
eBook - ePub
Nazi Millionaires
The Allied Search for Hidden SS Gold
- 320 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
The untold story of Nazi officers who escaped Germany after WWII with stolen treasureâand the Allied investigation to get it back.
During the final days of World War II, German SS officers crammed trains, cars, and trucks full of gold, currency, and jewels, and headed for the mountains of Austria. Most of these men were eventually apprehended, but many managed to evade capture. The intensive postwar Allied investigation that followed recovered only a sliver of their treasure. The true story of the men who escaped, and the riches that went missing, is finally revealed in Nazi Millionaires.
This groundbreaking study, based on previously unpublished and newly declassified documents, offers insight into the minds and methods of these SS thieves. Readers are taken inside the Reich Security Main Office where they worked and the Allied investigation into their activities to discover what happened to the vast wealth they looted from Europe's Jews. Nazi Millionaires tells a remarkable tale of greed, fraud, treachery, and murder.
During the final days of World War II, German SS officers crammed trains, cars, and trucks full of gold, currency, and jewels, and headed for the mountains of Austria. Most of these men were eventually apprehended, but many managed to evade capture. The intensive postwar Allied investigation that followed recovered only a sliver of their treasure. The true story of the men who escaped, and the riches that went missing, is finally revealed in Nazi Millionaires.
This groundbreaking study, based on previously unpublished and newly declassified documents, offers insight into the minds and methods of these SS thieves. Readers are taken inside the Reich Security Main Office where they worked and the Allied investigation into their activities to discover what happened to the vast wealth they looted from Europe's Jews. Nazi Millionaires tells a remarkable tale of greed, fraud, treachery, and murder.
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Yes, you can access Nazi Millionaires by Theodore P. Savas,Kenneth D. Alford in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & World War II. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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CHAPTER 1
The Devilâs Duo: Heinrich Himmler and Ernst Röhm
âIn this hour I was responsible for the fate of the German people, and thereby I become the supreme judge of the German people.â
Adolf Hitler was the most powerful man in Europe years before the United States entered World War II. His chosen successor, Reichsmarshall Hermann Göring, was also one of Germanyâs most dominant leaders. However powerful the former air ace was as the head of a mighty Luftwaffe at warâand notwithstanding his general corruptness and megalomaniaâGöring was forced to operate within the conventional framework of the armed forces, and all the restrictions that system entailed. He had stood side-by-side with Hitler during the Austrianâs climb to power, and was first in line in responsibility for victory in Poland and the Low Countries. But Göringâs fortunes rested upon a foundation of military successes. Humiliation over the skies of Britain and the humbling experience above the steppes of Russia dimmed his star.
Two other dominant personalities also played an important role in the rise of Nazism and Adolf Hitler during the 1920s and 1930s. Their quasi-military organizations were not hampered by traditional bureaucratic niceties or other such impedimenta. Laws and tradition existed only to be broken and extinguished. Only one of the leaders survived to witness the outbreak of war in 1939. His star rose during the heady days of 1939â1941âand kept on rising as setbacks in the east and west mounted. His position within the Third Reich was less conspicuous than that of Göringâs, and the power he wielded was almost absolute.
***
The character of one of the Nazi regimeâs most brutal officers continues to fascinate historians. Despite his explicit and freely admitted responsibility for monstrous cruelty against his fellow man, the dichotomy that was Heinrich Himmler remains.
Born in Munich on October 7, 1900, Himmler was the son of a pious authoritarian Roman Catholic schoolmaster who had once been tutor to the Bavarian Crown Prince. His early career in life was singularly unimpressive. Education during his formative years was taken in Landshut. While a teenager, he trained as an officer cadet and served with the 11th Bavarian Regiment, but did not see active service before the end of World War I. Unlike Hitler, however, Himmler did not outwardly manifest vehement infuriation at the harsh outcome imposed by the Versailles Treaty. Returning home, he entered Munichâs School of Technology in 1918 and emerged four years later with a degree in agriculture. The first few years of the 1920s passed quietly while Himmler labored as a fertilizer salesman and poultry farmer. Quiet, non-violent, and outwardly unemotional, the young man was described by one who knew him well as âan intelligent schoolmaster.â But inside that calm schoolmasterâs demeanor was something terribly wrong.
