In October 1941, the first rail transport of
German Jews arrived unexpectedly in Latvia, before the Salaspils camp was constructed. The train had been rerouted to Riga from its original destination of
Minsk. The Jewish people on the train were housed temporarily in
Jungfernhof concentration camp and in a Nazi-delineated part of Riga, which later became known as the
Riga Ghetto. The Nazis had planned to deport the last remaining Jews from Germany by the end of the summer of 1942. To support this, the plans for the Salaspils camp were revised in an effort to allow the camp to accommodate 15,000 Jews deported from Germany. The camp was to play three roles: a general police prison, a concentration camp, and a
forced labor camp. Salaspils was constructed quickly by
Soviet prisoners of war from a nearby
Wehrmacht camp, deported
Czech Jews, as well as a few German Jews from Jungfernhof. In the middle of January 1942, at least 1,000 Jews from the Riga Ghetto were forced to work building the camp. By the autumn of 1942, out of the 45 barracks housing 15,000 prisoners that were planned, the Salaspils camp comprised only 15
barracks housing 1,800 prisoners. In October 1942, SS chief
Heinrich Himmler ordered that
Latvian,
Estonian and
Lithuanian police battalion soldiers convicted by SS and police courts should serve their sentences at the camp. By the end of 1942, Salaspils held mainly
political prisoners, including those who had originally been incarcerated at the Riga central prison without
due process under "
protective custody orders", interned foreigners such as Latvian returnees from
Soviet Russia whom the Nazis considered politically suspect, and Latvian collaborators who had committed routine crimes without permission. There were only 12 Jews in the camp left, as many had died or been returned to Riga in a weak condition. Himmler briefly considered converting the camp into an official concentration camp (
Konzentrationslager), which would have formally subordinated the camp to the
National Security Main Office, but nothing came of this. By March 1943, around 1,100 children were imprisoned at Salaspils, most of whom were from the families of anti-Nazi
partisans and their supporters. The children's camp was liquidated in May, with the surviving children being dispersed to
orphanages or farms in the surrounding area. By 1944, Salapils was mainly populated by members of the
Latvian resistance, various
conscientious objectors and
draft evaders, and
deserters from the
Latvian Legion. ==Activity==