I will post information about the Police Force in Nazi Germany from 1936
to 1945 from Wikipedia and other links.
Ordnungspolizei commander
pennant
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Flag of the Nazi
Ordnungpolizei (Orpo) "Order Police", the name for the uniformed
regular German police force in existence during the period of Nazi Germany
1936–1945.
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A uniformed German
policeman in Berlin, January 1937.
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Agency
overview
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Formed
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26 June 1936
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Superseding agency
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Type
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State Police
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Jurisdiction
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Headquarters
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Hauptamt Ordungspolizei, Prinz-Albrecht-Straße, Berlin
52°30′26″N 13°22′57″E |
Employees
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401,300 (1944)
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Ministers responsible
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Heinrich Himmler 1936–1945, Chief of German Police
Wilhelm Frick (nominally) 1936-1943, Reich Interior Minister Heinrich Himmler 1943–1945, Reich Interior Minister |
Agency executives
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SS-Oberstgruppenführer und Generaloberst der Polizei
Kurt Daluege, Chief of the Ordnungspolizei, 1936–1943
SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei und Waffen-SS Alfred Wünnenberg, Chief of the Ordnungspolizei, 1943–1945 |
Parent agency
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Reichsinnenministerium (Reich Interior Ministry)
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The
Ordnungspolizei or Orpo (English: Order Police) were the
uniformed regular police force in Nazi Germany between 1936 and 1945. It was
increasingly absorbed into the Nazi police system. Owing to their green
uniforms, they were also referred to as Grüne Polizei (green police).
The Orpo was established as a centralized organisation uniting the municipal,
city, and rural uniformed forces that had been organised on a state-by-state
basis. Eventually the Orpo embraced virtually all of the Third Reich's
law-enforcement and emergency response organizations, including fire brigades,
coast guard, civil defense, and even night watchmen.
History
Reichsführer-SS
Heinrich Himmler was named Chef der Deutschen Polizei im Reichsministerium
des Innern (Chief of German Police in the Interior Ministry) on 17 June
1936 after Hitler announced a decree which was to "unify the control of
police duties in the Reich". Traditionally, law enforcement in Germany had
been a state and local matter. In this role, Himmler was nominally subordinate
to Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick.
However, the decree effectively subordinated the police to the SS, making it
virtually independent of Frick's control. Himmler gained authority as all of
Germany's uniformed law enforcement agencies were amalgamated into the new
Ordnungspolizei, whose main office became populated by officers of the SS.
The
police were divided into the Ordnungspolizei (Orpo or regular
police) and the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo or security police), which had
been established in June 1936.
The Orpo assumed duties of regular uniformed law enforcement while the SiPo
consisted of the secret state police (Geheime Staatspolizei or Gestapo) and
criminal investigation police (Kriminalpolizei or Kripo). The
Kriminalpolizei was a corps of professional detectives involved in fighting
crime and the task of the Gestapo was combating espionage and political
dissent. On 27 September 1939, the SS security service, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and the SiPo were
folded into the Reich Main Security Office (Reichssicherheitshauptamt or RSHA).
The RSHA symbolized the close connection between the SS (a party organization)
and the police (a state organization).
The
Order Police played a central role in carrying out the Holocaust. By "both career
professionals and reservists, in both battalion formations and precinct
service" (Einzeldienst) through providing men for the tasks
involved.
Generalmajor der Ordnungspolizei und SS-Brigadefuhrer Wilhelm Fritz von Roettig was the
first general to be killed in World War II, in Opoczno, Poland on 10 September
1939.
Orpo Chief Kurt
Daluege in 1933, as a general in the Prussian Landespolizei.
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The
Orpo was under the control of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler who
was the Chef der Deutschen Polizei im Ministerium des Innern (Chief of
the German Police in the Ministry of the Interior). It was initially commanded
by SS-Oberstgruppenführer und Generaloberst der Polizei Kurt Daluege. But
in 1943, Daluege had a massive heart attack and was removed from duty. He was
replaced by SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS und der Polizei
Alfred Wünnenberg, who served until the end of the war. By 1941, the Orpo had
been divided into the following offices covering every aspect of German law
enforcement.
Regular
Police
- Headquarters (Hauptamt Ordungspolizei) was the central command office of the entire Ordnungspolizei and from 1943 was considered a full SS-Headquarters command.
- Administration (Verwaltungspolizei) was the administrative branch of the Orpo and had overall command authority for all Orpo police stations. The Verwaltungspolizei also was the central office for record keeping and was the command authority for civilian law enforcement groups, which included the Gesundheitspolizei (health police), Gewerbepolizei (commercial or trade police), and the Baupolizei (building police). In the main towns, Verwaltungspolizei, Schutzpolizei and Kriminalpolizei would be organised into a police administration known as the Polizeipraesidium or Polizeidirektion, which had authority over these police forces in the urban district.
