Age, Biography and Wiki
Werner Kampe was born on 11 May, 1911 in Nowy Dwór Gdański, German Empire. Discover Werner Kampe's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 63 years old?
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63 years old |
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Taurus |
Born |
11 May 1911 |
Birthday |
11 May |
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Nowy Dwór Gdański, German Empire |
Date of death |
(1974-05-23) Hanover, West Germany |
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Hanover, West Germany |
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He is a member of famous with the age 63 years old group.
Werner Kampe Height, Weight & Measurements
At 63 years old, Werner Kampe height not available right now. We will update Werner Kampe's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Werner Kampe Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Werner Kampe worth at the age of 63 years old? Werner Kampe’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated
Werner Kampe's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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Timeline
Werner Kamiński alias "Werner Adolf Kampe" died in Hanover on May 23, 1974, aged 63.
During the "Brombergerprozess" in Munich which took place in 1966, the prosecutor charged Kampe with the murder of Bydgoszcz mayor Leon Barciszewski and his son. However, the court did not follow the indictment placed and only summoned him as a witness.
Describing in 1955 the WWII Nazi actions in Bydgoszcz, Julis Hoppenrath, the President of the Gdańsk tax administration, claimed: "the regional party headed by Kampe was particularly active in this field. Polish intelligentsia paid for his activities with their life".
In 1954, Werner Kampe made his way to West Germany and settled in Hanover. Living in the city center at 18 Gustaw Adolf, he officially opened afterwards an insurance office under his real name.
His name is mentioned in the files of the former "Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland" (Polish: Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni Niemieckich w Polsce) for Bydgoszcz, as late as August 1946. On November 30, 1946, the city District Court issued a decision accusing Werner Kampe of war crimes. The proceedings sped up in spring 1947, when archives about Kampe's actions were discovered in the City Hall, establishing his role in the mass executions during the first months of the German occupation. On May 27, 1947, the investigating judge in Warsaw wrote to the director of the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland in order to prosecute Werner Kampe together with Albert Forster, who was to be judged in 1948 by the Supreme National Tribunal (Polish: Najwyższy Trybunał Narodowy).
On February 18, 1941, Werner was transferred from Bydgoszcz to Gdańsk where Albert Forster appointed him as kreisleiter of the region. After Forster dropped him out, he was later sent to the western front. There, on April 29, 1945, he was captured by the Americans near Wismar on the Baltic coast.
Resettling Polish and Jewish inhabitants, Werner ultimately desired to establish a German district in the city center, near the town hall. Nevertheless, this idea was never fully implemented as many dignitaries preferred to keep living in villas, far from the old town. Part of this scheme included an overall reconstruction of the city center, to make it the new German Bromberg (German: Das neue deutsche Bromberg). Hence, in December 1939, he ordered the demolition of the Old Market Square western frontage where was standing the Former Jesuit Church with a view to erect on this spot a new town hall and a large parade square around. The mass was celebrated on the morning of Monday, January 8, 1940, and the demolition works started right after. As testified after the war by Otto von Proeck, then head of the Orpo in Bydgoszcz and opposed to Kampe:
This project was partially carried out in the first half of 1940: the church, three adjoining tenements on the right and one building on the left (the first seat of the city Museum) were razed down. However, the Nazis could not push further their plans.
At the beginning of 1940, Werner Kampe was interrogated by the Nazi prosecutor's office in a case of plunder and property appropriation of murdered Poles. The "Compensation Office for Germans" created immediately after his arriving in Bydgoszcz was requisitioning furniture and valuables from apartments of Poles and re-allocating them to Germans. However, the activity was arbitrarily led by Kampe alobne and not by the "Central Trustee Office-East" established by the Third Reich authorities, which raised claims by local Germans, followed by denunciations and investigations by the Orpo and the Gestapo.
Gdańsk NSDAP saw its role expand with the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent occupation of Pomerania by Nazi troops, covering the entire region re-named Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia. In this new administrative area, Bydgoszcz was the second largest political and social center. To take over the political and administrative power in that place, only a man from Forster's closest circle could be trusted: the choice fell logically on Werner Kampe, then 28 year old. On September 8, 1939, he was appointed Kreisleiter of Bydgoszcz NSDAP and city commissioner.
At his arriving, Kampe installed himself in the Town Hall, soon creating and managing the local Nazi party. He set his abode in 50 Gdańska street, though he also rented an apartment in the villa at 8a Sielanka, which was close to the seat of Selbstschutz at 7 Ossoliński Alley. He was regularly seen in the city SS headquarters set up at 48 Gdańska street. On October 27, 1939, Werner Kampe was officially appointed Mayor of Bydgoszcz. As soon as September 9 and 10, 1939, he ordered the shooting of 50 inhabitants of Bydgoszcz along the western facade of the Old Market place.
Kampe, using the full authority of the Nazi system, held the position of commander over the city's state administration and local government. Additionally, after Hitler's decree of August 28, 1939, he could perform arbitrary actions from his own initiative, without referring to his superiors. A supplemental ordinance of October 8, 1939, incorporating some Polish territory into the Third Reich, gave Kampe -as the mayor- a political role over the "special authorities": he could then influence the local offices of the Gestapo and the SD albeit he did not exercise any official authority over them.
