Wilhelm Dörr (Nazi) Explained

Wilhelm Dörr
Birth Date:9 February 1921
Birth Place:Merenberg, Hesse, Germany
Death Place:Hamelin Prison, Hamelin, Allied-occupied Germany
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Embed:yes
Rank:Oberscharführer
Battles:World War II
Death Cause:Execution by hanging
Conviction:War crimes
Conviction Status:Executed
Criminal Penalty:Death
Motive:Nazism
Trial:Belsen trial

Wilhelm Dörr (9 February 1921 – 13 December 1945) was a German SS-Oberscharführer[1] and concentration camp officer. He served as a guard at the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp and as deputy commander of the sub-camp of Kleinbodungen. Following World War II he was convicted of war crimes by British occupation authorities in the Belsen Trial and executed.

Life

Wilhelm Dörr was born in the town of Merenberg, Hesse on February 9, 1921, and raised in Emmerichenhain (Rennerod) where he worked primarily as a farmhand. Dörr was a member of the Hitler Youth from 1932 to 1939 and volunteered for the Waffen-SS in December 1940 after being rejected for service by the Wehrmacht.[2] While training to become a combat engineer in Dresden in October 1941 he became seriously ill with rheumatism and was confined to a hospital for several months. Following his recovery, Dörr was reassigned to the SS-Totenkopfverbände in the summer of 1942. He went on to serve as a guard at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp until December 1943.[3]

In January 1944 Dörr was transferred to the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp where he functioned as a Blockführer (Block Leader) in the main camp area before being appointed deputy to Hauptscharführer Franz Stofel, commander of the satellite-camp of Kleinbodungen in September 1944.

At Kleinbodungen, Dörr helped manage roughly 620 camp inmates used as slave-laborers in Mittelwerk, the armaments production facility used to manufacture Germany's V-2 ballistic missiles. When US troops appeared poised to capture Mittelbau-Dora and its environs in April 1945, the evacuation of the camp was ordered. Dörr was one of 45 SS men who led a brutal death march of hundreds of Kleinbodungen inmates to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Lower Saxony. During the journey the SS conducted numerous summary executions of prisoners who attempted to escape or otherwise slowed the progress of the march.[4]

Four days after Dörr and his group arrived at Bergen-Belsen the camp was liberated by British troops. He was arrested and indicted for the atrocities which had occurred during the death march from Mittelbau-Dora. Dörr was tried along with 45 other alleged war criminals before a British military court in Lüneburg as part of the so-called Belsen Trial.[5] He pleaded not guilty to the charges but was convicted and sentenced to death. Dörr was executed by hanging in Hamelin Prison on 13 December 1945.[6] His executioner was Albert Pierrepoint, aided by an assistant.

Notes and References

  1. Jens Christian Wagner: Kleinbodungen central warehouse, in: Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel (ed.): The place of terror - History of the Nazi concentration camp, Volume 7, Munich 2008, pp. 317
  2. http://www.bergenbelsen.co.uk/pages/Staff/Staff.asp?CampStaffID=68#Wilhelm Dorr Basic Information, British Belsen Trial Online# bergen.belsen.co.uk
  3. Jens Christian Wagner: Kleinbodungen central warehouse, in: Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel (ed.): The place of terror - History of the Nazi concentration camp, Volume 7, Munich 2008, pp. 316f. 316f
  4. Sellier, Andre. A History of the Dora Camp. Chicago:Ivan R. Dee. 2003, Biographical Bibliography# A History of the Dora Camp by Andre Sellier
  5. http://www.bergenbelsen.co.uk/pages/Staff/Staff.asp?CampStaffID=68#Wilhelm Dorr Basic Information, British Belsen Trial Online# bergen.belsen.co.uk
  6. Working Group on Tracing - National Socialism in the Westerwald: Remembering for the Future - 60 years after the liberation of the Nazi regime in the Westerwald, Montabaur 2005, pp. 13f# Working group on tracing national socialism