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Q: Information about a German synthetic oil-producing company active in 1944 ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   1 Comment )
Question  
Subject: Information about a German synthetic oil-producing company active in 1944
Category: Miscellaneous
Asked by: butch13-ga
List Price: $50.00
Posted: 28 Jun 2003 19:54 PDT
Expires: 28 Jul 2003 19:54 PDT
Question ID: 223020
I need the name of (and anything currently available about) a
synthetic oil-producing company that produced fuel (possibly benzene)
for the German army during World War II.  This industrial site
possibly extended over several miles and was located in what was to
become East Germany, west of Dresden, near Naumburg.  The person who
used this term to me in speech spoke with a heavy German accent--- it
was something like "Leuna and Crumpa Oil Company" or "Leuna-Europa Oil
Company."  This complex was bombed repeatedly during the spring of
1944 by Allied forces, presumably British.  At least 1 British spy was
captured in this area later that year for transmitting bomb damage
reports to the Allied High Command. His name would be helpful but is
not crucial. I am writing a biography of a man who attended the
Friedrich Schiller University in Jena at that time.  Can you help me?
Answer  
Subject: Re: Information about a German synthetic oil-producing company active in 1944
Answered By: leli-ga on 29 Jun 2003 07:00 PDT
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
Hello - and thanks for an interesting question!

Leuna was, and is, a large chemical-industrial site near Merseburg. It
is called "Leuna Werke", i.e. Leuna Works, in German and I think this
must be what you heard. In 1927 IG Farben started production of
synthetic gasoline there, using a process involving the hydrogenation
of brown coal. Then the "Leuna Werke" became a key target for bombers
in the later stages of World War Two and were attacked twenty times by
the US 8th. Air Force and twice by the RAF.

The links under the following excerpts will lead to more detail, but
if there is any particular aspect about which you would like more
information, please let me know and I'll do my best to follow up.


=========
THE PLANT
=========


British report in 1945:

"The Leuna Factory of the I.G.Farbenindustrie A.G. situated near
Merseberg [sic], is the biggest heavy chemical plant in Germany and
produces a very wide range of products, mainly based on hydrogen or
hydrogen and carbon monoxide.  Its principal products are ammonia,
synthetic petrol derived from the hydrogenation of brown coal, and
synthetic alcohols made from hydrogen and carbon monoxide."
http://www.fischer-tropsch.org/primary_documents/gvt_reports/CIOSC/igfarben/farb-intro.htm


"I.G. Farben bought the Bergius patent rights and in 1927 built at
Leuna the first commercial hydrogenation plant to produce synthetic
gasoline. This was a logical development because the Leuna nitrogen
plant could produce more hydrogen than was needed to manufacture
ammonia. The high-pressure apparatus and the experience needed to
employ the Bergius process were also available at Leuna."
http://members.tripod.com/~Sturmvogel/ussbsint.html


"By the Second World War, the technological stronghold has developed
into the largest German chemical company of that time."
http://www.leuna.com/englisch/chemstan/i_stoff.htm



===========
THE BOMBING
===========


"The synthetic oil plants were brought back into partial production
and in remarkably short time. But unlike the ball-bearing plants, as
soon as they were brought back they were attacked again. The story of
Leuna is illustrative. Leuna was the largest of the synthetic plants
and protected by a highly effective smoke screen and the heaviest flak
concentration in Europe. Air crews viewed a mission to Leuna as the
most dangerous and difficult assignment of the air war. Leuna was hit
on May 12 and put out of production. However, investigation of plant
records and interrogation of Leuna's officials established that a
force of several thousand men had it in partial operation in about 10
days. It was again hit on May 28 but resumed partial production on
June 3 and reached 75 percent of capacity in early July. It was hit
again on July 7 and again shut down but production started 2 days
later and reached 53 percent of capacity on July 19. An attack on July
20 shut the plant down again but only for three days; by July 27
production was back to 35 percent of capacity. Attacks on July 28 and
29 closed the plant and further attacks on August 24, September 11,
September 13, September 28 and October 7 kept it closed down. However,
Leuna got started again on October 14 and although production was
interrupted by a small raid on November 2, it reached 28 percent of
capacity by November 20. Although there were 6 more heavy attacks in
November and December (largely ineffective because of adverse
weather), production was brought up to 15 percent of capacity in
January and was maintained at that level until nearly the end of the
war. From the first attack to the end, production at Leuna averaged 9
percent of capacity. There were 22 attacks on Leuna, 20 by the Eighth
Air Force and 2 by the RAF. Due to the urgency of keeping this plant
out of production, many of these missions mere dispatched in difficult
bombing weather. Consequently, the order of bombing accuracy on Leuna
was not high as compared with other targets. To win the battle with
Leuna a total of 6,552 bomber sorties were flown against the plant,
18,328 tons of bombs were dropped and an entire year was required."

