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The Blechhammer ( ) (nowadays Blachownia Śląska, district of the City of Kędzierzyn-Koźle) area was the location of , prisoner of war camps, and forced (). Labor camp prisoners began arriving as early as June 17, 1942, and in July 1944, 400–500 men were transferred from the Terezin family camp to Blechhammer. The mobile "pocket furnace" () crematorium was at Sławięcice.) and Bau und Arbeits Battalion (BAB, ) 21 was a mile from the Blechhammer oil plants and was not far from and . Blechhammer synthetic oil (aka Parramore, Col Woody W. "The Combined Bomber Offensive's Destruction of Germany's Refined-Fuels Industry." Air & Space Power Journal 26.2 (2012).) production began April 1, 1944 with 4000 prisoners,

(2004). 9780805076233, Macmillan. .
with the slave labor camp holding these prisoners during April 1944, becoming a satellite camp of the dreaded Auschwitz extermination camp, as Arbeitslager Blechhammer.


Chemical plants
Two plants in the area, Blechhammer North (south of Sławięcice) and Blechhammer South at Azoty ( from the labor camp) were nicknamed "Black Hammer" by Allied bomber aircrews.
(1993). 9781879418066, Biddle Publishing Company.
The facilities were approximately apart with each occupying a 3,000 × 5,000 ft (914 × 1524 m) area in open country. Similar to the Gelsenberg plant,
(2000). 9780792364870, Springer. .
the Blechhammer plants used from Upper Silesian Coal Basin in the to synthesize oil. In June 1944, the United States Army Air Forces considered Blechhammer one of the four "principal synthetic oil plants in Germany", and after the Fifteenth Air Force had dropped 7,082 tons (14,164,000 lbs; 6,424 tonnes) of bombs on Blechhammer, the Blechhammer post-war by the Soviets.


Evacuation
In March 1945 the POWs were evacuated. One camp went to , BAB 21 went to Landshut) and on January 25, labor camp prisoners were force-marched for five days to (about 20% died en route). Some small groups did manage to escape (see František R. Kraus).

The "7 Company" was the guard battalion for Blechhammer, and the 1945 convicted Blechhammer staff members and .


Camps
The Blechhammer complex contained a number of POW Camps: BAB 21 (E794), 40, 48; E3, E714, E769, Camp 139.

Life at Blechhamer and the work parties is described in Captive Plans, the POW diary of Reg BeattieBeattie, Trevor (ed.) (2011). Captive Plans: The Pow Diary of Reg Beattie. . and by a Czech survivor, journalist František R. Kraus.


See also
  • Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany
  • Monowitz concentration camp
  • Oil Campaign of World War II
  • Territorial changes of Poland after World War II


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