Reichswerke Hermann Göring

Reichswerke Hermann Göring
Industry Conglomerate
Fate Captured and nationalized by Allied soldiers 1943-1945
Successor Salzgitter AG
Founded 1937
Founders Hermann Göring
Defunct 1945
Headquarters Berlin, Nazi Germany
Area served
Nazi Germany
Number of employees
Around 500.000

Reichswerke Hermann Göring was an industrial conglomerate of Nazi Germany. It was established in July 1937 to extract and process domestic iron ores from Salzgitter that were deemed uneconomical by the privately held steel mills. The state-owned Reichswerke was seen as a vehicle of hastening growth in ore mining and steel output regardless of private capitalists' plans and opinions, which ran contrary to Adolf Hitler's strategic vision. In November 1937 Hermann Göring obtained unchecked access to state financing and launched a chain of mergers, diversifying into military industries with the absorption of Rheinmetall. Göring himself supervised the Reichswerke but did not own it in any sense and did not make personal profit from it directly, although at times he withdrew cash for personal expenses.[1]

After the Anschluss the Reichswerke absorbed Austrian heavy industries, including those owned by private German investors. The cluster of steel mills and supporting companies in Linz became its most important asset. Nazi leadership regarded captured assets as the property of the state and were not willing to share the spoils with German businesses.[2] After the German occupation of Czechoslovakia the Reichswerke absorbed between 50 and 60 per cent of Czech heavy industries.[3] The pattern was repeated in occupied Poland, France and the Soviet Union. The Reichswerke operated captured assets as far from its base as Liepāja in Latvia and Donetsk in Eastern Ukraine.[4] It provided one-eighth of German steel output during World War II[5] and created a Nazi-controlled military complex that was independent of private interests.[6] By the end of 1941 the Reichswerke became the largest company in Europe[7] and probably in the whole world, with a capital of 2.4 billion reichsmarks and about half a million workers.[8]

In 1942 the inefficient structure was reduced in size. Its weapons and munitions assets were integrated into the Ministry of Armaments; the mining and steel core of the Reichswerke continued operation under Göring's supervision until the end of the war, albeit at a loss. The conglomerate was dismembered by the Allies in 1944–1945, but the Salzgitter plant continued operations as Reichswerke until 1953.[9] The Reichswerke logo, which resembled Göring's coat of arms, remained in use by Peine+Salzgitter until the middle of the 1980s.[9]

Salzgitter

1941. Göring at an assembly of mining personnel in Berlin. According to the archive caption, only 57 of 625 men belonged to the Reichswerke.
Further information: Economy of Nazi Germany

In 1935–1936 German steel industry, concentrated in the Ruhr area, recovered from the Great Depression and reached nearly full utilization of its mills.[10] It was dominated by privately held VS, Krupp, Gutehoffnungshütte and Mannesmann. Three quarters of iron ore processed in Germany was imported; domestic ore reserves in the Salzgitter area were deemed to be of too poor quality to be economical.[11][12] Demand for iron and steel rose in line with the rise in military spending, further increasing dependence on imports.[11] Influential people inside the Nazi Party, including Hitler's economic advisor Willhelm Keppler, rallied to increase domestic iron ore mining.[11]

Iron ore became the principal problem of the Four Year Plan (1936–1940).[11] In October 1936 Göring learned that Stewarts & Lloyds foundry in Corby had successfully smelted low-grade ores; the new technology removed the barriers for Göring's plans.[11] In December 1936 Göring announced that domestic ore, iron and steel program had become a national priority and that he would not tolerate hesitation or obstruction by private owners of the resources.[11] Private capital raised their objections against rapid growth, and Göring settled to take ore mining under state control.[13]

