Fritz Todt

German engineer and senior Nazi figure (1891–1942) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fritz Todt ([fʁɪt͡s tɔt]; 4 September 1891 – 8 February 1942) was a German construction engineer and senior political figure of the Nazi Party. In 1938, he founded Organisation Todt (OT), a military-engineering organisation that supplied German industry with forced labour, and he served as Reich Minister for Armaments and Ammunition in Nazi Germany early in World War II, directing the entire German wartime military economy from that position.

Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
Preceded byPosition established
Quick facts Reich Minister for Armaments and Munitions, Leader ...
Fritz Todt
Todt in 1940
Reich Minister for Armaments and Munitions
In office
17 March 1940  8 February 1942
LeaderAdolf Hitler (Führer)
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
Inspector General for Water and Energy
In office
29 July 1941  8 February 1942
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
General Plenipotentiary for Regulation
of the Construction Industry
In office
9 December 1938  8 February 1942
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
Head of the Organisation Todt
In office
May 1938  8 February 1942
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
Inspector General for German Roadways
In office
5 July 1933  8 February 1942
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlbert Speer
Personal details
Born(1891-09-04)4 September 1891
Died8 February 1942(1942-02-08) (aged 50)
Resting placeInvalids' Cemetery, Berlin
PartyNazi Party
Parent(s)Emil Todt (father)
Elise Unterecker (mother)
EducationTechnical University of Munich
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
ProfessionCivil engineer
Known for
Chief of Organisation Todt
CabinetHitler Cabinet
Civilian awards
German Order
Military service
Allegiance German Empire
Nazi Germany
Branch/serviceLuftstreitkräfte
Luftwaffe
Years of service
1914–1918
1939–1942
RankLeutnant of the reserves
Generalmajor der Luftwaffe (Honorary)
SAObergruppenführer
Battles/warsWorld War I
World War II
Military awardsIron Cross
Close

An engineer by training, Todt served in the Luftstreitkräfte during World War I and was a recipient of the Iron Cross. He joined the Nazi Party in 1922 and the Sturmabteilung (SA) in 1931. Steadily rising through the ranks, Todt became Inspector General for German Roadways after Adolf Hitler came to power. In that capacity, he was responsible for the construction of the German autobahns. Todt also directed large-scale engineering projects such as the construction of the Westwall (Siegfried Line) and the Atlantic Wall. In 1940, he was appointed Reich Minister of Armaments and War Production. During World War II, the OT made extensive use of upwards of 800,000 slave labourers from German-occupied territories. To this end, Todt's eponymously named agency can be linked to the Holocaust as SS personnel collaborating with the OT murdered many of the forced labourers (especially Jews) under the auspices of eliminating security risks or as a component of the Nazi genocidal programme.

Todt was killed along with four other people in February 1942 near Wilhelmsdorf when his aircraft crashed en route from Rastenburg to Berlin-Tempelhof. He was succeeded as Reichsminister and head of the OT by Albert Speer.

Early life and education

Todt was born in Pforzheim[1] in the Grand Duchy of Baden (now in Baden-Württemberg) to Emil Todt (1861–1909) and his wife, Elise, née Unterecker (1868–1935). His father owned a small ring factory.[2]

In 1910, he volunteered for one-year military service. From 1911 to 1914, Todt studied engineering at Technical Hochschule of Munich and Karlsruhe, graduating with a Diplom degree in construction engineering from the latter.[3]

During World War I, he served initially with the infantry and then as a front-line reconnaissance observer within the Luftstreitkräfte, winning the Iron Cross. Todt had been wounded in combat during his role as a flying observer.[4] After the war he resumed his studies and completed them at Karlsruhe in 1920.[3][4]

In 1921, Todt married Elsbeth Müller who bore him four children, three daughters and a son; the latter died in 1944.[2]

Career

In 1921, he initially worked on waterpower stations for the Grün & Bilfinger AG, Mannheim company and the same year for the civil engineering company Sager & Woerner [de] where he worked until 1933.[3] In January 1922, he joined the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP), or Nazi Party.[5] In 1931, he joined the Sturmabteilung (SA), which was then commanded by Ernst Röhm. He rose steadily through its ranks, attaining the rank of SA-Obergruppenführer in September 1938. In 1932, Todt completed his thesis at Technical Hochschule of Munich Fehlerquellen beim Bau von Landstraßendecken aus Teer und Asphalt ("Sources of defects in the construction of tarmac and asphalt road surfaces") and became a Doctor of Engineering (Dr.-Ing.).[3]

