
The Bremen-Osterort camp became a Neuengamme sub-camp on November 28, 1944. On that day all the prisoners at the Bremen-Neuenland subcamp—probably fewer than 1,000—were transferred to Osterort. The conditions in the Osterort camp in many respects resembled those in the previous camp: the commandant, camp elder, and Kapos were largely the same, and the majority of the prisoners continued to work at the U-boat bunker Hornisse, while others worked in removing rubble or possibly at the Weserflug or Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau AG (Deschimag). There were several reasons for the transfer from Neuenland to Osterort, the most important being that the distance the prisoners traveled to work decreased, and the route no longer passed through a densely populated part of the city. Some prisoners were now working at the Norddeutsche Hütte, which owned the campsite. The existing barracks had been previously used as a prisoner- of- war (POW) camp.1 The Norddeutsche Hütte was part of the Krupp ...
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