Throughout the first half of 1937 Göring rallied for self-sufficient steel industry, and against the steel barons.[13] His radical calls improved his own political weight and silenced the opposition. Göring's aim of bringing the economy in line with Hitler's strategic plans was fully supported by the Nazi press.[14] The danger of relying on ore imports was proven by the strikes and anti-Nazi mood in Sweden and by the success of the Popular Front in France.[13] In July 1937 the steel barons were stunned by a decree which instituted the Reichswerke, an integrated state company tasked with surpassing the Ruhr in finished steel output.[15] Fearing creation of excessive industrial capacity and cutthroat competition with the state, they cautiously discussed the ways of curbing Göring's ambitions.[15] They joined arms with Göring's adversary Hjalmar Schacht, who denied state financing to Göring's project.[16]

July 23, 1937 Göring announced that the Reichswerke would begin mining and processing Salzgitter ores and that the government would take over privately held ore deposits in exchange for minority shares in the new enterprises.[16] Paul Pleiger became the managing director. Critics argued that the Salzgitter project would consume more steel than it could produce in three years.[17] The Ruhr attempted a coordinated response, but wire-tapping and surveillance gave Göring advance knowledge of the steel barons' moves, and he preempted their organized action through personal threats and promises.[10] The steel barons escaped an open confrontation with the regime[10] but the trust between Nazi leadership and the big business was lost forever.[18] Schacht was compelled to resign in November 1937, his function passed to Göring.[18]

The Salzgitter project recruited workforce from all over Germany,[19] Austria, Italy, the Netherlands and other countries.[20] It produced its first pig iron in October 1939 and its first steel in August 1940.[19] A large metalworking plant, Stahlwerke Braunschweig, was built nearby, starting in March 1940; eventually it became one of the largest plants in the country, employing ten thousand workers.[20] The majority of Salzgitter area staff, 47,000 workers, were non-Germans.[20] In five years, 1937 to 1942, population increased fivefold.[20] Housing was not sufficient even for native Germans; foreign workers had to live in seventy makeshift camps.[21] The Gestapo ran an on-site correctional camp for the delinquent workers.[21] Forced labor of concentration camp prisoners was not employed until May 1944; the three camps that supplied slaves to Salzgitter contained up to 6,500 prisoners.[21] Another local camp, Drutte, supplied slave workers for the Reichswerke's ammunition plants since 1942 (see List of subcamps of Neuengamme, Celler Hasenjagd).[21] Salzgitter was the target of Allied bombings several times but damage to the plant was insignificant. Its blast furnaces operated until captured by the Americans in April 1945.[22]

Expansion

May 13, 1938. Hermann Göring visits construction site of the Reichswerke in Linz.

After the removal of Schacht in November 1937 the Reichswerke rapidly grew while privately held steel mills of the Ruhr were deprived of capital (their capacity remained at 16 million tons p.a. until the outbreak of World War II).[23] In February 1938 Göring pumped up the Reichswerke capital from 5 to 400 million reichsmark. This started a chain of mergers. In April the Reichswerke moved into weapons production by absorbing Rheinmetall.[2][24] In a few following months the Reichswerke, once an insignificant German steel company, consolidated most of Austrian heavy industries, from extraction of ore to production of advanced weapons.[25]

Göring turned his eyes to Austrian steel in 1937.[26] The Anschluss of March 1938 gave Göring practically unlimited access to Austrian resources. The Reichswerke's activities in Austria demonstrated that Göring regarded captured assets as state property and was not willing to share the fortunes with private German businesses – on the contrary, the Reichswerke absorbed Austrian assets that were already owned by German investors and completely eliminated the barons of Ruhr from Austrian industry.[27] Its primary target in Austria, Alpine Montangesellschaft[28] steel company, was 56% owned by German giant VS. Immediately after the Anschluss, Göring advised VS to speed up mining its Austrian ores, and again the private business refused in fear of overproduction.[29] The Reichswerke purchased a non-controlling share in Alpine and then wrestled complete control over the company for six months.[26][29] Regulatory pressure threatened to devalue Alpine, and in March 1939[30] VS stepped aside.[29] Alpine's ore resources were vital for Göring's second great project – the new vertically integrated cluster of steel mills in Linz which also included Eisenwerke Oberdonau and numerous construction and shipping companies.[31] Göring, in his functions of President of Prussia and Chief of the Luftwaffe, also established close ties between the Reichswerke and the oil and aircraft industries.[32]