Rudolf Hess, Heinrich Himmler, Philipp Bouhler, Reich Minister Todt and Reinhard Heydrich (from left), listening to Konrad Meyer at a Generalplan Ost exhibition, 20 March 1941

On 5 July 1933, five months after Adolf Hitler became Reichskanzler, Todt was appointed Generalinspektor für das deutsche Straßenwesen (Inspector General for German Roadways).[5] In November, Todt's public authority was raised to the status of a "Supreme Reich Authority" (Oberste Reichsbehörde) outside the hierarchy of Reich Ministries; Todt was subordinated directly to Hitler.[6] Alan S. Milward characterized this phase of Todt's emergence in the heirarchy as follows:

"His personal views on business questions and, what was more important, the success of the motorway project kept Todt in the inner circle of the Führer. At the same time, his deliberate pose as a technical expert, as a man without interest in internal power struggles...shielded him from the hostility of the more prominent Party leaders".[7]

He was given the task of organizing a new construction company for the motorways (Reichsautobahnen).[8][a] According to historian Adam Tooze, Todt was selected for his political commitment to the Nazi cause, for being an 'old fighter' of the Nazi Party who was unquestioningly loyal to Hitler, and for his embrace of the Nazi's racial Weltanschauung.[9] Hitler allocated 5 billion Reichsmarks for the autobahn project over a 5 year period and entrusted Todt to oversee it in its entirety.[10] Historian Frank McDonough avows that the extensive road network's "underlying rationale" was to "speed up military transport during a war."[11][b] For his work on the autobahnen, Todt was recognized with the German National Prize for Art and Science by Hitler, next to Ernst Heinkel, Ferdinand Porsche and Willy Messerschmitt.[3][12] Hitler donated the award during 1937, devised as a replacement for the Nobel Prize, which Hitler forbade Germans from accepting starting during 1936.[13]

In December 1936, he became Leiter des Hauptamts für Technik in der Reichsleitung der NSDAP (Director of the Head Office for Engineering in the National Directorate of the NSDAP) and, in December 1938, Generalbevollmächtigter für die Regelung der Bauwirtschaft (General Plenipotentiary for the Regulation of the Construction Industry) in the Four Year Plan.[1] At the beginning of World War II in Europe, he was also appointed to the rank of Generalmajor of the Luftwaffe.[3]

In May 1938, he initiated the Organisation Todt—named such by Hitler himself, who announced this at a Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg[14]—joining government firms, private companies and the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labour Service).[3] The OT eventually used up to 800,000 forced labourers (Zwangsarbeiter) from countries that Germany occupied during World War II.[3] Todt was responsible for the construction of the "West Wall" (commonly named the "Siegfried Line" in English-speaking countries) to defend the Reich territory.[15][16] For the West Wall, Todt assembled some 350,000 workers, drawn foremost from among former autobahn construction workers, to which 100,000 Reich Labor Service workers and 90,000 army engineers were added, and he also used his "well-developed contacts" with German industry magnates from nearly 1,000 individual firms.[17] By the time the Westwall was completed in the summer of 1939,[18] the newly constructed fortifications consisted of 11,283 bunkers and gun emplacements.[19]

Notwithstanding his disagreements with Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring over energy policy, it was Göring himself who appointed Todt Plenipotentiary for the Regulation of Construction on 9 December 1938—a mandate whose execution reveals Todt's sustained investment in modern technology and the technocratic aspirations of the engineering profession.[20] Todt simplified the issues complicating the Nazi state's manufacturing practices, like its "manifold regulations, instrusive price controls," and its "ill-coordinated procurement processes."[21] The program he advanced was simultaneously technical and ideological: mechanization, fixed material quotas, labor reallocation, production rationalization, and the closure of unproductive building sites, each measure underwritten by his insistent demand that entrepreneurs, engineers, and workmen alike reconstitute themselves as "more productive Volk comrades."[20] Resistance from the military and local Party leadership makes the program's relative success the more telling; within little more than a year, Göring elevated Todt to Inspector General for Special Tasks in the Four Year Plan, extending his technocratic remit beyond construction into the broader structural deficiencies of the war economy.[22]

On 1 January 1939, Todt assumed the chairmanship of the Verein Deutscher Ingenieure (VDI), completing the process of professional coordination that the Party had pursued, with considerably less success, since Gottfried Feder's failed attempt to achieve the same objective in 1933.[23] With Germany's most prestigious technical association now fully integrated into the new order, its institutional weight served as an implicit warning to any professional body within Germany that continued to withhold cooperation from the Nazi Party.[23]

