Everything about Oswald Pohl totally explained
Oswald Pohl (
June 30 1892 -
June 7 1951) was a
Nazi official and member of the
SS (with a rank of
SS-Obergruppenführer), involved in the mass murders of
Jews in
concentration camps, the
Endlösung.
Early years
Pohl was born in
Duisburg-Ruhrort as the son of blacksmith Hermann Otto Emil Pohl and his wife Auguste Pohl (née Seifert); he was the fifth of a total of eight children. After graduating from school in
1912, he became a full-time sailor in the
German navy, being trained in
Kiel and
Wilhelmshaven as well as the
Caribbean and south-east
Asia. During
World War I, he served in the
Baltic sea region and the coast of
Flanders. Pohl also attended a navy school, and became
paymaster on
April 1 1918; most of his time in the navy from then on was spent in
Kiel. On
October 30 the same year, he married.
After the end of the war, Pohl attended courses at a trade school and also began studying
law and state theory at the
Christian-Albrechts-Universität in
Kiel; he dropped out of university soon again, though, and became
paymaster for the
Freikorps "
Brigade Löwenfeld", working in
Berlin, Upper
Silesia and the
Ruhr basin. In
1920, like many others involved in the
Lüttwitz-Kapp Putsch, he was accepted into the
Weimar Republic's new navy, the
Reichsmarine. Pohl was transferred to
Swinemünde (now in
Poland) in
1924.
SS career
One year later, in
1925, Pohl became a member of the
SA, then finally joined the re-founded
NSDAP (the
Nazi party) on
February 22 1926 as member #30842. He met
Heinrich Himmler in
1933 and became his protége; he was appointed chief of the administration department in the staff of the
Reichsführer-SS ("
Reich leader SS", RFSS) and given the rank of
SS-Standartenführer on
February 1 1934 and began to influence the administration of the
concentration camps.
His career continued when he was made
Verwaltungschef (chief of administration) and
Reichskassenverwalter ("
Reich treasurer") for the
SS on
June 1 1935, then initiated the
Inspektion der Konzentrationslager ("inspection of the concentration camps"), an organization to organize and oversee the administration of the
concentration camps. He also founded the "
Gesellschaft zur Förderung und Pflege deutscher Kulturdenkmäler" ("Society for the preservation and fostering of German cultural monuments"), which was primarily dedicated to restoring the
Wewelsburg, an old castle that was supposed to be turned into a cultural and scientific headquarters of the
SS at
Heinrich Himmler's request. The "society" soon became a part of Pohl's
SS administration office.
Pohl also left the church in
1935, and in June
1939 became chief of both the "
Hauptamt Verwaltung und Wirtschaft" ("main bureau
[for] administration and economy", part of the SS) and the "
Hauptamt Haushalt und Bauten" ("main bureau
[for] budget and construction", part of the
Reich's ministry for the interior). On
February 1 1942, both institutions were combined into the
SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt (SS-WVHA, "SS main bureau for economic administration") with Pohl in charge; among other things, the SS-WVHA was in charge of the organization of the
concentration camps, deciding on the distribution of detainees to the various camps and the "rental" of detainees for forced labour until
1944.
Pohl was made
SS-Obergruppenführer and
general of the
Waffen-SS on
April 20 1942; on
December 12 the same year, after divorce from his wife, he married
Eleonore von Brüning, widow of
Ernst Rüdiger von Brüning who in turn was the son of one of the founders of the
Hoechster Farbwerke which became part of the
IG Farben in
1925.
In
1944, Pohl was put out of charge of the concentration camps, with the
Rüstungsministerium (ministry of armament) overtaking; at the same time, the responsibility for construction was also taken away from the SS-WVHA. However, Pohl remained in charge of the administration of the
Waffen-SS for the remainder of the war.
Postwar
After the end of
World War II in
1945, Pohl first hid in
Upper Bavaria, then near
Bremen; nevertheless, he was captured by
British troops on
May 27 1946 and sentenced to death on
November 3 1947 by an American
military tribunal after the
Nuremberg trials for crimes against humanity, war crimes and membership in a criminal organization as well as for mass murders and crimes committed in the concentration camps administered by the SS-WVHA he was in charge of. However, Pohl wasn't executed right away.
In
1950, Pohl's book "
Credo. Mein Weg zu Gott" ("Credo. My way to
God") was published with permission from the
Catholic church, which Pohl had rejoined. Until his death in
Landsberg am Lech on
June 7 1951, where he was hanged after a long series of appeals, Pohl insisted on his innocence, stating that he was only a "simple functionary".
Further Information
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