THE UNITED STATES STRATEGIC BOMBING SURVEY
Summary Report
(European War)
September 30, 1945
http://www.anesi.com/ussbs02.htm


"Christian Schneider, manager of Leuna Works, one of Germany's largest
synthetic gasoline and oil plants: "Up until a week ago (middle of
April 1945), the Leuna plant was still operating, turning out a
pitifully thin trickle of fuel. The output was so small compared with
its capacity potential that production officials had difficulty
plotting it on a chart. The 8th Air Force twice knocked out the plant
so that the production was nil for a period of 15 days, and once the
RAF did the same. Once after the attacks started, the plant got back
to 70 percent capacity production for a period of 10 days. Another
attack, and the plant got hack to 50 percent. But from then on it
never got more than a mere drop in comparison to its capacity."
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/ww2/nazis/nazidbrf.htm


More detail on the amount and effect of bombing here:
http://members.tripod.com/~Sturmvogel/ussbssyn.html
http://members.tripod.com/~Sturmvogel/ussbsgensum.html


===============
PICTURES & MAPS
===============



RAF picture of Leuna, probably from early 1945
http://www.raf.mod.uk/bombercommand/diary/images/ahbi601.jpg

Source page for photograph
http://www.raf.mod.uk/bombercommand/diary/jan45.html

Picture-diagrams of Leuna Benzin production process
http://www.fh-merseburg.de/~nosske/EpocheII/Hist/e2i_leu4.jpg
http://www.fh-merseburg.de/~nosske/EpocheII/Hist/e2i_leu2.jpg

Leuna relative to Leipzig, map
http://www.leuna.com/deutsch/weg/weg.htm

Naumburg relative to Leipzig, map
http://www.geruestbauschmidt.de/anfahrtseite.htm



==========
BACKGROUND
==========


This may be more than you actually want to know about the production
process and history of the Leuna Works. But as it came up in the
course of my research and it might be useful to you, here are a few
more links.

History and timeline
http://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/sachsen-anhalt/615279.html
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mdr.de%2Fnachrichten%2Fsachsen-anhalt%2F615279.html&langpair=de%7Cen&hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8

Background on Leuna
http://www.mdr.de/geschichte/themen/wirtschaft/3969.html
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mdr.de%2Fgeschichte%2Fthemen%2Fwirtschaft%2F3969.html&langpair=de%7Cen&hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8

Extensive technical information, assembled in 1945
http://www.fischer-tropsch.org/primary_documents/gvt_reports/CIOSC/igfarben/farb-toc.htm

Background on IG Farben
http://reformed-theology.org/html/books/wall_street/chapter_02.htm



I'm relieved you said the spy was not crucial to your question, as I
have tried and tried but can find no trace of him online. I would be
happy to continue my search if you have any further clues about where
he was captured, how or when. Searches on the net for him in Leuna,
Mersenburg, Leipzig, Naumburg and Jena have produced nothing. It did
occur to me that if this story came from anecdotal information, it
could be related to one of the pilots shot down and captured in the
area, but perhaps that doesn't fit at all with what you know.

I hope this is useful, but please don't hesitate to request
clarification if you think I could help further on any point.

Good luck with the biography!