Relationships between the state and steel barons continued to deteriorate, and Göring used the same pattern of intimidation to extort other Austrian and later Czech assets from their past owners.[30][33] The Reichswerke absorbed 50 to 60 per cent of Czech heavy industry, and a slightly lesser share in Austria.[3] Takeover mechanism ranged from bona fide stock purchase to control by proxy through dependent local banks to outright confiscation, as was the case of British-owned Rothschild family mill in Vitkovice.[34] Sudetenland, annexed in 1938, brought the first substantial coal reserves.[6] In Germany, the Reichswerke effectively subdued the Ruhr barons by forcing them to supply coal to Salzgitter blast furnaces, commissioned in 1939, at below-market price.[35] "Acquisition" of Polish coal mines allowed the Reichswerke to drop coal prices even lower.[36]

After the outbreak of World War II the Reichswerke abandoned peacetime formalities and simply took over all "German" assets it found attractive. It declared itself "a trustee for the German state" for the duration of the war, a white knight saving occupied countries from "colonialism" of big business.[17] Settlements and compensations, when recognized, were delayed until the end of the war.[17] But the Reichswerke's own post-war plans, developed in 1942, called for a further increase of state control over heavy industries and industrialization of the eastern territories at the expense of the Ruhr.[37] The Reichswerke clearly favored industrial development in Central Europe, rather than Germany itself, in part because it was out of reach of allied bombers.[38] By 1943-1944 half of the Reichswerke iron and steel were produced in the occupied territories, the other half in Germany (including annexed Austria).[39]

Romanian assets, almost all of the country's coal and steel capacity, were acquired through a series of friendly arrangements and placed under joint German-Romanian control.[40] The Soviet coal and steel industry captured in 1941–1942 became the Reichswerke's most challenging task. Hitler tasked the Reichswerke with harvesting the abandoned plants as soon as possible.[7] Pleiger compelled the old steel barons of the Ruhr to send in their managing teams and literally "adopt" the Soviet assets.[7] Reluctant steel barons objected but had to comply with Hitler's explicit order.[41] Radical Nazis objected, for different reasons, but could not offer a better solution.[7]

Restructuring

Albert Speer (right) took over weapons and munitions plants from Göring (left) in 1942.

By the end of 1941 the Reichswerke became the largest company in Europe.[7] The conglomerate experienced a series of reorganizations; in January 1941 its assets were arranged in three divisions:[4]

A fourth division was added later for captured Soviet assets – Kryvbas and Donets Basin plants and mines in Ukraine, with lesser interests in Belarus, Latvia and central Russia.[4]

The company amassed too many plants to run them effectively. Instead of pinpointing the most promising assets, it spread the available resources over everything it had.[41] Its managers did not feel the pressure of competition that shaped the management of private companies.[41] Richard Overy noted that Göring's obsession with long-term mega-projects not only drained the economy, but was in stark contrast with the ideology of blitzkrieg.[42]

Inability to control the huge conglomerate became evident in 1942, and Pleiger persuaded Göring to limit the Reichswerke to coal, iron, and steel production. The Reichswerke passed control over its weapons and munitions plants to Organisation Todt and its successor, Ministry of Armaments.[32] Still, the organization operated at a loss; in fact, Block A posted losses in every year of its existence, from 1939 to 1945.[43] The French operations fared even worse.[44]

Liquidation

Salzgitter plant in 1961.