- State protection police (Schutzpolizei des Reiches), state uniformed police in cities and most large towns), which included police-station duties (Revierdienst) and barracked police units for riots and public safety (Kasernierte Polizei).
- Municipal protection police (Schutzpolizei der Gemeinden), municipal uniformed police in smaller and some large towns. Although fully integrated into the Ordnungspolizei-system, its police officers where municipal civil servants. The civilian law enforcement in towns with a municipal protection police was not done by the Verwaltungspolizei, but by municipal civil servants. Until 1943 they also had municipal criminal investigation departments, but that year, all such departments with more than 10 detectives, were integrated into the Kripo.
- Gendarmerie (state rural police) were tasked with frontier law enforcement to include small communities, rural districts, and mountainous terrain. With the development of a network of motorways or Autobahnen, motorized gendarmerie companies were set up in 1937 to secure the traffic.
- Traffic police (Verkehrspolizei) was the traffic-law enforcement agency and road safety administration of Germany. The organization patrolled Germany's roads (other than motorways which were controlled by Motorized Gendarmerie) and responded to major accidents. The Verkehrspolizei was also the primary escort service for high Nazi leaders who traveled great distances by automobile.
- Water police (Wasserschutzpolizei) was the equivalent of the coast guard and river police. Tasked with the safety and security of Germany's rivers, harbors, and inland waterways, the group also had authority over the SS-Hafensicherungstruppen ("harbour security troops") which were Allgemeine-SS units assigned as port security personnel.
- Fire police (Feuerschutzpolizei) consisted of all professional fire departments under a national command structure.
Auxiliary
Police
- The Orpo Hauptamt also had authority over the Freiwillige Feuerwehren, the local volunteer civilian fire brigades. At the height of the Second World War, in response to heavy bombing of Germany's cities, the combined Feuerschutzpolizei and Freiwillige Feuerwehren numbered nearly two million members.
- Air raid protection police (Luftschutzpolizei) was the civil protection service in charge of air raid defence and rescue victims of bombings in connection with the Technische Nothilfe (Technical Emergency Service) and the Feuerschutzpolizei (professional fire departments). Created as the Security and Assistance Service (Sicherheits und Hilfsdienst) in 1935, it was renamed Luftschutzpolizei in April 1942. The air raid network was supported by the Reichsluftschutzbund (Reich Association for Air Raid Precautions) an organization controlled from 1935 by the Air Ministry under Hermann Göring. The RLB set up an organization of air raid wardens who were responsible for the safety of a building or a group of houses.
- Technical Emergency Corps (Technische Nothilfe or TeNo) was a corps of engineers, technicians and specialists in construction work. TeNo was created in 1919 to keep the public utilities and essential industries running during the wave of strikes. From 1937 TeNo became a technical auxiliary corps of the police and was absorbed into Orpo Hauptamt. By 1943, the TeNo had over 100,000 members.
- Radio protection (Funkschutz) was made up of SS and Orpo security personnel assigned to protect German broadcasting stations from attack and sabotage. The Funkschutz was also the primary investigating service which detected illegal reception of foreign radio broadcasts.
- Postal police (Postschutz) comprised roughly 4,500 members and was tasked with the security of Germany's Reichspost, which was responsible not only for the mail but other communications media such as the telephone and telegraph systems.
- SS-Bahnschutz replaced the Railway police within the Reich territory from 1944.
- Factory protection police (Werkschutzpolizei) were the Security guards of the Third Reich. Its personnel were civilians employed by industrial enterprises, and typically were issued paramilitary uniforms.
- Urban and rural emergency police (Stadt- und Landwacht) created in 1942 as a part-time police reserve. Abolished in 1945 with the creation of the Volksturm.
- Schutzmannschaft was the collaborationist auxiliary police in occupied Eastern Europe.
Special
police
- Railway police (Bahnschutzpolizei) was made up of full-time and part-time police officers who were employees of the Reichsbahn (state railway). The Bahnschutzpolizei was tasked with railway safety and also with preventing espionage and sabotage of railway property. They were not subordinated to Hauptamt Ordnungspolizei, only the Deutsche Reichsbahn.
Ordnungspolizei conducting
a raid (razzia) in the Krakow
ghetto, January 1941.
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Police
Battalions
Between
1939 and 1945, the Ordnungspolizei also maintained separate military
formations, independent of the main police offices within Germany. The first
such formations were the Police Battalions (SS-Polizei-Bataillone), for
various auxiliary duties outside of Germany, including anti-partisan
operations, construction of defense works (i.e. Atlantic Wall), and support of
combat troops. Specific duties varied widely from unit to unit from one year to
another. Generally, the SS Polizei units were not directly involved in combat.
