By staff
Title: Dachau Concentration Camp, 1941-1946
Predominant Dates:1941 -- 1943
ID: RG-28/RG-28
Primary Creator: Allied Authorities, US Military Government in Germany, Gestapo and Dachau commandant offices (1945 -- 1946)
Extent: 0.0
Arrangement:
The arrangement scheme for the record group was imposed during processing in the absence of an original order. Materials are arranged by subject/creator, then by identifier, as assigned by the processor.
Record group is comprised of four collections and one item, the collections of which are: 1. Collection on the Commandmant Office of Dachau concentration camp; 2. Dachau concentration camp photo album; 3. Dachau concentration camp photo-booklet; 4. Special Services of the US Seventh Army overview reports.
RG-28, Dachau Concentration Camp and Memorial Site, 1941 -- 1946.
Documents from the camp commandant office and the documents relate to the postwar memorialization of the campsite
This record group is comprised of materials related to Dachau concentration camp, documenting the administrative aspects of the camp authorities and its personnel; the murderous activities undertaken in the camp; and post-liberation documents which provide evidence of Nazi crimes and postwar trials of the camp personnel.
The correspondence within this record group include letters between the Gestapo in Munich, as well as other German police and security agencies with the Office of the Dachau camp commandant. Additionally, there are also the reports issued by the Dachau Commandant Office. These reports deal with daily activity, including the executions carried out for the Soviet Prisoners of War.
Other documents originate with the Allied military administration. For example, these such materials shed light on the murderous activities of the Nazi security agencies, in the concentration camps and prisoner of war camps, specifically regarding the mass killings of the Soviet (Russian) prisoners of war in October-November 1941 and April-May 1942. These documents, originating from the three different offices--the Commandmant Office of the Dachau concentration camp; the office of the Stalag VII A in Moosbourg; and from the office of Criminal Counsel Weyrauch--do not reveal the causes for the daily extermination of the Soviet (Russian) prisoners of war, mainly young soldiers, on the grounds of the Dachau concentration camp.
The linked documentary, within this record group, is streamed from the Film and Video Archive of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, and is titled Atrocities at Dachau.
Materials in this record group include reports by the Special Services of the U.S. Seventh Army; diaries and testimonies; official documents; photographs; and a linked documentary from USHMM.
Repository: Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust
Access Restrictions: No Restrictions, some documents are displayed at the Museum
Use Restrictions:
Copyrighted materials, credits to and references to the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust are required
Digital copies might be available upon request
Original/Copies Note: The documentary, Atrocities at Dachau, is linked from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, and can be found here: http://resources.ushmm.org/film/display/detail.php?file_num=56.
Preferred Citation: RG-28, Dachau Concentration Camp. Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust Archive.
Processing Information: Materials are primarily described using the local descriptive standards of the LA Museum of the Holocaust.
US Military government in Bavaria initiated memorialization of the site of Dachau concentration camp.
When Federal Republic of Germany was established in the fall of 1949, it would continue memorialization efforts, eventually the Museum of Dachau concentration camp came into being.
The Album presented here is one of the earliest publication of the Dachau concentration camp. It served as precursor to the future museum publications and the literature about Nazi crimes.
This document is a picture-based publication edited by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNNRA).
This document discusses information and photographs and interpretations of Dachau concentration camp.
Document includes photographs from wartime era, as well as liberation photographs.
Captions are written in English, French, Polish, and German.
c. 1946