On
this date, October 24, 1946, a Nazi SS General Kurt Daluege was executed by
hanging in Prague. He and Karl Hermann Frank were the ones who ordered the
Lidice Massacre. I will post information about him from Wikipedia.
Orpo Chief SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer Kurt Daluege, shown here in
February 1936 as an Obergruppenführer.
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Chief
of the Ordnungspolizei
(All uniformed Police within the German Reich) |
|
In
office
June 26, 1936 – August 31, 1943 |
|
Preceded by
|
Post Created
|
Succeeded by
|
Alfred Wünnenberg
|
Deputy
Protector of Bohemia and Moravia
(Acting Protector) (Konstantin von Neurath was titular Protector) |
|
In
office
June 5, 1942 – August 24, 1943 |
|
Preceded by
|
Reinhard Heydrich
(as Acting Protector) |
Succeeded by
|
Wilhelm Frick
(as Protector) |
Personal
details
|
|
Born
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September 15, 1897
Kreuzburg, Upper Silesia, German Empire (now Kluczbork, Poland) |
Died
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October 24, 1946 (aged 49)
Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic) |
Nationality
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German
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Political party
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National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP)
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Spouse(s)
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Käthe Schwarz (married 1926)
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Kurt Daluege
(September 15, 1897 – October 24, 1946) was a German Nazi
SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer and Generaloberst of the Police (ranks equivalent to
Colonel-General, or four-star General) as chief of the national uniformed
Ordnungspolizei (Order Police), and ruled the Protectorate of Bohemia and
Moravia as Deputy Protector after Reinhard Heydrich's assassination.
Early
life and career
Daluege,
son of a Prussian state official, was born in the small Upper Silesian town of
Kreuzburg (now Kluczbork) on September 15, 1897. He entered the Imperial German
Army in 1916 and served with the 7th Garde Regiment West. During his service on
the Western Front he was severely wounded a number of times, declared 25%
disabled and decorated for bravery.
1920s
After
World War I, Daluege became leader of Selbstschutz Oberschlesien (SSOS)
- Upper Silesian Self Defense — an Upper Silesian veterans' organization
engaged in combat with the Poles in that region. In 1921, he also became active
in the Freikorps Rossbach while studying engineering at the Technical
University in Berlin. Two years later he joined the Nazi Party, or NSDAP and
was assigned Party number 31,981. In 1926 he joined the Sturmabteilung (SA),
eventually becoming the leader of Berlin's SA and Goebbels' deputy gauleiter
(or Party leader) in Berlin.
Daluege (right) in 1939, shaking hands with Heinrich Himmler (left). Hans Frank is also standing between the two men. |
SS
and police leader
In
July 1930, in accordance with Hitler's wishes, Daluege resigned from the SA and
joined the SS with the rank of SS-Oberführer and SS membership number 1,119.
His main responsibility was to spy on the SA and political opponents of the
Nazi Party. Berlin SS headquarters was strategically placed at the corner of
Lützowstrasse and Potsdamerstrasse, opposite the SA headquarters.
In
August 1930, when Berlin SA leader Walter Stennes had his men attack the Berlin
Party headquarters, it was Daluege's SS men who defended it and put the attack
down. Sometime afterwards in an open letter to Daluege, Adolf Hitler proclaimed
"SS Mann, deine Ehre heißt Treue!" (SS man, your honor is loyalty);
and "Meine Ehre heißt Treue" (My honor is loyalty) was duly adopted
by the SS as its motto. Hitler promoted both Daluege and Heinrich Himmler to
SS-Obergruppenführer, with Daluege the SS leader of northern Germany while
Himmler controlled the southern SS units out of Munich in addition to serving
as national leader for the entire SS. In 1932 Daluege became a Nazi Party
delegate in the Prussian state parliament, and in November 1932 was elected to
the Reichstag representing the Berlin East electoral district, a seat he
retained until 1945. At the same time, Hermann Göring moved Daluege to the
Prussian Interior Ministry, where he took over the nonpolitical police with the
rank of General der Polizei. In 1936, the entire German police force was
reorganized and administrative functions previously exercised by the now
largely defunct federal states were reassigned to the Reich Interior Ministry.
That same year, Wilhelm Frick appointed Daluege as chief of the
Ordnungspolizei, or Orpo, which gave him administrative, though not executive,
authority over most of the uniformed police in Nazi Germany. He commanded the
Ordnungspolizei until 1943, rising to the ranks of SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer
und Generaloberst der Polizei.
In
1942 Daluege became the Deputy Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, following the
assassination of Deputy Protector Reinhard Heydrich. Although Konstantin von
Neurath was nominally Protector, he had been stripped of his day-to-day duties
in 1941, so Daluege was Acting Protector in all but name. In June 1942, along
with Karl Hermann Frank and other SS operatives, he ordered the villages of
Lidice and Ležáky razed to the ground in reprisal for Heydrich's death. All of
the men in both villages were murdered, while many of the women and children
were deported to Nazi concentration camps.
Kurt
Daluege (left) and Karl Hermann Frank (right)
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Illness,
arrest and execution
In
May 1943, Daluege became seriously ill after a massive heart attack. In August,
he was relieved of all of his day-to-day responsibilities and spent the rest of
the war living on a property given him by Hitler. In May 1945, he was arrested
by British troops in Lübeck and interned in Nuremberg until September 1946,
when he was extradited to Czechoslovakia and tried for his many war crimes
committed in the Protectorate. He was convicted on all charges and hanged in Pankrác prison in Prague on October 24,
1946. He is buried in an unmarked grave at Prague's Ďáblice cemetery.
Kurt
Daluege in 1933
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Personal
life
In
1926 Daluege married Käthe Schwarz (born November 23, 1901). In 1937, Daluege
had himself attested sterile so he and his wife could foster the son of an SS
officer named Belbe. Afterwards, this attestation was disproved as Daluege's
wife bore three biological children, sons born in 1938 & 1940 and a daughter
born in 1942.
Summary
of SS career
Dates
of promotion
- SS-Oberführer: July 25, 1930
- SS-Gruppenführer: July 1, 1932
- SS-Obergruppenführer: September 9, 1934
- Generalleutnant der Landespolizei: April 20, 1935
- General der Polizei: June 17, 1936
- SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer und Generaloberst der Polizei: April 20, 1942
Decorations
- Iron Cross, second class (1918)
- Wound Badge in Black (1918)
- Cross of Honor (1929)
- Brunswick Rally Badge (1931)
- Frontbann Badge (1932)
- Golden Nazi Party Badge (1933)
- SS Honour Ring (1933)
- Anschluss Medal (1938)
- Order of the Crown of Italy, Grand Cross (1938)
- Police Long Service Award
- Memel Medal (1939)
- Sudetenland Medal (1939) with Prague Castle bar (1939)
- Danzig Cross (1939)
- Nazi Party Long Service Award in bronze (1940) and in silver (1941)
- War Merit Cross with Swords, second class (1941) and first class (1941)
- German Cross in Silver (10. September 1942)
- Knights Cross of the War Merit Cross, with swords (1943)
Trivia
When
Stalin's son, Yakov Dzhugashvili, was captured by the Wehrmacht, Daluege is
credited with the idea of offering to return Dzhugashvili to the Red Army in
exchange for the release of Field Marshal Paulus. Joseph Stalin turned down the
offer, allegedly stating that "a Lieutenant was not worth a General".
Daluege then arranged for Dzhugashvili to be interned at Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, where he died at the age of 36. The Germans stated
officially that Dzhugashvili had died by running into an electric fence. Some
have contended that he committed suicide at the camp, while others have suggested
that he was murdered.
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