1. Wittmoor Concentration Camp Memorial Stone and Plaque.

Directions:
S1, S11 to Poppenbüttel, or U1 to Ohlstedt.
Then Bus No. 276 from Poppenbüttel or Ohlstedt to the Tannenhof stop. Then walk into Bilenbarg that continues into a footpath leading into Wittmoor.
The memorial stone and plaque is circa 250 metres into the moor.


2. Gestapo-Zentrale Stadthausbrücke (Gestapo Headquarters, No. 8 Stadthausbrücke)

Today No. 8 Stadthausbrücke houses the Baubehörde (Planning Department and Building Control Office).
There is a memorial plaque in the entrance hall which states:
 Wir gedenken der Opfer, die hier während             We remember the victims who suffered
 der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft         here under the Gestapo during the 
 unter der Geheimen Staatspolizei gelitten haben.     period of National Socialist tyranny.
 Für viele war hier die erst Leidensstation           For many this was the first stage of suffering 
 auf dem Weg in die Konzentrationslager.              on the way to the concentration camp.
 Verteidigt die Menschenrechte.                       Protect human rights.


Wittmoor Concentration Camp Memorial Stone and Plaque.

Hamburg's first concentration camp was established as early as April 1933 in the closed-down peat factory on Wittmoor.
At this early date there were already 2,000 citizens of Hamburg in "Schutzhaft" ("protective custody"), and the authorities urgently sought a camp where the prisoners could be accommodated.
Initially, 20 prisoners, under guard, were taken to Wittmoor to prepare the former factory for its new role. In the following months the number of prisoners rose to 140.

Prior to the Second World War, Police Headquarters was accommodated in the Stadthaus. Today No. 8 Stadthausbrücke houses the Baubehörde (Planning Department and Building Control Office). After the Nazis came to power they established a special commando with the task of tracking down and persecuting political opponents. Initially, the commando was mostly made up of SA men (Storm Troopers), but after the turn of the year 1933/34 the SS took over, and shortly thereafter the Gestapo was formed. From the start the Gestapo made the Stadthaus a place of terror, brutality and torture. Those Hamburg Jews, that for whatever reason came into the hands of the Gestapo, were especially badly maltreated. For many of these individuals the Stadthaus was the first stage of suffering that ended in an extermination camp. In 1933 many political prisoners were taken from the Stadthaus to Wittmoor concentration camp.

For many prisoners, having survived the torture in the new Gestapo Headquarters in the Stadthaus, life behind the barbed-wire of Wittmoor concentration camp was almost bearable. Initially, violence was rarely used and the guards did not have the brutality of the later concentration camp guards. The policemen and SA men (Storm Troopers) on guard duty in the Wittmoor camp were not brutal enough for the Nazis; they played football and got into political discussion with the prisoners. The prisoners were able to organize protests and sucessfully attained visiting hours for relatives, and improvement in the quality of meals. However, it should not be forgotten that these were political prisoners, arrested merely for being political opponents of the Nazis, and who were forced to do unpaid, forced labour. For many prisoners Wittmoor concentration camp was a stage on the way to the extermination camps.

A Hamburg newspaper dated 4 June 1933 carried a whole page article entitled "Pictures of Wittmoor Concentration Camp". The population were therefore informed about concentration camps, but the majority looked away and said nothing, also when the terror directed against selected minorities became more and more brutal. This passive acquiescence led ultimately to the programme of mass murder.


Literature:
Klawe, Willy: "Im übrigen herrscht Zucht und Ordnung ...", Zur Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Wittmoor, VSA-Verlag, Hamburg, 1987.
Weinke, Wilfred: "Deutschfeindliche Journalisten unf Schriftsteller": Justin Steinfeld und Heinz Liepmann, In: Wamser, Ursula und Weinke, Wilfred (Hrsg.), Ehemals in Hamburg zu Haus: Jüdisches Leben am Grindel, VSA-Verlag, Hamburg, 1991.