Some Police Battalions were primarily focused on traditional security roles of
an occupying force while others were directly involved in the Holocaust. This
latter role was obscured in the immediate aftermath of World War II, both by
accident and by deliberate obfuscation, when most of the focus was on the
better-known Einsatzgruppen ("Operational groups")
who reported to the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA — Reich
Main Security Office) under Reinhard Heydrich.
The
Police Battalions consisted of approximately 500 men armed with light infantry
weapons. The battalions were originally numbered in series from 1 to 325, but
in February 1943 were renamed and renumbered from 1 to about 37 to distinguish
from Schutzmannschaft, auxiliary police battalions
recruited from local population in German-occupied areas. The Police Battalions
were organizationally and administratively under Chief of Police Kurt Daluege
but operationally they were under the authority of regional SS- und
Polizeiführer (SS and Police Leaders), who reported up a
separate chain of command, bypassing Daluege, directly to Reichsführer SS
Heinrich Himmler. While these units were similar to Waffen-SS divisions, they
were not part of the Waffen-SS and should not be confused with the 4th SS
Polizei Division.
During
the invasion of Poland in 1939, Police Battalions committed atrocities against
both the Catholic and the Jewish populations and as security forces patrolled
the perimeters of the Jewish ghettos in Poland (SS, SD,
and in some cases the Criminal Police were responsible for internal ghetto
security issues in conjunction with Jewish ghetto administration). Starting in
1941 Police Battalions and local Order Police units helped to transport Jews
from the ghettos in both Poland and the USSR (and elsewhere in occupied Europe)
to the concentration and extermination camps, as well as operations to hunt
down and kill Jews outside the ghettos.
Operating
both independently and in conjunction with the Einsatzgruppen, Police
Battalions were also an integral part of the "Final
Solution" in Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union
which began on 22 June 1941. Police Battalions, whether as part of Police
Regiments or as separate units or reporting directly to the local SS-und-Polizeiführer
were part of the first and second waves of killing in 1941–2 in the USSR and
also in killing operations in Poland. Police Battalion involvement in direct
killing operations are responsible for at least 1 million deaths.
The
Order Police were one of the two primary sources from which the Einsatzgruppen
drew personnel in accordance with manpower needs (the other being the Waffen-SS).
The
majority of police battalions formed 28 Police Regiments as of 1942, many of
which saw combat on the Eastern Front during the retreat of the German army.
The
regular military police of the Wehrmacht (Feldgendarmerie) were
separate from the Ordnungspolizei.
Waffen-SS
Police Division
Main
article: 4th SS Polizei Division
The
primary military arm of the Ordnungspolizei was the SS Polizei Division,
4th Panzergrenadier Division of the Waffen-SS. Mainly
used as a rear guard and reserve formation, the Polizei Division was
historically known as being undertrained and lacking in skilled combat tactics.
The division consisted of four police regiments composed of Orpo personnel and
was typically used to rotate police members into a military situation, so as
not to lose police personnel to the general draft of the Wehrmacht or to the
full SS divisions of the regular Waffen-SS.
Very
late in the war several Orpo SS-Police regiments were transferred to the Waffen-SS
to form the 35th SS and Police Grenadier Division.
Troops from the SS
Police Battalions load Jews into boxcars at Marseille, France in January 1943.
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Orpo
and SS relations
The
Ordnungspolizei was separate from the SS and maintained a system of insignia
and Orpo
ranks. It was possible for policemen to be members of the SS but without
active duties. Police generals who were members of the SS were referred to
simultaneously by both rank titles during the war. For instance, a Generalleutnant
in the Police who was also an SS member would be referred to as SS
Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Polizei. In addition, those Orpo
police generals that undertook the duties of both Senior SS and Police Leader
(Höhere SS und Polizeiführer) gained equivalent Waffen-SS ranks in August 1944
when Himmler was appointed Chef der Ersatzheeres (Chief of Home Army), because
they had authority over the prisoner-of-war camps in their area.
Heinrich
Himmler's ultimate aim was to replace the regular police forces of Germany with
a combined racial/state protection corps (Staatsschutzkorps) of pure SS units.
Local law enforcement would be undertaken by the Allgemeine-SS with the
Waffen-SS providing homeland-security and political-police functions.
Historical analysis of the Third Reich has revealed that senior Orpo personnel
knew of Himmler's plan and were opposed to it.
Orpo
legacy
At
the close of the Second World War, the Orpo ceased to exist; but many of its
personnel continued with business as usual, performing police services for the
Allied occupation forces. The traditions of the Orpo continued in East
Germany, which maintained a state police force (Volkspolizei)
designed after the SS structures, being based on a centralized system. In West
Germany, the police were decentralized again, as they had been before 1936,
with each of the new federal states (called Bundesländer)
establishing its own police force Landespolizei,
each of which survives to this day. Many Landespolizei regulations, procedures,
and even some uniforms, which are green, and insignia, can be traced back to
the pre-1936 forces.
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