During February 1940, Göring named Todt Inspector General for Extraordinary Activities in the Four Year Plan, after which the Reichsmarschall instructed "the agencies of the state, Party, and armed forces, as well as business" to provide their "support" to the "Inspector General in every way."[24]

Todt with Wernher von Braun at Peenemünde, 21 March 1941

On 17 March 1940, Todt was appointed Reichsminister für Bewaffnung und Munition (Minister for Armaments and Munitions otherwise known as the Ministry of Ammunition) which meant he managed the entire military economy.[3] This appointment was in many ways "a calculated snub" to officers in the army procurement office, which General Karl Becker attempted to reverse only to be upstaged by Erich Mueller—a weapons designer from Krupp—who had Hitler's ear and impressed upon him the need to stay with Todt in this role instead of a "soldier."[25] Production of munitions doubled in the first half of 1940, and Hitler subsequently gave sole credit to Todt during a victory speech during the summer.[26]

In October 1940, Todt formed a colonial working group focused on road construction in preparation for what Nazi leaders saw as an imminent return of Germany's African colonies. Todt wanted to use Fascist Italy's empire as a model for the development of a Nazi colonial empire.[27]

Intending to maximize industrial productive output through "rationalization", Hitler met with both Todt and General Georg Thomas in May 1941 at Berchtesgaden, where he "outlined his plans for increasing the efficiency of the war economy."[28][c] In this case, rationalization entailed less technical demand from the military via the production of highly advanced specialized weaponry and instead, focused on a "return to more primitive, robust construction" that would better facilitate mass production; this was later accompanied by a Führer Order on "Simplified and Increased Efficiency in Armaments Production."[30] Subsequent Hitler's directive, by November 1940, Todt had established a system of committees, each responsible for specific armament types;[31] the first ones being for "armoured vehicles, munitions, weapons, machine tools, and general military equipment."[32] German industrialists elected to characterize Todt's ammunition committees as "a fundamental break with all previous practice"—conveniently eliding the procurement efforts of his predecessors—which revealed less a genuine rupture than a calculated embrace of "the ugly cocktail of Nazi leadership doctrine (Führertum) and the self-serving rhetoric of entrepreneurial dynamism (Unternehmertum) that was soon to become the guiding ideology of the German war economy."[33]

After the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Todt was appointed to manage the restoration of the infrastructure there, as well as plans to ramp up armaments production.[34] Hitler's insistence on making the army more mobile with an additional 36 Panzer and 18 additional motorized divisions placed "exceptional demands" on Germany's industrial economy in Todt's estimation.[35] The ideological significance of the enhanced influence with Hitler acquired by Nazi engineers like Todt during the war years was an outgrowth of the technical demands of modern warfare, individual career ambition, and the Führer's admiration for Todt's unbureaucratic methods.[36]

In late July 1941, Todt was named Generalinspekteur für Wasser und Energie (Inspector General for Water and Energy).[37] During that year, he became increasingly distant from the commanders of the Wehrmacht, in particular from Hermann Göring, the Oberbefehlshaber der Luftwaffe (Commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe).[3]

By the summer's end of 1941, Germany confronted a cascading series of structural crises—a major coal shortage with direct consequences for steel and armaments production, a fuel crisis in the autumn, and severe inflationary pressures—to the degree that Tooze characterized the situation as a "bankruptcy" of the Nazi's "entire war-fighting strategy."[38] For Todt, the situation had become untenable: the difficulties encountered by the Wehrmacht, particularly Army Group Center's stalled advance on Moscow, the chronic shortages of arms, and the prospect of American belligerence combined to produce a settled despair about Germany's prospects for victory.[39] Between November 29, 1941, and what appears to have been a stormy final confrontation on February 7, 1942, Todt presented Hitler on four separate occasions with statistical and factual arguments for ending the war.[39] Walter Rohland, head of the Main Committee for tank production and Todt's emissary to the front, recorded in his memoirs that at the first of these meetings Todt told Hitler plainly: "This war can no longer be won by military means" and stressed that a political solution was necessary.[39][d] Hitler rejected Todt's assessment in heated discussions the night before Todt's ill-fated plane crash and elected to continue the offensive against the Soviets.[41]

Death

On 8 February 1942, sometime after take off from the Wolfsschanze ("Wolf's Lair") airfield near Rastenburg, in East Prussia, Todt's Heinkel He 111 aircraft crashed near the village of Wilhelmsdorf and he was killed.[3][e] He was buried in the Invalids' Cemetery in the Scharnhorst-Strasse in Berlin. Posthumously, he became the first recipient of the newly created Deutscher Orden ("German Order").[3][43]

