Inmates and staff The detainees at the camp included primarily women of
Jewish background deported from
Hungary and
Poland. The number of inmates averaged at 300, or 400, while towards the end of the War the total swelled to nearly 1,000. The function of camp
commandant or
Lagerkommandant (a position sometimes denominated
Zwischengeschalteter SS-Offizier or "SS
liaison officer") was performed by
SS-Hauptsturmführer Paul Radschun. The
Ober­auf­seherin or "senior overseer" (the highest female official) was
Erna Rinke. The staff included 1015
female guards. Among the most notorious of them are mentioned the names of the
Auf­seherinnen Philomena Locker (sentenced after the War to seven years' imprisonment), Charlotte Neugebauer, and (first name unknown) Schneider.
Location The camp was situated in the locality called Mittelsteine (renamed
Ścinawka Średnia in 1947) in what was then the territory of the
Third Reich, about to the north-west of
Kłodzko (), the nearest larger town, or to the south-west of the regional
metropolis,
Wrocław () in the territory of
Lower Silesia. Despite its picturesque geographical location in the so-called
Ścinawka Depression (
Obniżenie Ścinawki) between the
Table Mountains and the
Stone Mountains and its history reaching back to the 14th century, Mittelsteine/Ścinawka Średnia was before the Second World War a highly industrialized village. The hamlet was, for example, the site of a major
power plant that supplied electricity to the
electrified Silesian grid (the
Elektrischer Bahnbetrieb in Schlesien) of the German railway system (see picture below) considered one of the most valuable assets of the Reich. It was a major railway junction already in the 19th century. Mittelsteine was thus a natural choice for the location of various industries. Today, the
border crossing between the Czech Republic and Poland at
OtoviceTłumaczów is just away; while the nearest town in Germany,
Zittau, is away.
The camp The camp consisted of three barracks located by the north-western side of the exit road leading out of the village towards
Ratno Dolne (
Ger., Niederrathen) the present-day
Voivodeship Route (or
DW) locally called the
ulica Piłsudskiego about 600 metres from the bridge on the
River Steine (present-day
Ścinawka) in the direction away from the village centre on the right-hand side. The prisoners were marched under armed guard back and forth along village streets between their places of forced labour and the camp. The
forced labour involved primarily work for the armaments and munitions manufacturer Totex, a subsidiary of
Metall­waren­fabrik Spree­werk GmbH, itself owned by the
Deutsche Industrie­-Werke AG (
DIWAG), and for other DIWAG munitions concerns located at Mittelsteine, and at the aviation-parts factory
Fa. Albert Patin, Werk­stätten für Fern­steuerungs­technik (whose location within the village is today uncertain). The inmates' slave labour was specifically related to the manufacture of component parts of the
V-1 and
V-2 rockets components which were being secretly produced in the factory installed in the converted
cotton mill (
die Baumwollspinnerei) of Schiminsky & Co. (The factory is said to have been connected by a tunnel with the
Kłodzko Fortress where a similar factory manned by slave labour was in operation.) Prisoners unable to work because of serious illness were removed from the camp to be executed off premises, as were those in advanced stages of pregnancy. while the Polish nationals were sent to the newly created camp at
Grafenort in Germany (now
Gorzanów in Poland) at a distance of 27 kilometres from Mittelsteine. As
Bella Gutterman, the director of the
International Institute for Holocaust Research, comments on these ultimate developments, by 1945 the decisions of the Nazis with regard to the Mittelsteine camp "followed no evident logic". However, the inexplicable dénouement may be linked to the fact that, with the advances of the
Allied forces on the
Eastern Front, the Nazis rapidly halted the secret production of the V-1 and V-2 rocket components at Mittelsteine, dismantled the specialized machinery used for the purpose and shipped it out of the region. ==Post-war developments and testimonials==