By 1923 Himmler had acquired a deep interest in German politics. Setting aside his quiet life of agriculture, he participated in Hitlerâs abortive Beer Hall Putsch and joined Ernst Röhmâs criminal paramilitary organization, the Reichskriegsflagge (Reich War Flag). By 1925 he was a full member of the Nazi party as well as the black-shirted SS (Schutzstaffeln), Hitlerâs personal armed bodyguard. A succession of positions of power within the fledgling party were now open to him; promotions flew in his direction. In 1926 he became the partyâs assistant propaganda leader. After marrying in 1927 and briefly returning to poultry farming, Hitler tapped him to run the SS, at that time a small body comprised of about 200 men. The following year Himmler was elected as a Nazi Reichstag deputy. For the next three years he worked tirelessly on Hitlerâs behalf, guaranteeing his own continued rise to power.
After the Nazis seized the countryâs political machinery in 1933, Himmler was appointed police president in Munich and head of the Bavarian political police. This authority and control gave Himmler exactly what he had been seeking for years: the power base to broaden and deepen his SS and organize the Sicherheitsdienst, or SD, a separate ideological intelligence department within the SS under the command of Reinhard Heydrich. It also distanced him from Ernst Röhmâs Sturmabteilung, or SA, Hitlerâs paramilitary police. Himmler took the opportunity to set up the first concentration camp at Dachau, where political opponents and undesirables were housed in what was euphemistically called âprotective custody.â Throughout these early years Himmler demonstrated an amazing organizational ability, especially with regard to the formation of political alliances within the Nazi hierarchy. The superficially cool officer was a survivor, an ambitious climber who craved power.1
According to one author, Himmler used his new powers in 1933 to begin constructing a âstate within the state,â a shadow government that answered to no one. Membership in his SS grew from 200 to more than 50,000 before the end of 1933. The ideology driving Himmler, and thus the SS, was an unhealthy preoccupation with religion, Nordic myths, and Aryan genealogy. As a result, the SS was constructed on the organized principles of the order of the Jesuits. The service statutes and spiritual exercises prescribed by Ignatius Loyola were emulated. Indeed, Himmlerâs title, âReichsfĂŒhrer,â was intended as the counterpart of the Jesuitâs General of Order. The complete structure of the SS leadership was adopted from Himmlerâs studies of the hierarchic order of the Catholic Church. His domination expanded during this time when he secured the SSâs independence from control of Ernst Röhmâs SA, to which the SS was initially subordinated. Together with Reinhard Heydrichâs SD, Himmler continued his ceaseless labors to consolidate his power. In September 1933 he was made commander of all the political police units outside Prussia and, though formally still under Göringâs control, became head of the Prussian Police and Gestapo on April 20, 1934. Up until now Himmlerâs rise within the party hierarchy had been little short of meteoric. Only one man stood in the way of his complete consolidation of power.
***
Like Himmler, Ernst Röhm was also born in Munich. Other than their mutual association with Adolf Hitler, however, similarities were few and far between. Röhm served honorably in World War I. By the time Germany surrendered in 1918 he was the recipient of three combat wounds and held the rank of captain. Like so many men after that disastrous war, Röhmâs postwar goals were ill-defined at best. Yearning for structure he joined the Freikorps, a radical right-wing group of armed associations organized to defend the countryâs borders against the threat of communist invasion. After participating in the Freikorpsâs bloody slaughter of hundreds of communists and socialists in March 1919, Röhm steeped himself in nascent right-wing party politics. It was Röhm who secured the services of a young Adolf Hitler to spy on the German Workerâs Party (GWP), which Röhm soon joined. Like so many others, Röhm found Hitler to be a charismatic comrade. At his urging, Röhm led a group of armed storm troopers in the failed Beer Hall Putsch in November 1923. Tried and found guilty of treasonable acts, Röhm escaped prison but was booted from the German army. Hitler was much smarter than Röhm. Instead of trying to defend himself on the few merits of his position, Hitler turned his trial into a political discourse that elevated his prestige even as he later languished in Landsberg prison.