His major objective, however, was to segregate and exterminate the Polish population under his authority in a planned and centrally directed manner. It was originally justified by the need to apprehend the perpetrators of the so-called Bloody Sunday. In fall 1939, with Kampe's active participation, Nazi propaganda created a myth from this event, turning it into a persecution of the Volksdeutsche, which perforce triggered feelings of revenge among the thousands of Nazi officials working in the region and justified the bloody repression against the Polish population.
Werner used all kind of frauds vis-à-vis demobilized Polish intellectuals coming back from the front in 1939. Most of them were executed to various execution sites in the outskirts of Bydgoszcz, among which Tryszczyn (Polish: Zbrodnia w Tryszczynie) and Fordon's Valley of Death (Polish: Dolina Śmierci)).
Kampe personally identified people to be "liquidated", such as Leon Barciszewski, the former mayor, who was shot together with his 18-year-old son intentionally on the Polish commemoration day, on November 11, 1939. Jan Konopczyński, priest of the parish of the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, detained with Leon Barciszewski, witnessed Werner visiting their cell and formally identifying the former mayor and insulting him on the eve of the execution.
Acting as the organizer of round-ups, arrests and shootings, Werner became the major Nazi officer responsible for the exactions which took place in Bydgoszcz from September 1939 to spring 1941. People having been in direct contact with him remembered the character as a man driven by an exceptional hatred for everything that was Polish. In addition to Leon Barciszewski and his son, Kampe had been involved in the murder of social activists of Bydgoszcz (Kazimierz Bayer, Jan Góralewski, Tadeusz Janicki), together with Marian Guntzel, the director of municipal gardens, and his wife.
The city synagogue, then located at the corner of Wały Jagiellońskie and Jana Kazimierza streets, had been closed after the outbreak of World War II and the entry of the Germans into Bydgoszcz. On September 14, 1939, Werner Kampe, announced in Deutsche Rundschau the tender for the demolition of the temple together with other buildings belonging to the Jewish community. The bid was won by Herbert Matthes, owner of a furniture factory on Garbary Street. Despite this result, four days later, Kampe asked Franz Froese, then municipal construction counselor, to organize the dismantlement of the synagogue by professionals as soon as possible. Eventually, the building demolition was completed by December 1939.
Furthermore, on September 20, 1939, Kampe demanded the liquidation of:
The situation of Kampe in Bydgoszcz was already made difficult by his personal rivalries with local Nazi notables such as Günther Patschowsky (president of the Bydgoszcz Region in 1939-1940), Dr. Kemp (the German prosecutor) or von Proeck (head of the Orpo). The sentences of financial embezzlement pronounced among his network and the suspicions associated with his person were the last straw for him.
Kamiński's post as aide-de-camp to Forster helped him to hone his skills in the NSDAP, doctrinally and practically. In 1936, Forster promoted him to the position of Kreisleiter of the Gdańsk County (Polish: powiat gdański). In the same move, he took the post of municipal manager of the real estate administration. This function proved to be a stepping stone for him as in August 1939, he became a government counselor. In 1937, he changed his name "Werner Kamiński" to "Kampe", hence officially turning his back to his Polish roots.
After the Nazi party took power in Germany in 1933, Werner's career lifted off: he took a strong position in the leadership of Gdańsk's NSDAP. In accordance with his skills, he was appointed to the position of manager for economic and financial affairs while also carrying out specific tasks in the political field. The zeal he displayed in his duties was recognised by Albert Forster, Gauleiter of Danzig-West Prussia: in November 1934, Werner was appointed as his Aide-de-camp. From this moment on, he was at the forefront of the leadership of the Nazi party in Gdańsk. This appointment marked the end of personal feuds which occurred within the Gdańsk NSDAP and concluded with the complete victory of Albert Forster and his suite over the president of the Senate of the Free City of Danzig and the deputy gauleiter Hermann Rauschning, who both had to resign.
In October 1930, Werner, aged 19, joined the NSDAP in Gdańsk where his political activity quickly propelled him as the head of the section. In 1932, he lost his position at Ertmann and Perlewitz and found himself unemployed. Although he started to work in his parents' shop in Nowy Dwór Gdański, he had a lot of free time which he dedicated to immerse fully himself into the political activity of the NSDAP. Hence, Werner served in the office of propaganda, in the office of economic affairs and for a time, he even worked as Aide-de-camp to the Kreisleiter. During this period, he joined the SS, where eventually he reached the rank of Hauptsturmführer.
In 1920, Berta Kamińska re-married Heinrich Freimann, a merchant. Werner stayed at the family's house till November 1927, when he was sent to learn a trade at Ertmann and Perlewitz, a clothing firm in Gdańsk. Here he started a professional career, holding different positions: salesman, branch manager and sales representative.
Werner Adolf Kampe (1911-1974) was a Kreisleiter of the NSDAP, a SS Hauptsturmführer and a Mayor of Bydgoszcz between September 1939 and February 1941. He was a war criminal, responsible for the murder of Poles and Jews in Bydgoszcz in 1939. He additionally ordered the demolitions carried out in the area of Bydgoszcz Old Town during WWII.
Werner Adolf Kampe was born Werner Kamiński on May 11, 1911, in Nowy Dwór Gdański, then called Tiegenhof. He was the eldest son of Adolf Kamiński, a merchant, and Berta née Schwichtenberg. His father was killed in 1918, while fighting on a World War I front. Consequently, his mother, looking for providing sustenance, moved the family from Nowy Dwór Gdański to Berlin then Sopot. Werner attended various schools but was never interested in science: he only managed to receive a basic education.