Karl Eberhard Schöngarth

Officer

Birthday April 22, 1903

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Leipzig, German Empire

DEATH DATE 1946-5-16, Hamelin Prison, Hamelin, Allied-occupied Germany (43 years old)

Nationality Poland

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1903

Karl Eberhard Schöngarth (22 April 1903 – 16 May 1946) was a German SS officer during the Nazi era.

Karl Georg Schöngarth was born on 22 April 1903 in Leipzig, Germany.

His father was a master brewer.

Schöngarth began high school at the age of 11, but soon dropped out in order to work at a garden center to support the war effort.

1918

On 7 March 1918 Schöngarth was awarded a “Young Men's Iron Medal”.

After the war, he was to go back to high school to complete his education, but instead joined a Freikorps paramilitary group in Thuringia.

1923

This eventually led to Schöngarth joining a local Nazi group in Erfurt on November 1923, as he felt the organization agreed with his ethno-nationalistic tendencies.

Schöngarth fled to Coburg to try to escape from his crime of treason, but eventually came back to Erfurt and was given amnesty.

1924

In 1924 Schöngarth finished his high school education and got a job at the Deutsche bank while also joining the Army Infantry Regiment 1/15 in Gießen.

Karl Eberhard Schöngarth later joined the SA (Sturmabteilung) as member number 43,870 while claiming expulsion from the army.

By 1924, Schöngarth's involvement with the Nazi Party had decreased, and he enrolled at the University of Leipzig, majoring in economics and law.

1928

He completed his first bar exam in 1928 and landed a job in the Naumburg Superior Courts.

1929

He then went on to acquire his doctorate in law from the Institute for Labor and Law, on 28 June 1929 at the age of 26, and was awarded a Cum Laude.

His thesis was on the subject of "the refusal of notices of termination of employment contracts".

1933

He then decided to take his second bar exam in December 1933 and became a court official for Magdeburg, Erfurt and Torgau.

Eberhard married Dorothea Gross, with whom he had two sons.

After becoming a court official, Schöngarth began involving himself more heavily in the Nazi Party.

On 1 February 1933 he joined the SS (member number 67,174 and Nazi Party member number 2,848,857).

Because party membership was now crucial for getting a government job in Germany, his involvement allowed him to become a postmaster in Erfurt.

In 1933 he became a member of the SD, the SS's own intelligence service.

1935

He eventually left his postmaster position on 1 November 1935 and joined the Gestapo.

During his time working with the Gestapo, he worked in the main press office, the political-church council, and the Arnsberg district office in Dortmund.

He also served as police chief in Münster and was named a government counselor.

It is unknown why he found employment at the political church.

A letter from Reinhard Heydrich to the Reich Ministry of the Interior recommended Schöngarth become a part of the Secret State Police due to his broad and insightful law background.

He was placed with the Gestapo, and later with the SS.

1939

He rose in ranks in the SS, becoming a first lieutenant, captain, major and lieutenant colonel in 1939, and from colonel to brigadier general in 1940.

During the German attack on Poland he was promoted to SS Obersturmbannführer.

He later served as a Senior Inspector for the Reich Security Main Office in Dresden.

1941

In January 1941 he was sent to Kraków, occupied Poland, as senior commander of the SiPo and SD (BdS).

During the time Schöngarth was stationed in Kraków, he led a temporary Einsatzgruppe unit, Einsatzgruppe z.b.V..

In June 1941, Schöngarth, on the orders of the RSHA, deployed Wolfgang Birkner to the Bialystok District to suppress resistance.

Schöngarth was responsible for the murders of approximately 10,000 Polish Jews between July and September 1941 and the massacre of Lwów professors and their families behind the frontlines of Operation Barbarossa in the Soviet Union.

1942

He was a war criminal who perpetrated mass murder and genocide in German-occupied Poland during the Holocaust; he participated in the January 1942 Wannsee Conference, at which the genocidal Final Solution to the Jewish Question was originally planned.

Schöngarth attended the Wannsee Conference on 20 January 1942, along with Dr. Rudolf Lange (Einsatzgruppe A), who had also participated in the Holocaust.

1944

After the war, Schöngarth and six others were tried for murdering a downed American pilot, Americo S. Galle, in 1944.

They were all found guilty.

From early July 1944 until the end of war he was the head of the BdS in the Netherlands.

1945

After the ambushing of SS General Hanns Albin Rauter on 6 March 1945, Schongarth ordered mass executions in reprisal.

1946

Five of them, including Schöngarth, were sentenced to death and executed in 1946.