In these early years of the Nazi movement Röhmâs Brownshirts had been an indispensable element of Hitlerâs success, a magnet that had attracted thousands of disaffected recruits into the Party. From within Landsberg the future leader of Germany came to realize that Röhmâs thirst for direct military confrontation with the German State was not the true course to power. He began to disassociate himself from a man he now viewed as an undesirable. Discarded by Hitler, Röhm withdrew from political life. The few jobs he held frustrated and bored him. Only an offer from Bolivia to serve as a military instructor preserved in Röhm some vestige of self worth. But history was not yet finished with the stocky native of Munich. The round chubby-faced ex-captain with a deep scar on one cheek, uneven mustache, and biting, porcine eyes, had one more act to play in the drama unfolding within Germanyâs borders.2
While Röhm toiled, Hitler plotted a new course for the SA. Shedding its paramilitary garb, Hitler honed the organization into a political weapon wholly subordinated to the NSDAP, or Nazi party. Hitlerâs significant electoral victory in 1930 prompted him to recall Röhm as the SAâs chief of staffâthough only after Hitler had assumed the position of Supreme Leader of the organization. Röhm rapidly expanded the SA into a popular army of street fighters, gangsters, and thugs. By 1934 the unemployed and disaffected swelled the ranks of the SA to several (loosely organized) millions. Röhm regarded this plebeian army of desperadoes as the core of the Nazi movement, the embodiment and guarantee of a permanent revolution. Under his leadership the SA fulfilled an indispensable role in Hitlerâs rise to power between 1930 and 1933. Spreading propaganda and terror, Röhmâs brownshirts won the battle of the streets against the communists and other political opposition. As 1934 dawned, Röhmâs private army was as powerful as the German Army itself. But while Röhm was conquering the streets for Hitler, the new Chancellor of Germany had again come full circle in his thinking: his SA chief was no longer necessary.
Indeed the SA chief was now a threat to Hitler. Röhm had become disillusioned with the Nazi revolution. The growing bureaucratic Nazi movement angered Röhm, who dreamed of a âsoldierâs stateâ and the primacy of the soldier over the politician. Provided a seat on the National Defence Council in 1933, Röhm vocalized his dissatisfaction over the use of his SA. In October he sent an ominous letter to Walther von Reichenau, the liaison officer between the German army and the Nazi Party. âI regard the Reichswehr [German army] now only as a training school for the German people. The conduct of war, and therefore of mobilization as well, in the future is the task of the SA.â Röhm insisted on maintaining momentum in a socialist direction while talking openly about the conquest of Germany. His populist demagogy alienated the middle class and the industrialists, whose support Hitler was still seeking and desperately needed. Röhm failed to understand Hitlerâs concept of a gradual insurrection carried out under the cloak of legality. The real revolution, warned Röhm, was yet to come.
If Hitler did not readily admit and recognize it, his chief supporters did: Röhm had to go. The head of the SA overplayed his hand by antagonizing two dangerous rivals, Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler. Both feared the SA leader, who was potentially strong enough to crush them. Both pressured Hitler to reduce his power and exposure by utilizing the SS and the Gestapo to do so. Röhmâs own conduct and that of his entourage, given to dissolute homosexual orgies and drinking bouts, loutish behavior, and wildly indiscreet remarks, made the task of his enemies that much easier. Still, Hitler hesitated. How could he eliminate his oldest comrade-in-arms, a man to whom he felt a debt of gratitude and a certain warmthâeven though he had become a liability and even a danger to his regime?
In goose-stepped Heinrich Himmler and his SS. Together with several officers of the German army, Himmler plotted Röhmâs spectacular demise. Heydrich, head of Himmlerâs SD arm, was ordered to compile a damning dossier. The SA leader, Heydrich âdiscovered,â had accepted millions of marks from the French to launch a coup and oust Hitler. Hitler knew the record was untrue, but he saw the opportunity to finally be rid of Röhmâand seized it. Taken utterly by surprise, Röhm was arrested on June 30, 1934, in a private hotel at Bad Wiessee, a small Bavarian spa south of Munich where he was taking a holiday with other SA leaders. He was taken to Stadelheim prison, where he was executed two days later by firing squad after refusing to take his own life. It was an ironic end for the man who had once uttered, âAll revolutions devour their own children.â3
The bloody purge was kept secret until the middle of July, when Hitler mentioned the action during a speech and gave it a name that would resonate through history: âThe Night of the Long Knives.â Hitler publicly branded Röhm a traitor and accused him of having fomented a nationwide plot to overthrow the government. âIn this hour I was responsible for the fate of the German people, and thereby I become the supreme judge of the German people,â shouted Hitler in his explanation of why he did not use the German justice system to try Röhm. âI gave the order to shoot the ringleaders in this treason.â Hitler professed outrage at the homosexual aspects of Röhm and his criminal entourage, although the leaderâs lifestyle had been well known and tolerated for many years. Scores and perhaps hundreds perished in the purge that both ended the influence of the SA and gained for Hitler the acceptance of the German officer corps and support of many industrialists. When President Paul von Hindenburg died five weeks later, the former World War I corporal became head of state.4
Himmler, too, was the beneficiary of a Nazi apparatus unfettered with the likes of an Ernst Röhm. The flow of SA blood paved the way for the emergence of the more military SS as an independent organization charged with safeguarding the embodiment of the National Socialist idea and translating the racism of the regime into a dynamic principle of action. The ReichsfĂŒhrer occupied a splendid villa in the fashionable Berlin suburb of Dahlem alongside other high Party officials, as well as a country home on the Tegernsee. However, neither location was suitable for the seat of his rising SS Order. His wandering eye fell upon Wewelsburg Castle, an impressive triple-towered renaissance-era citadel overlooking the Alme Valley ten miles southwest of Paderborn. The location and unusual triangular form of the castle, which had served as the secondary residence of the prince bishops of Paderborn in the early 1600s, was perfect for what Himmler had in mind. He viewed his black-shirted SS men as the reincarnation of not just the medieval order of the Teutonic knights, but also of King Arthurâs Knights of the Round Table. Arthur had Camelot; Himmler would have Wewelsburg.
