Battle of Stuttgart

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1956 photo of the New Palace, destroyed during the war

Battle of Stuttgart was air campaign done with strategic bombing during World War II. The bombing did major damage to the City of Stuttgart and killed many of the city's citizens. The damage was so total that US Troops did not enter the city till July 1945, after the war had ended. Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally to the Allied forces on 8 May 1945, known as VE Day. US Troops and Free French forces battled Nazi Troops on the outer parts of the city, in Augsburg, on April 28, 1945.[1]

Stuttgart was key Nazi industrial hub, as such, the city was heavily targeted by Allied bombing. Some of the major industrial plants targeted were: Bosch, Daimler-Benz, and SKF.[2][3] The bombing severely damaged these and other factories. Stuttgart produced: military parts, tanks, and engines. [4][5]

Forced labor

Due to German labor shortages, many of the industrial plants had moved to forced labor, often referred to as Ostarbeiter. Most were from Eastern European nations and were held in very poor conditions. Even the Technical University of Stuttgart (now the University of Stuttgart) used forced labor.[6] The outlining parts of the city, like Hagesüd company in Stuttgart-Feuerbach, also used forced labor. By May 1945, the forced labor concentration camps had been liberated.[7][8]

Post war

See also

References

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