Documentation, mainly of the Gestapo, regarding Soviet and Polish foreign laborers in Germany from the Osoby Archive in Moscow, 1941-1943
Documentation, mainly of the Gestapo, regarding Soviet and Polish foreign laborers in Germany from the Osoby Archive in Moscow, 1941-1943
Documentation, mainly of the Gestapo, regarding Soviet and Polish foreign laborers in Germany from the Osoby Archive in Moscow, 1941-1943
Most of the files in the collection are files from the Duesseldorf Gestapo and its neighboring branches (Krefeld and Moenchen-Gladbach) relating to specific foreign laborers for whom Gestapo intervention was requested.
- File of the Krefeld Gestapo regarding foreign laborers from eastern Europe, including correspondence concerning police handling of specific laborers, and documentation regarding the implementation of the guideline from the Duesseldorf Gestapo for the arrest of foreign laborers from eastern Europe who avoid work or perform negligently, including details of the guideline of January 1943 and lists of the laborers with details of the laborers arrested (Microfilm JM/29053, Frames 644-771).
Also in the collection:
- File including statistics of deaths of POWs and Soviet laborers, including a few monthly reports from the Gross-Rosen camp, and death notices of specific Soviet laborers, mainly in Stalag 318 in Lemsdorf and from some [death notices] issued in Gross-Rosen (Microfilm JM/29053, Frames 894-914.
Details
Map
Hierarchical Tree
item Id
11141610
Type of material
List of forced laborers
Names of perpetrators
Official documentation
Police file
Questionnaire
Statistical data
Language
German
Record Group
M.88 - Osoby Collection - Captured German and Other Nations' Documents in the Osoby (Special) Archive, Moscow, 1933-1945
Date of Creation - earliest
11/1941
Date of Creation - latest
1943
Original
NO
Archival Signature
Fond 1164
Location of Originals
TSENTR KHRANENIYA ISTORIKO-DOKUMENTALNYKH KOLLEKTSIY (TSKHIDK) - RUSSIA, MOSKVA
Connected to Item
M.88 - Osoby Collection: Nazi documentation from the Special Archive (Osoby) in the Soviet Union