Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre


The Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre housed in Grafeneck Castle was one of Nazi Germany's killing centres as part of their forced euthanasia programme. Today, it is a memorial site dedicated to the victims of the state-authorised programme also referred to since as Action T4.
At least 10,500 mentally and physically disabled people, predominantly from Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, were systematically killed during 1940. It was one of the first places in Nazi Germany where people were killed in large numbers in a gas chamber using carbon monoxide. This was actually the beginning of the Euthanasia Programme.
Here was also settled the central office of "Charitable Ambulance Transport GmbH", which was responsible for the transport of T4 and was headed by Reinhold Vorberg.

Location

Grafeneck is a castle-like property in Grafeneck, a part of the municipality of Gomadingen in Baden-Württemberg.

History

Built around 1560, the Grafeneck Castle served as a hunting lodge for the Dukes of Württemberg. In the 19th century, it was used by the Forest Service. The Samaritan Foundation acquired it in 1928, setting up a handicapped home. In 1929, the charitable non-profit organisation Samariterstiftung established an asylum for disabled people. On 13. October 1939 Richard Alber, from 1938 to 1944 Landrat of district Münsingen, ordered that Schloss Grafeneck had to be cleared the next day. Four buses brought around 100 disabled men and few women from Grafeneck to the monastery St. Elizabeth in Reute. All patients who were accommodated there survived Aktion T 4.

Modification of the building

From October 1939 to January 1940 former samaritanian hospital was rebuilt into a killing area.
Living and administration rooms were installed in the castle, as well as a registry office and a police office.
A wooden hut with about 100 beds was built in the castle grounds, a parking space for the grey buses, a crematorium oven and a shed with facilities for gassing people.
Moreover, staff were recruited from Stuttgart and Berlin: doctors, police officers, clerks, maintenance and transport personnel, economic and domestic staff, guards and funeral staff. Between October and December 1939, only 10 to 20 people were in the castle, but by 1940 there were already about 100 men and women there.
The systematic murder under the T4 action started on 18 January 1940 in Grafeneck in a gas chamber camouflaged as a shower room, which was in a "garage": The prison doctor operated a manometer valve to allow carbon monoxide to enter the gas chamber. The steel cylinders required were supplied by Mannesmann, the filling was made by IG Farben in Ludwigshafen. The first murdered patients were from the mental hospital Eglfing-Haar in Bavaria. The victims came from 48 institutions for handicapped and mentally ill: 40 from almost all districts of Baden-Württemberg, six from Bavaria and one each from Hesse and North Rhine-Westphalia.
On 13 December 1940 the last victims were burned in the crematory.
Killings with gas were performed between January and December 1940. Afterwards, it was used to house children and mothers with babies who had fled from Allied bombing. In Grafeneck Castle were killed during the Nazi Euthanasieaktion 10,654 disabled and sick people through lethal injections and gas. The French occupying forces returned the site in 1946/47 to the Samaritan Foundation or, who re-established it as a centre for disabled and mentally ill people which still operates to this day. In the fifties, the development of the cemetery began as a memorial. In 2005, the documentation center Grafeneck Memorial was finally built.
Documentation center Grafeneck
The Grafeneck process presented in the summer of 1949, a total of 10,654 victims laid.

Offenders

The people who worked here overtook partially important jobs in the Nazi concentration camps.

Administration

The T4-organisators Viktor Brack and Karl Brandt arranged, that the killing of ill people was to be made only by medical staff, because of a letter from Adolf Hitler. The service of the gas tap was the task of the doctors. However it could happen when the doctors were not present or for other reasons the gas tap was operated by non medical staff. All doctors from Grafeneck used code names for correspondence.
In Grafeneck worked as killing doctors:
Deputy Head of the Special Registry Office: Hermann Holzschuh, according Wögers leaving his successor