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Revision as of 08:55, 18 March 2008

Flag of the SS Heimwehr Danzig

SS Heimwehr "Danzig" was an SS unit established in the free city of Danzig (today Gdańsk, Poland) before the Second World War. It fought with the German army against the Polish Army during the invasion of Poland. After this it became part of the 3rd SS Division Totenkopf and ceased to exist as an independent unit.

Also known as Heimwehr Danzig (Home resistance Danzig), it was officially established on 20 June, 1939, when the Danzig senate under Albert Forster decided to set up its own powerful armed force; a cadre of this new unit primarily formed the Danzige SS Wachsturmbann "Eimann".

History

Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler supported this project and sent SS Obersturmbannführer Hans Friedemann Goetze to Danzig. Goetze was the commander of the III. Sturmbann (Regiment) of the 4th SS-Totenkopfstandarte "Ostmark," established in October 1938 in Berlin-Adlersheim.

The III. Sturmbann regiment was strengthened with the help of anti-tank defense forces (the Panzerabwehr-Lehrsturm of the SS Totenkopfstandarten) as well as about 500 additional volunteers from Danzig who named their new unit SS Sturmbann "Goetze". The Danzig SS-men had been members a special SS troop established in July 1939 - the Wachsturmbann "Eimann" - and at the beginning of August this self-named Sturmbann "Goetze" reached the peninsula at the mouth of the Vistula called the Danzig Westerplatte. There it kept itself hidden on German ships, including the naval training ship "Schleswig-Holstein."

On August 18, 1939 the Polish government militarily mobilized against the German Reich. The Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans) in Danzig "completely spontaneously" founded the 1,550-man strong Heimwehr Danzig (Danzig Militia).

On 1 September, 1939 German troops attacked Poland. The Heimwehr Danzig fought on the German side, in the process capturing the Polish post office, an event which Günter Grass dedicated a chapter of his novel The Tin Drum to. During the attacks the German forces used ADGZ armoured cars, 75mm and 105mm artillery and flamethrowers against Poles armed with pistols, rifles, light machine guns and grenades. The SS-Heimwehr Danzig participated in the attack on the Danzig Westerplatte, and already was considered a part of the SS-Totenkopf Division then forming under Theodor Eicke. Later, it provided coast guard services in Danzig.

On September 30, 1939, the Heimwehr was dissolved. After Poland was overrun, such militias were involved in war crimes perpetrated on Polish civilians in West Prussia.

Commanders

  • SS Obersturmbannführer Hans Friedemann Goetze

Battle formation

The SS Wachsturmbann "Eimann"

The SS Wachsturmbann "Eimann" was set up in early June, 1939 in Danzig by then SS Sturmbannführer Kurt Eimann and was considered as an armed reserve of the Danzig SS-Standarte 36. It was used also in the Volksdeutsche (ethnic German) areas of the Polish Corridor, in order to induce ethnic Germans to join the SS, particularly the Totenkopfverbände. This Wachsturmbann was the first regiment of the later SS-Totenkopf-Division to have a purely military battle formation.

Commanders

Battle formation

  • Command
  • I. Squadron (one hundred men)
  • II. Squadron
  • III. Squadron
  • IV. Squadron
  • Truck squadron

After the "reunification of Danzig with the German Reich," the Wachsturmbann "Eimann" provided the staff for the newly-established concentration camp Stutthof near Danzig. The Nazi government also employed it for "special police tasks" in the new Reichsgau Danzig-Westpreussen, which means it was used to persecute and imprison Polish Jews.

References

  1. HIAG: Wenn alle Brüder schweigen, grosser Bildband über die Waffen-SS (ISBN 3-921242-21-5), 1973
  2. Mollo, Andrew: Allgemeine-SS (ISBN 0-7643-0145-4)
  3. Mark Yerger: A Pictorial History of the SS, 1923-1945 (ISBN 0-8128-2174-2)
  4. Robin Lumsden: The Allgemeine-SS, Vol. 266 (ISBN 1-85532-358-3)
  5. Martin Windrow: Waffen-SS, Vol. 34 (ISBN 0-85045-425-5)