The SS rented the castle in 1934 from the district of BĂŒren for a single Reichsmark each year. Himmler intended to transform the castle into a nucleus of support for the pseudo-scientific ideology of National Socialism and a sacred shrine for dead SS leaders. Improvement work on the Wewelsburg complex began immediately. The castleâs focal point, a grand dining hall complete with a gigantic oak table that seated twelve, owed much to Arthurian legend. Coats of arms adorned the walls. Below the dining hall was a circular cellar called the âRing of Honor.â The room, intended as a crypt, was lighted by a few rectangular openings in the thick brick walls and sported a giant swastika embedded in the ceiling. Signet rings emblazoned with the horrendous âdeathâs headâ insignia were presented to the first 10,000 SS men and to senior commanders. Whenever an SS notable died, his ring was placed in a chest housed in the crypt. Select SS members were ordained into senior positions there.
Each of the rooms allotted to the knights in the castle commemorated Germanic heroes, decorated and furnished in period and provided with books and documents on their subject. Himmlerâs castle quarters were dedicated to Heinrich I, the tenth-century Saxon King who beat back Magyar horsemen pressing westward from the interior of Russia and formed the basis of the German confederation of princes which became, under his son Otto, the Holy Roman Empire.5
ReichsfĂŒhrer Himmler had successfully completed his bid to win control of the political and criminal police throughout the Third Reich when he became head of the Gestapo that had originally been established by Göring. Almost every level of power was now either under Himmlerâs command or within reach of his iron cold grasp. Now the only question was how that power would be wielded and the results that would flow from its use.
Notes
1. This general background of Heinrich Himmler is extracted from Peter Padfield, Himmler: ReichsfĂŒhrer-SS (London, Cassell Publishers, 2001). See specific references within. Padfieldâs book is, by far, the best single source on Himmlerâs life and career under the Nazi banner.
2. Joachim C. Fest, The Face of the Third Reich: Portraits of Nazi Leadership (London, 1970), pp. 141â144.
3. Fest, The Face of the Third Reich, pp. 144â147.
4. Axelrod and Phillips, Dictionary of Military Biography, p. 166.
5. Padfield, Himmler, pp. 248â249.
CHAPTER 2
Hitlerâs Rogues: Reinhard Heydrich and Ernst Kaltenbrunner
âWe have achieved a complete victory and the SS is in formation and awaiting further orders.â
In order to channel his author...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Map
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Dramatis Personae
- Introduction: The Rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany
- 1 The Devilâs Duo: Heinrich Himmler and Ernst Röhm
- 2 Hitlerâs Rogues: Reinhard Heydrich and Ernst Kaltenbrunner
- 3 Franz Konrad: The King of the Ghetto
- 4 Playing God in Budapest: The KastnerâBecher Faustian Bargain
- 5 Fischhorn Castle: The Last SS Headquarters
- 6 The Moneymakers
- 7 A Bureaucrat and His Gold: Josef Spacilâs Final Days of World War II
- 8 Betrayal: The Discovery of Josef Spacil
- 9 Ghetto Konradâs Hidden Wealth
- 10 Walter Hirschfeld and the Search for Eva Braunâs Jewels
- 11 Kurt Becher: The Only White Sheep in the Black SS?
- 12 Fall From Grace: Walter Hirschfeld and the Counter Intelligence Corps
- 13 Ernst Kaltenbrunnerâs Missing Sacks of Gold
- 14 Adolf Eichmannâs Blaa Alm Gold
- 15 The Frau Connection: Iris Scheidler and Elfriede Höttl
- 16 The Gold Trade in Upper Austria
- 17 The Bloody Red Cross? Walter Schellenbergâs âExternal Assetsâ
- Postscript: Loose Ends
- Bibliography
- Plate section