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Albert Sauer
Albert Sauer
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Albert Sauer (17 August 1898, Misdroy – 3 May 1945, Falkensee) was a Nazi German commandant of Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp. He died of wounds in 1945, and was never tried for his role in The Holocaust.

Nazi atrocities and death

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Quarry "Wiener Graben" (1941/42)

Sauer, a carpenter by trade, became a member of the NSDAP (Nazi Party) and the SS in 1931. After a period of unemployment, he became a full-time SS employee.[1]

A protégé of the Inspector of Concentration Camps Theodor Eicke, Sauer was assigned to the SS guard unit (Wachtruppe) of Oranienburg concentration camp in April 1935. From 1 April 1936, he was the commandant of Bad Sulza concentration camp.[2] Between 1 August 1937 and mid-1938, Sauer was second Schutzhaftlagerführer in Sachsenhausen concentration camp and thus belonged to "Wachtruppe Brandenburg".[1]

In the period between 1 August 1938 and 1 April 1939, he officially acted as commandant of the then-temporary quarry Wienergraben, so named because of the Wienergraben Valley in which it was located, of Granitwerke Mauthausen, which relied on slave labor from the subcamps of Mauthausen-Gusen. Due to negligence, Sauer was removed from the camp service in April 1939.

On 9 February 1939, he was replaced as camp commandant by SS-Sturmbannführer Franz Ziereis.[3] In the period of 1941–1942, he had an official position in the RKFDV (Reichskommissar für die Festigung deutschen Volkstums; Reich Commissioner for the Consolidation of German Nationhood).

From September 1942 to April 1943, Sauer was again Schutzhaftlagerführer in Sachsenhausen.[4] In 1943, Sauer was involved in the destruction of the Riga Ghetto, which involved executing or deporting thousands of people (mostly Jews) to their deaths in concentration camps. Later, he was temporarily the commandant of Kaiserwald concentration camp which was vacated in July 1944, by execution and deportation of inmates.

He died of wounds received at Falkensee on 3 May 1945.[5]

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from Grokipedia
Albert Sauer (1898–1945) was a German SS officer and the initial commandant of the , overseeing its establishment in August 1938 following the Nazi of . A carpenter by trade who held the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer, Sauer managed the transfer of approximately 300 prisoners from Dachau to construct the camp and exploit the adjacent Wiener Graben stone quarry through forced labor organized by the SS-owned Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke . His tenure lasted until February 1939, when he was replaced by amid reports of inadequate administration and persistent complaints regarding camp operations. Sauer later served as commandant of the Riga-Kaiserwald concentration camp before dying of wounds sustained at the in May 1945.

Early Life

Birth and Pre-War Career

Albert Sauer was born on 17 August 1898 in , a town in the Province of Pomerania within the . Sauer trained and worked as a carpenter (Tischler) by , a skilled common in the region's woodworking and sectors during the early . Archival and provide scant details on his origins, formal schooling beyond vocational training, or early , reflecting broader gaps in documentation for lower-profile SS personnel prior to their institutional roles. No verifiable evidence exists of Sauer serving in the during , though individuals of his birth year (1898) were often conscripted from 1916 onward; his absence from military records suggests either exemption, deferment, or unrecorded service amid the era's incomplete postwar archiving. Pre-1933 occupational history remains limited to his work, with no indications of political activity, business ownership, or notable achievements before the onset of widespread in the late period, which affected many skilled tradesmen amid the .

