Quote:
Originally Posted by walter mitty
henry poole of saville row ,if you please
|
henry poole of saville row did military uniforms in the 19th century, but the SS uniforms were designed by Hugo Boss
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wierd Valley Mackem
.... Some people are mixing up Waffen and Allgemeine SS. The Camps and internal security were made up of the latter,.....
|
i thought it was the other way around?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wierd Valley Mackem
.... A big percentage of the SS were made up of foreigners due to the restrictions on recruiting Germans by the Army. Also a lot of the troops were conscripts after restrictions were lifted. .....
|
you had some who had a higher rank within the SS than they did within the German army.
As the war progressed the SS grew in numbers due to foreign input, but a lot of Germans also made sidewards type moves to take up senior positions within the SS
The SS was originally from way before the outbreak of WWII when they were more political police than soldiers ... they had to be card carriers, and they did their own cull in the late 30's to get rid of people within the SS they considered "not pure", and then once the war started they set op foreign SS units (Lithuania, The Netherlands, etc) made up with volunteers from occupied countries.
The Waffen SS were more associated with being frontline military units, but as the war progressed all the SS units became one and people transferred within the SS from frontline, to admin function, to camp guard, to transport units.
The SS even had its own highly lucrative Economic and Administrative Department (SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt) who had a wide range of tasks leading up to and during the war, from guard duties at the concentration camps to selling all the gold they gathered at same camps, overseeing the slave labour at work camps or manufacturing plants, to driving crates of fanta (aka nazi cola!) or nestle chocolate to the troops! It was during the war that Nestle made its initial fortune by getting the contract from the SS to supply all chocolate to the Axis troops. They registered the company in Switzerland to safeguard their future.
The SS also had a say in how Kodak (the camera company) developed using "cheap" labour, and they also made a fortune when they developed Fanta at the German Coca Cola factories (which was later taken over by Coca Cola again once the war ended) - They now say that the German boss of Coca Cola, Max Keith, never joined the nazi party, but there is a lot of doubt about this as in that period you couldn't run a company if you weren't a member.