List of subcamps of Sachsenhausen

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Sachsenhausen, brickworks

The following is a list of subcamps of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp established by Nazi Germany. The main camp, with around 50 barracks for slave-labour prisoners, was located Template:Convert from Berlin, and operated between 1938 and April 22, 1945. During World War II the prisoners included Germans, Poles, Soviet POWs, Roma, and later Jews. It is estimated that the number of victims of Sachsenhausen was 30,000Template:Ndash35,000.<ref name="jewishgen">List of subcamps of Sachsenhausen at Jewishgen.org</ref> Dozens of subcamps of Sachsenhausen existed directly in the capital city, serving individual business operators and factories.<ref name="denkmal">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

There are indications that the concentration camp in Pustków, located within the SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager military complex in southeast Poland, was another subsidiary of Sachsenhausen. The Pustków camp reportedly followed the Sachsenhausen blueprint, it was guarded until 1942 by the SS-Totenkopf batallion "Oranienburg" sent directly from Sachsenhausen (commanded by SS Hauptsturmführer Otto von und zu der Tann and SS Hauptsturmführer Bormann<ref>Template:Citation</ref>), and it was to Sachsenhausen that the survivors from Pustków were evacuated in July 1944. However, researchers at the Sachsenhausen Memorial and Museum have not been able to confirm the relationship between the two camps.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Sub-camps

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  1. Bad Saarow
  2. Beerfelde in Steinhöfel
  3. Berlin Arado-Werke (Preußen/Berlin, Arado-Werke/Flugzeugwerke) <ref name="denkmal2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  1. Berlin-Hakenfelde (Preußen/Berlin, Luftfahrtgerätewerk/Siemens), 1,000 women <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  2. Berlin-Halensee (Preußen/Berlin, DEMAG) <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  3. Berlin-Haselhorst Siemensstadt (Preußen/Berlin, Siemens/Schuckertwerke AG), 700 women <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  4. Berlin-Haselhorst Siemensstadt (Preußen/Berlin, Siemens/Schuckertwerke AG), 1,400 men <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  5. Berlin Kastanienallee (Preußen/Berlin, Waffen-SS), 150 men <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  6. Berlin-Köpenick (Preußen/Berlin, Kabelwerk Oberspree der AEG), 1,200 women <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  7. Berlin-Köpenick (Preußen/Berlin, Kabelwerk Oberspree der AEG), men <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  8. Berlin-Lichtenrade (Preußen/Berlin, Luftschutzbauten / Feuerlöschteichen), men <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  9. Berlin-Lichterfelde (Preußen/Berlin, Reichssicherheitshauptamt), 1,500 men <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  10. Berlin-Mariendorf (Preußen/Berlin, Maschinenbau-Henschel), 650 women <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  11. Berlin-Marienfelde <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  12. Berlin-Moabit <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  13. Berlin-Moabit (Friedrich-Krause-Ufer) <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  14. Berlin-Müggelheim <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  15. Berlin-Neukölln <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  16. Berlin-Niederschöneweide <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  17. Berlin-Reinickendorf <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  18. Berlin-Spandau <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  19. Berlin-Südende <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  20. Berlin-Tegel <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  21. Berlin-Tegel <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  22. Berlin-Wilmersdorf <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  23. Berlin-Wilmersdorf (Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS) <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  24. Berlin-Zehlendorf <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  25. Berlin-Zehlendorf <ref name="denkmal2"/>
  26. Bernau bei Berlin
  27. Biesenthal
  28. Börnicke in Nauen
  29. Brandenburg an der Havel
  30. Brüx
  31. Döberitz in Dallgow-Döberitz
  32. Drögen-Niendorf
  33. Falkenhagen in Falkensee
  34. Fürstenwalde
  35. Fasterweide (?)
  36. Genshagen in Ludwigsfelde
  37. Glau in Trebbin
  38. Groß Rosen (initially a subcamp, became its own camp in 1941)
  39. Hohenlychen in Lychen
  40. Karlsruhe in Plattenburg
  41. Kleinmachnow
  42. Königs Wusterhausen
  43. Kolpin
  44. Küstrin
  45. Lieberose
  46. Lübben
  47. Müggelheim in Berlin
  48. Neubrandenburg
  49. Neudamm
  50. KZ Neuengamme (initially a subcamp, became its own camp in 1940)
  51. Oranienburg (early camp, replaced by KZ Sachsenhausen; re-established in 1943)
  52. Pölitz
  53. Prettin
  54. Rathenow
  55. Riga
  56. Schönwalde-Glien
  57. Schwarzheide<ref>From Ashes to Naches, Template:ISBN, page 71.</ref>
  58. Senftenberg
  59. Storkow
  60. Stuttgart
  61. Syrets (near Babi Yar, Kyiv; intended to be a subcamp)
  62. Tettenborn
  63. Treuenbrietzen (was a subcamp of Ravensbrück until 1944)
  64. Usedom (Peenemünde, V-2 rocket production plant)
  65. Werder
  66. Wewelsburg (initially a subcamp, became its own camp in 1941, then became a subcamp of Buchenwald in 1943)
  67. Wittenberg
Construction labor commandos that detained Poles
  1. Baubrigade 1
  2. Baubrigade 8
  3. Baubrigade 9
  4. Baubrigade 10
  5. Baubrigade 12
  6. Baubrigade I
  7. Baubrigade II
  8. Baubrigade V
  9. Baubrigade XIII

See also

References

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