On 1 April 1945, Kammler ordered the evacuation of 500 missile technicians to the Nazis'
Alpine Fortress. Since the last V-2 on the western front had been launched in late March, on 5 April Kammler was charged by the
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht to command the defence of the Nordhausen area, where Mittelwerk was located. However, rather than defend the missile construction works, he immediately ordered the destruction of all the "special V-1 equipment" at the
Syke storage site. In the final weeks of the war in Europe, Kammler's movements became sketchy and contradictory. Further evidence of Kammler's activities consists of a telegram sent from Kammler to Speer, Himmler and Göring on 16 April, informing them of the creation of a "message centre" at Munich and the appointment of an operations chief for the construction of the
Messerschmitt Me 262. On 20 April, he reportedly arrived with a group of technicians at Himmler’s
Kommandostelle near Salzburg. On 22 April he caught up with
Wernher von Braun and
Walter Dornberger, both of whom were reported to have made contact with the Allies, in
Oberammergau, Bavaria. He failed to agree on a joint course of action with them. A wartime diary, relating to the surrender of the mountain resort town
Garmisch-Partenkirchen to Allied troops, reports the arrival of Kammler and some 600 staff in a motorised column carrying "high-quality research material" in Oberammergau on 22 April 1945. According to this source, he came into conflict with the local commander,
lieutenant Burger, over failing to seek permission to establish his quarters in the area. In Oberammergau, Kammler initially stayed in the hotel of Alois Lang, which he had commandeered for indefinite use on 9 February 1945, and then moved quarters to the
Linderhof Palace in nearby
Ettal. On 23 April, Kammler sent a radio message to his office manager at Berlin, ordering him to organise the immediate destruction of the "V-1 equipment near Berlin" and then to go to Munich. On 27 April, American tanks were reported in
Schongau, 35 km to the northwest of Oberammergau. On the morning of 28 April, anticipating their entry into Oberammergau that day, Kammler left the town with his staff. His next stop, in late April/early May, was at the
Villa Mendelssohn, the headquarters of SS Special Inspection IV, in
Ebensee, some 270 km to the east of Oberammergau. Ebensee was the site of a
concentration camp and arms factory overseen by him and part of the half-mythical
Alpine Fortress complex. On the early morning of 4 May, he ordered the immediate transfer of the Ebensee office to Prague, apparently denounced by his subordinates as a suicide mission. He drove in the direction of
Linz (100 km from Ebensee), captured by the American troops on 5 May, and became separated from others in his convoy, including
Karl Saur. On 6 May, he was alleged by
Gottlob Berger, head of the
SS Main Office, to have met with him in
Kirchdorf in Tirol, almost 200 km west of Ebensee. On 7 May, British intelligence intercepted a message signed by Kammler asking the SS unit at the
Leitmeritz concentration camp, a suspected
V-3 production site, to report the arrival of his staff there. It is unclear whether he might have sent it after his capture. Kammler then went missing. On 2 November 1945, however, Brigadier General George Clement McDonald (1892–1969), the director of intelligence of the US Air Forces in Europe, acting under the authority of the Air Force Intelligence Service chief in Washington, DC, commissioned the interrogation of Kammler to chief investigator Ernst Englander, indicating particular interest in German underground installations. This is understood as evidence that Kammler was by then still alive and in US custody.
Testimonies by other Nazis In a sworn statement on 16 October 1959, Kammler's driver, Kurt Preuk, stated that Kammler's date of death was "about 10 May 1945", but that he did not know the cause of death. On 7 September 1965, Heinz Zeuner (a wartime aide of Kammler's), stated that Kammler had died on 7 May 1945 and that his corpse had been observed by Zeuner, Preuk and others. All the eyewitnesses consulted were certain that the cause of death was
cyanide poisoning. In their accounts of Kammler's movements, Preuk and Zeuner claimed that he left
Linderhof near
Oberammergau on 28 April 1945 for a tank conference at
Salzburg and then went to
Ebensee (where tank tracks were manufactured). According to Preuk and Zeuner, he then traveled back from Ebensee to visit his wife in the
Tyrol region, when he gave her two
cyanide capsules. The next day, 5 May, at around 4 am, he is said to have departed Tyrol for
Prague. Both Preuk's and Zeuner's accounts are judged to be "fictitious narratives that ... only served the purpose of obscuring the actual events and supporting the pension claims of Jutta Kammler for which her husband had to be officially declared deceased". In a 1969 book,
Wernher von Braun: Mein Leben für die Raumfahrt, journalist Bernd Ruland claimed Kammler arrived in Prague by aircraft on 4 May 1945, following which, he and 21 SS men defended a bunker against an attack by more than 500
Czech resistance fighters on 9 May. During the attack, one of Kammler's aides-de-camp shot Kammler to prevent his capture. This version can reportedly be traced to Walter Dornberger, who claimed to have heard it from eyewitnesses.
Official verdict On 9 July 1945, Kammler's wife petitioned to have him declared dead as of 9 May 1945. She provided a statement by Kammler's driver, Kurt Preuk, according to which Preuk had personally seen "the corpse of Kammler and been present at his burial" on 9 May 1945. The District Court of
Berlin-Charlottenburg ruled on 7 September 1948 that his death was officially established as 9 May 1945. Both Preuk and Zeuner maintained their version of events when interviewed in the 1990s. Some support for this version of events came from letters written by Ingeborg Alix Prinzessin zu Schaumburg-Lippe, a female member of the
SS-Helferinnenkorps, to Kammler’s wife in 1951 and 1955. In these, she affirmed that Kammler had said goodbye to her on 7 May 1945 in Prague, stating that the Americans were after him, had made him offers but that he had refused and that they would not "get him alive". == Post-war searches ==