The assets of the Reichswerke acquired by conquest were recaptured by Allied troops between 1943–1945 - these included assets of ARBED[17] (Luxembourg) and Skoda Works.[45]

The Reichswerke assets in allied-occupied Austria were nationalized by the First Nationalization Law enacted by the Austrian Parliament on July 26, 1946.[46] The ore mines in Erzberg and the steel mills in Linz, destroyed by allied air raids, were reorganized into the state-owned VÖEST (now part of voestalpine).[46] Reconstruction of these assets became a key priority of the Marshall Plan in Austria. Nationalization was supported by the United States Department of State and opposed by the U. S. Army generals, who called for privatization.[47] Steyr-Daimler-Puch, once owned by the Reichswerke, and controlled by the U.S. Army, became a pilot model for the private modernization advocated by Mark W. Clark.[47] Eventually the Department of State prevailed and the Austrians were allowed to nationalize the plants at will.[47] The Reichswerke assets in the Soviet zone of occupation were taken over by the Administration for Soviet Property in Austria and returned to Austria for a ransom in 1955.

The Salzgitter furnaces were shut down and earmarked for dismantling, devastating the town's economy.[22] Dismantling began in earnest in 1947 and ended with the demolition of furnaces and foundries.[48] Salzgitter was flooded with forty four thousand of German refugees from the East,[49] unemployment exceeded 30%, and the British considered physically resettling the residents in fear of a Communist uprising.[48] Of the thirty seven thousand displaced persons (mostly from Poland) working in Salzgitter in 1945, many refused to be resettled, and deportations continued until mid-1950s.[49] In February 1950 the workers stood up against demolition of their plants and eventually won the bloodless standoff with the British troops.[48] Dismantling continued for another year, but steelmaking in Salzgitter was saved.[48] The state-owned plant operated under the name Reichswerke until 1953, was renamed AG für Bergbau- und Hüttenbetrieb, and eventually became Salzgitter AG.[9] The Reichswerke logo, which resembled Göring's coat of arms, was not replaced until the 1980s.[9]


Notes

  1. Overy, p. 145.
  2. 1 2 Overy, p. 108.
  3. 1 2 Overy, p. 155.
  4. 1 2 3 Overy, pp. 162-163.
  5. Overy, p. 113.
  6. 1 2 Overy, p. 151.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Overy, p. 159.
  8. Neumann, pp. 20-21.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Neumann, p. 30.
  10. 1 2 3 Overy, p. 105.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Overy, p. 97.
  12. Salzgitter ores contained high levels of silicic acid and could not be smelted in conventional furnaces - Neumann, p. 19.
  13. 1 2 3 Overy, p. 98.
  14. Overy, p. 99.
  15. 1 2 Overy, p. 100.
  16. 1 2 Overy, p. 104.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Overy, p. 114.
  18. 1 2 Overy, p. 106.
  19. 1 2 Neumann, p. 19.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Neumann, p. 20.
  21. 1 2 3 4 Neumann, p. 21.
  22. 1 2 Neumann, p. 2.
  23. Overy, p. 107.
  24. Rheinmetall owned subsidiaries in the Netherlands, thus Reichswerke also acquired leverage over the Dutch economy - Overy, p. 329.
  25. Overy, p. 150.
  26. 1 2 Overy, p. 148.
  27. Overy, pp. 108 and 109.
  28. The alpine component of present-day Voestalpine.
  29. 1 2 3 Overy, p. 109.
  30. 1 2 Overy, p. 149.
  31. Overy, pp. 149–150.
  32. 1 2 Overy, p. 164.
  33. Overy, p. 110.
  34. Overy, p. 154.
  35. Overy, p. 111.
  36. Overy, p. 340.
  37. Overy, pp. 115-116.
  38. Overy, pp. 115-116 and 151.
  39. Overy, p. 170, table 5.5.
  40. Overy, pp. 159-160.
  41. 1 2 3 Overy, p. 173.
  42. Overy, p. 245.
  43. Overy, p. 170, table 5.4.
  44. Overy, p. 170.
  45. Overy, p. 139.
  46. 1 2 Tweraser, p. 293.
  47. 1 2 3 Tweraser, p. 294.
  48. 1 2 3 4 Neumann, p. 26.
  49. 1 2 Neumann, p. 28.

References

Further reading

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