Nazi Involvement

Entry into NSDAP and SS

Albert Sauer, trained as a carpenter, encountered prolonged unemployment during the economic turmoil of the Weimar Republic's final years, when registered joblessness exceeded 5 million by 1931 and peaked at approximately 6 million (nearly 30% of the workforce) in 1932. Amid widespread resentment toward the Treaty of Versailles's reparations and territorial losses, which many Germans viewed as humiliating constraints on national recovery, Sauer affiliated with the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP) and the Schutzstaffel (SS) in 1931. This timing aligned with the NSDAP's electoral surge, as the party garnered 18.3% of the vote in September 1930 and promised economic revitalization through public works, autarky, and rejection of international debt obligations, appealing to disaffected workers seeking stability and purpose. Following his entry, Sauer transitioned to full-time employment within the SS, an organization that expanded rapidly from a small bodyguard unit into a paramilitary force emphasizing discipline and ideological loyalty under Heinrich Himmler's leadership. The SS's structure, formalized in the early , rewarded early adherents with progressive ranks based on service and performance within its Allgemeine-SS and later Totenkopfverbände divisions, which handled guard duties. Sauer's initial involvement reflected the broader influx of members drawn by the Nazi regime's post-1933 consolidation of power, including the of March 1933 that centralized authority and curtailed opposition, fostering an environment of rapid organizational growth. By the mid-1930s, Sauer's rank had advanced sufficiently—reaching SS-Sturmbannführer by 1938—to position him for administrative roles, indicative of the SS's meritocratic yet ideologically rigid promotion system that prioritized commitment to National Socialist principles over formal military experience. This progression occurred against the backdrop of Germany's rearmament and economic recovery under policies like the Four-Year Plan, which reduced to under 1 million by 1938 through and labor , reinforcing the party's narrative of efficacious leadership. Sauer's affiliations thus embodied the causal draw of Nazi ideology for individuals in economically precarious trades, offering not only employment but a framework for nationalistic restoration amid the era's political volatility.

Initial SS Assignments

Albert Sauer, an SS member since 1931, undertook early assignments in the nascent Nazi concentration camp system, which expanded rapidly after 1933 to detain political opponents under orders. From April 1935 to April 1936, he served at , the precursor to Sachsenhausen, in a role that involved guard and administrative duties amid the SS's consolidation of control over internment facilities. In April 1936, Sauer was appointed commandant of Bad Sulza, a small early camp in originally established in November 1933 under police oversight but transferred to SS administration. He held this position until July 15, 1937, overseeing approximately 850 prisoners, primarily communists, social democrats, and other regime opponents subjected to forced labor and harsh discipline. Under his command, the camp enforced strict SS protocols emphasizing unquestioned obedience, aligning with Heinrich Himmler's directives for personnel selection based on proven and in suppressing . Bad Sulza's operations reflected the broader Nazi policy of decentralized early camps, which served as testing grounds for SS administrative practices before the centralization of larger facilities like Dachau and Sachsenhausen. The camp was dissolved in July 1937, with its prisoners transferred to Buchenwald, marking Sauer's transition from peripheral sites to more prominent roles as the system scaled under the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps. These assignments vetted Sauer through practical enforcement of , prioritizing ideological reliability over prior expertise, consistent with SS recruitment patterns favoring veterans of the early 1930s purges.

Concentration Camp Roles

Command at Sachsenhausen

Albert Sauer served as the second Schutzhaftlagerführer ( camp leader) at from August 1937 until mid-1938, a position that placed him in direct oversight of daily prisoner operations, guard supervision within the detention area, and enforcement of SS disciplinary measures. In this role, he reported to the camp commandant, , and contributed to the implementation of Nazi policies aimed at the internment and labor-based "re-education" of perceived enemies of the regime, primarily political opponents such as communists, social democrats, and trade unionists. The camp's prisoner population, numbering around 7,000 by late 1937 and expanding to over 10,000 by early 1938, consisted largely of German nationals categorized as political detainees, with smaller contingents of criminals, "asocials," , and homosexuals; Jewish prisoners remained minimal prior to the November 1938 pogroms. Under Sauer's administrative oversight, Sachsenhausen functioned as a model SS camp, emphasizing forced labor in camp construction, the adjacent DELA brickworks, and preliminary armaments-related tasks that supported infrastructure projects, including materials for military expansion ahead of . routines involved strict roll calls, work assignments from dawn to dusk, and punitive measures for infractions, aligned with directives from the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps under , which prioritized labor extraction while maintaining order through intimidation and . These operations yielded economic outputs, such as bricks for Berlin-area developments, but were marked by reports of arbitrary brutality, including floggings and executions for alleged escapes or , contributing to mortality from exhaustion, , and disease—estimated in the hundreds annually during this pre-war phase, though exact figures for 1937–1938 remain fragmentary due to incomplete records. Contemporary accounts and post-war testimonies attribute to Sauer personal involvement in harsh interrogations and selections for punishment, reflecting the broader SS ethos of deterrence through terror, yet these actions occurred within the framework of centralized Nazi orders for camp self-sufficiency and prisoner exploitation rather than initiatives. While later , often drawing from survivor narratives compiled by institutions like the International Tracing Service, highlights systemic violence under such leadership, pre-war mortality rates at Sachsenhausen—lower than wartime peaks—stemmed more from and inadequate medical care than deliberate , underscoring the camp's initial role in political suppression and economic mobilization over extermination. Sauer's tenure ended with his transfer to establish Mauthausen in August 1938, leaving Sachsenhausen amid ongoing expansions to accommodate rising detentions following the .