During Todt's funeral oration, Hitler pronounced him as "the most powerful builder of all time," recalled the Reich Minister's early commitment to the NSDAP, his Party career, and praised his oversight of both the Autobahnen and Westwall's construction.[44] Nazi theorist and ideologue Alfred Rosenberg offered a characteristically ideological gloss, casting Todt as a creative engineer possessed of deep feeling for the profound laws of nature and animated by a love of art.[44] Hitler's funeral observations aside, it has been suggested that Todt had been the victim of an assassination orchestrated by the Führer, but that has never been confirmed,[45] and the available evidence does not support this claim.[46] A possible motive for killing Todt was that he had flown to the Wolf's Lair to recommend that Hitler sue for peace with the Soviet Union. Todt's production figures suggested that the German economy was not able to support the defeat of Russia.[47]

Adolf Hitler presenting Albert Speer with the Fritz-Todt-Ring, 13 May 1943.

Todt's successor as Reichsminister was Albert Speer,[48] whom Hitler awarded the "Dr Todt Ring" on 13 May 1943.[49] To reduce the bureaucratization, political infighting, and jurisdictional arguments that had plagued the war effort previously, Hitler gave his new Minister of Armaments wide executive powers and reduced the role of the military and Göring when it came to production; this allowed Speer to cite the Führer's direct support and helped eliminate technical and economic disputes under those auspices.[50] Not long after Todt's death and Speer's ascendancy, the so-called "production miracle" of 1942–1944 ensued, begun by the former Minister of Armaments (Todt) but advanced by Speer's more sweeping authority and sway with Hitler.[51]

Post-accident investigation

Speer was supposed to be on the same plane as Todt departing Rastenburg for Berlin on 8 February but had elected to sleep in that day.[52] In his autobiography, Speer mentioned a Reich Air Ministry inquiry into the airplane accident, which he said ended with the sentence: "The possibility of sabotage is ruled out. Further measures are therefore neither requisite nor intended".[53] Even Todt's own son Fritz (named for his father)—who became a pilot himself—claimed to have personally investigated the matter and concluded "there was no explosive device on the plane."[54]

Holocaust complicity

On 17 October 1941, Hitler expounded before Todt and Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel his programme for the conquered East—Slavic populations to be treated like "Red Indians," urban populations starved, "destructive Jewish elements" exterminated immediately—leaving no participant uninformed of the murderous campaign to which the Einsatzgruppen massacres and the Hunger Plan had already given concrete, ongoing expression.[55]

Though the Organisation Todt is conventionally characterized as a construction body rather than a criminal one, the evidence suggests a more incriminating picture.[f] An illustrative example includes the deportation of Jewish men and their relatives from Antwerp to OT labor camps in northern France in the summer of 1942, rendering the OT camps "one of the most threatening steps in the racial persecution of the Jewish population in Belgium."[59] Another telling example stems from late January 1945, when approximately 7,000 Jewish women were mercilessly force-marched from Stutthof satellite camps near Danzig to the Baltic coastal locality of Palmnicken—a column directed by 25 guards from the SS and more than 120 members of Organisation Todt.[60] Only 3,000 reached Palmnicken; the remainder perished en route, among them over 2,000 shot after they collapsed from exhaustion.[61] Only 15 persons amid the original 7,000 force-marched to Palmnicken survived.[62]

In many ways, Organisation Todt personnel moved fluidly between technical and lethal roles, as its architects became task-group leaders overseeing slave labour, its surveyors coordinated with SS execution squads, and its medical staff conducted work fitness selections for Auschwitz.[63] At the end of 1944, there were 130,000 concentration camp inmates working for the OT among those considered "fit" for work.[64] Correspondingly, the same institutional flexibility that allowed the Ordnungspolizei to transition from routine policing to mass murder operated within the OT as well—personnel were simply reassigned to whatever the regime required. Members of formally designated criminal organisations, including the SS, served within OT ranks without friction, and the organisation's indifference to the motivations of its personnel extended equally to its ambivalence to their methods, provided the work in service to the Reich was completed.[63] Commenting on Todt specifically, historian Charles Dick avows that "he viewed Jews, Slavs and other prisoners as expendable to achieve his goals."[65] To this end, the Organisation Todt and its founder (including Todt's successor, Albert Speer) bear substantial responsibility for both the Holocaust and the catastrophic mortality of the Nazi slave-labor program—a culpability that warrants their unambiguous recognition among the principal instruments of the regime's criminal enterprise.[65]

Major awards

See also

References

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