List of prisoners of Sachsenhausen

This article is an incomplete list of people imprisoned at Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

Wash up area for prisoners

List of prisoners

German commemorative postal stamp for Georg Elser, 2003
Portrait of Hans Grundig by Lea Grundig.

Prisoners executed at "Station Z"

  • Commandos from Operation Musketoon.
  • August Dickmann, a German Jehovah's Witness publicly shot on 15 September 1939 for conscientious objection to joining the armed forces.[5][6][7]
  • John Godwin (Royal Navy officer), a British Naval Sub-Lieutenant who managed to shoot dead the commander of his execution party, for which he was posthumously mentioned in despatches.
  • William Grover-Williams, Grand Prix motor racing champion.
  • Franz Kaufmann, German jurist, former Chief Secretary of the Reich Public Accounts Office and head of an underground group that supplied counterfeit documents to underground Jews, including certificates of Aryan descent, driving licenses, and food ration cards. Arrested in 1943 and executed in 1944.[8]
  • Heinrich Koenen, an NKVD spy captured in Berlin, executed in 1945.
  • Willi Lehmann, NKVD spy, probably cremated December 1942.
  • Józef Wojciech, Ukrainian-born Polish Franciscan priest, killed 1940 at age 50.
  • Friedrich Weißler, German lawyer active in the resistance movement against National Socialism.
  • Albert Willimsky, German Roman Catholic priest active in the resistance movement against National Socialism.
  • Stanisław Kubista, Polish SVD Priest.
  • Major Philipp Frank Chamier, British Intelligence Corps Officer and SOE Agent was tortured and probably killed at either Sachsenhausen or Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, for not divulging radio codes to enable the Germans to "Funkspiel" the Allies.

References

  1. Sachsenhausen concentration camp
  2. US Holocaust Memorial Museum. "Blacks During the Holocaust". Holocaust Encyclopedia. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  3. Ottosen, Kristian, ed. (2004). Nordmenn i fangenskap 1940–1945 (in Norwegian) (2nd ed.). Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. p. 420. ISBN 82-15-00288-9.
  4. Astrid Zajdband (2014). "German Rabbis in British Exile and their influence on Judaism in Britain" (PDF). Doctoral thesis. University of Sussex. p. 51. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  5. September 17, 1939 The New York Times
  6. He Died For a Principle, Watch Tower Society
  7. A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust, Florida Center for Instructional Technology
  8. Schönhaus, Cioma (2004). The Forger. Grant Books.
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