Führersonderzug Explained

Führersonderzug
Manufacturer:Deutsche Reichsbahn
Factory:Henschel
Krauss-Maffei
Credé
Yearconstruction:1937–39
Yearservice:1939
Yearscrapped:1945
Capacity:200+
Trainlength:10–16 components
Weight:1,200 tons
Enginetype:2x BR 52 "Kriegslok"
Class KDL1 locomotives

The Führersonderzug (from German: "Führer's special train") was Adolf Hitler's personal train. It was named Führersonderzug "Amerika" in 1940, and in January 1943, was renamed the Führersonderzug "Brandenburg".[1] The train served as a headquarters until the Balkans Campaign. Afterwards, the train was not used as Führer Headquarters (Führerhauptquartier), however Hitler continued to travel on it throughout the war between Berlin, Berchtesgaden, the Wolfsschanze and his other military headquarters.

Usage

Before the first permanent Führer Headquarters Felsennest was used in May 1940, the Führersonderzug served as a mobile headquarters. Hitler and his entourage used this train to visit various fronts and theaters of war. For safety, a front train and rear train were used to prevent any possible attack.

The train was originally named Führersonderzug "Amerika", purportedly because Hitler wanted to pay homage to the European conquest of the Americas.[2] After Germany declared war on the United States, on December 11, 1941 the train was renamed to the Führersonderzug "Brandenburg".[3]

In late April 1945, Hitler ordered his aide and adjutant Julius Schaub to travel to Austria to destroy the Führersonderzug.[4]

Components

The exact of the train are not known; documentation for each journey was destroyed after the trip to prevent it being used to plan an attack.[5] Some details were revealed by the departure information "Bln 2009", when the train departed the Anhalter Bahnhof in Berlin on 23 June 1941, arriving at Wolfsschanze on 24 June 1941;

The individual 10-16 components (locomotives and railway cars) in order were:[6] [7]

Otto Dietrich indicates that the Flakwagen never had to be used when Hitler was travelling. The "Pressewagen" was to receive and release press reports, not for journalists.[8]

Other Sonderzüge

There were other special trains (Sonderzüge in German) used by prominent German officials;[9] [10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Felton. Mark. Mark Felton. 6 November 2015. Planes, Trains & Automobiles – Transporting the Führer . 7 December 2018. markfelton.co.uk.
  2. Le Train D'Hitler: La Bête D'Acier (Hitler's Steel Beast) . 2016 . television production . fr . . 4:30, 42:30.
  3. Book: Franz W. . Seidler . Dieter . Zeigert . Hitler's Secret Headquarters. The Fuhrer's Wartime Bases . 2004 . 2000 . . 190 . 1-85367-622-5.
  4. Book: Joachimsthaler, Anton . Anton Joachimsthaler . The Last Days of Hitler: The Legends, The Evidence, The Truth . 1999 . 1995 . . 287 . 1-86019-902-X.
  5. Felton
  6. Raiber, Richard, Guide to Hitler's Headquarters, After The Battle, No. 19, p. 2.
  7. Web site: The Führersonderzug, Hitler's special train . Hitler Archive.
  8. Book: Otto Dietrich . Otto Dietrich . The Hitler I Knew: Memoirs of the Third Reich's Press Chief . Richard . Winston . Clara . Winston . June 2010 . . 1957 . 189 . 978-1-60239-972-3.
  9. Raiber, Richard, Guide to Hitler's Headquarters, After The Battle, No.19, pp. 48–51.
  10. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/aktuelles/aus_dem_archiv/galerie/00133/index.html Der Kommandant Führerhauptquartier