Command at Mauthausen-Gusen

![Wiener Graben quarry at Mauthausen concentration camp][float-right] Albert Sauer served as the first commandant of from August 1, 1938, to February 17, 1939. Appointed shortly after the camp's establishment following Austria's with in March 1938, Sauer oversaw the transfer of approximately 300 prisoners from , who arrived on August 8, 1938, to initiate construction and operations. These initial inmates, primarily convicted criminals and individuals deemed "asocial" by Nazi authorities, were tasked with building the camp infrastructure and exploiting the nearby Wiener Graben granite quarry. Under Sauer's command, the camp's primary economic function centered on forced labor in the granite quarries managed by the SS-owned Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke (DEST) GmbH, founded in April 1938 to supply building materials for Reich infrastructure projects such as the and military fortifications. Prisoners were compelled to extract and transport heavy blocks, often hauling them up the 186 uneven steps known as the "Stairs of Death" from the quarry floor to the camp level, a process that contributed to severe physical exhaustion and high attrition rates due to overwork and inadequate nutrition. By the end of 1938, the prisoner population had grown to nearly 1,000, reflecting the camp's expansion to meet DEST's production quotas for used in Nazi construction efforts. The regime under Sauer enforced rigorous SS discipline, with prisoner treatment characterized by brutal forced marches to the quarry, minimal rations, and punitive measures for failing to meet output demands, as documented in survivor testimonies and camp records. While specific execution orders were not prominently featured in the early phase, deaths resulted primarily from labor-induced collapse, injuries, and emerging disease outbreaks in the confined environment, though comprehensive medical logs from the period indicate that epidemics like played a significant causal role in mortality once overcrowding intensified. Nazi evaluations credited the camp's initial operations with efficient resource extraction supporting war preparations, yet empirical data from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum highlight the foundational harshness that set the stage for Mauthausen's later as a Category III camp for the most severe political prisoners. Prisoner demographics during Sauer's tenure remained focused on Austrian political opponents and common criminals, distinct from the influx of and other groups after 1941.

Death and Aftermath

Circumstances of Death

Albert Sauer received severe wounds at the Falkensee subcamp of Sachsenhausen concentration camp during the final days of April 1945, as Soviet forces advanced rapidly toward Berlin and Nazi control disintegrated in the region. He succumbed to these injuries on 3 May 1945. Falkensee, established in 1943 as a forced-labor site for armaments production, faced evacuation orders amid the chaos, with thousands of prisoners marched out under guard as SS personnel fled or dispersed to avoid capture. The wounds Sauer suffered occurred in this breakdown of order, characterized by abandoned camps, improvised prisoner releases, and retaliatory acts against remaining SS staff by inmates or mutinying guards, reflecting the causal collapse of command structures under total military defeat rather than coordinated retribution. Eyewitness reports from the period describe sporadic against camp personnel during such liberations, though specific details on Sauer's assailants remain unverified in primary accounts. His death precluded any formal post-war or accountability, in contrast to contemporaries like Mauthausen Franz Ziereis, who was wounded while evading capture on 23 May 1945 and interrogated before dying. Germany's unconditional surrender followed days later on 8 , marking the end of organized Nazi resistance.

References

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