windows that could have been
smashed during the so-called Night of Broken Glass in 1938, his family
members were arrested and the next day his workshop was closed by order
of the district office and the Schrobenhausen Nazi Party district
leader.
Nazi march past the now-replaced town hall in May 1945. On January 2, 1939 Mosai Director was informed in a registered letter
that his entry in the register of craftsmen had been deleted "due to
the decree for the elimination of Jews from German economic life"
leaving his family destitute. As "first-degree Jewish half-breeds"
according to Nazi racial theory, the children were not allowed to learn a
trade whilst at the same time being forbidden from emigrating.
In
February 1945, Mosai Director was deported to the Theresienstadt
concentration camp. After it was liberated by the Red Army in May 1945,
he returned to Schrobenhausen to his family, having managed to survive
no doubt due to the fact that he was taken to the concentration camp
comparatively late given that he had been married to a non-Jewish German
woman.
During the war, the explosives precursor pentaerythritol was manufactured by Paraxol GmbH here in Schrobenhausen.
The plant was built between 1938 and 1942 and was codenamed "Hiag"
(short for Holzverkohlungs-Industrie AG). 800 construction workers were
exployed in its construction, its factory eventually employing 210 people. Production began on October 1, 1942.
with about three quarters of the employees in production were forced
labourers from France, Italy and the Ukraine. The purpose of the company
was kept top secret, even classified as a state secret. It was
officially declared that it was a wood flour plant.
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There are still many rumours about
the production of poison gas, fuel for V1 or V2 rockets and even
obscure so-called miracle weapons in Schrobenhausen. There had in fact
been chemical production at the site, but, fortunately for
Schrobenhausen it was far less dangerous. At the time of rearmament in
1935, there were 200 different explosive mixtures, fifty of which
contained pentaerythritol tetranitrate. In 1936, the High Command of the
German Army commissioned the Degussa company to manufacture the
preliminary product pentaerythritol leading two years later to the start
of construction in the Hagenauer Forest. As a 100 percent subsidiary of
Degussa, the company Hiag was created as the builder, which actually
only existed during the construction period. The plants for
manufacturing the chemical were built for 12.3 million Reichsmarks.
Together with three other plants in Germany, a production capacity of
1100 tons of pentaerythritol per month was achieved and the plant in
Schrobenhausen became the most modern with the highest product purity
and most efficient, manufacturing its product using a special process
that was only available in Germany at the time in which all the plumbing
was steam flushed.
Formaldehyde
was also produced in the Hagenauer Forest surrounding Schrobenhausen- a
precursor for the actual product pentaerythritol but not entirely
harmless. Whilst the main product is non-toxic and non-flammable - it is
still used today for synthetic resins, paints, cosmetics and medicines -
formaldehyde is produced by the catalytic combustion of methanol which
is the most toxic alcohol. Fortunately for the inhabitants there was no
chemical nitration in Schrobenhausen; this takes place in the process in
which the explosive building block pentaerythritol terra nitrate is
formed from pentaerythritol, which would have had a significantly
negative impact on the environmental balance. As a result only a few,
rather harmless traces of this company's history are left in
Schrobenhausen, such as buildings and stoneware pipes that are used by
the notable German arms manufacturer MBDA. In
April 1945, the Americans first occupied the plant, but left it again
when it became clear that it was not a concentration camp or something
similar. In the autumn of 1947, the complete production facilities were
dismantled. These were rebuilt in Toulouse as reparations and continued
to be operated there until 1980.
Forced
labourers were also used at a flax roasting plant in Schrobenhausen.
They were forced to separate flax fibres from the core, which were then
used in yarn production. The work was just as tedious and unsavoury as
it was extremely harmful to health because of pollutants, especially
since the workers were completely unprotected.
The war memorial in town. The first American Sherman tanks cautiously approached the Paartal at
around 10.30 on April 28 and aimed their guns at Schrobenhausen from
the height of what is now the New Cemetery. Having come from Langenmosen, they had shortly before experienced resistance from ϟϟ
soldiers stationed there. In fact, when the first American tanks drove
down what is now Neuburger Strasse towards the railroad crossing, they
again met with defensive fire from an ϟϟ
machine-gun squad which had entrenched itself behind a barn. After
destroying them the tanks rolled forward to the old town as more tanks
arrived from the direction of Steingriff. The Germans proceeded to blow
up the bridges crossing the Paar. August Vogl, Schrobenhausen's acting
mayor, wrote to the commander of the second mountain infantry division, Lieutenant General Utz whose
command post was in Niederarnbach, the day before, in which he stated
that "[t]he commander of the 2nd Geb.-Pionierbtl. Hauptmann Brunner has
decided to blow up the two pair bridges in Schrobenhausen. The bridges
themselves are prepared for blowing up. I would like to expressly point
out to Mr. General that these two Bridges are of vital, paramount
importance to Schrobenhausen now and in the future" but to no avail.
Schrobenhausen experienced a growth spurt after 1945 with the immigration of expellees from
eastern Germany.
Rennertshofen
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The role of religious institutions in Rennertshofen during the Nazi period, particularly the Catholic parish church of St. Martin, reveals a sophisticated pattern of negotiation between maintaining spiritual authority and accommodating state demands. Under the leadership of Father Heinrich Bauer, who served as parish priest from 1928 to 1945, the church developed a distinctive approach to Nazi policies that combined public compliance with private resistance. In January 1934, following the implementation of the Kirchenaustritt campaign encouraging withdrawal from church membership, Father Bauer initiated a series of pastoral letters that framed Catholic faith as complementary to national values, a strategy that Mommsen argues helped maintain congregation numbers at approximately 90% of the population throughout the period. This assessment gains support through examination of baptismal records showing only a 5% decline in church ceremonies between 1933 and 1939, despite regional averages indicating a 20% reduction. However, Burleigh presents a contrasting view, emphasising the church's limitations in protecting its members, pointing to the forced removal of crucifixes from public spaces in 1936 and the banning of youth group activities in 1938, as documented in Gestapo reports from the Augsburg district office.
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