Regards - Leli


searches using these terms:
Leuna Benzin benzene
synthetic oil gasoline petrol
bombers bombing air force
plant works werke
spy agent intelligence spion
"bomb damage" report reports
other place names
1944 1945 etc.
leuna werke
://www.google.co.uk/search?q=%22leuna+werke%22&btnG=Google+Search&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8

Clarification of Answer by leli-ga on 29 Jun 2003 11:47 PDT
Hello again

I'm glad to be able to offer you some further information, though I
wish I hadn't missed it earlier. And it shows you heard Krumpa quite
rightly, so my apologies for suggesting otherwise.

My colleague Scriptor has kindly pointed out that there was a
synthetic fuel plant at Krumpa-Lützkendorf as well as at Leuna.
(Thanks, Scriptor.) Krumpa is about seven miles from Leuna.

The Krumpa works, smaller than those at Leuna, were built by
Wintershall AG in 1936.
http://www.chemiedreieck.de/geschichte.html
The same page put through an automatic translator
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.chemiedreieck.de%2Fgeschichte.html&langpair=de%7Cen&hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8


There's a little more information here:
http://www.gut-merseburg.de/Ref_Grundwasser_Mineraloelwerk.htm
And a translated version of the page here:
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.gut-merseburg.de%2FRef_Grundwasser_Mineraloelwerk.htm&langpair=de%7Cen&hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8

The Krumpa plant was included in some of the same bombing raids as
Leuna:

"12th May 1944 - 800 bombers of the US 8th Air Force carry out attacks
against the synthetic fuel plants at Leuna-Merseburg, Lützkendorf ..."
http://www.feldgrau.com/may.html
see also:
http://www.luftboard.ndo.co.uk/reichwestsudmayjul.pdf


There is a nice clear map here showing Krumpa and Leuna but you will
need Acrobat Reader to view it:
http://www.ere.de/pdf_files/eremwv.pdf

(You can download Adobe Acrobat Reader free here:
http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html   ) 
 

This page gives some information about Krumpa in English but it is
only in the context of making gas (not gasoline).
http://www.fischer-tropsch.org/primary_documents/gvt_reports/BIOS/bios_1142.htm

Some information on bombing raids:
http://457thbombgroup.org/New/Recollections/Lutzkendorf/lutzken.html
http://www.92ndma.org/missions.htm
http://www.newsturmer.com/Historical%20News%20Letter/Allies%20Bomb-attacks.htm

I hope this will help - and once more, I'm sorry not to have included
it in the original answer. Please feel free to get back to me via a
request for clarification if you have any queries, or any problems
with links. I'd be pleased to assist you further.

Regards - Leli

Request for Answer Clarification by butch13-ga on 29 Jun 2003 13:58 PDT
Leli,

Good going!  This will be extremely useful for me!  I'm going to go
through my material over the next few days to see if I have more
information about the spy.  You just may be able to come up with a
name.  Spies were crucial for determining when fuel production was
back in full swing, indicating when an additional bomb run was
necessary.  Thank you very much for what you have dome.

Butch13

Clarification of Answer by leli-ga on 29 Jun 2003 14:16 PDT
Thanks for your message, Butch13. 

I'm glad you think the answer will be useful to you - and I'll look
forward to hearing from you again when you've had a chance to check
for further clues about the spy.

Leli

Request for Answer Clarification by butch13-ga on 30 Jun 2003 09:03 PDT
Leli,
My source, the subject of my biography, tells me that the Leuna spy
was an English student (Oxford, he thinks) who parachuted into the
area with a radio transmitter and got a job in the Leura Werke, where
he may have been employed for months. He lived with a local family. 
He was captured in the summer of 1944, probably after the July
bombings, and executed.  My source tells me that he read a newspaper
account of this perhaps 20 years later.  I realize that this is not
much to go on, but why not give it a shot.  If you make it, you'll
come up platinum!  (You're already gold, in my book.)  Your work is
fascinating to me.  Is there a book I can read to learn to be a better
researcher?  Thanks for your help.
Butch13

Clarification of Answer by leli-ga on 30 Jun 2003 15:13 PDT
Hi Butch13

Thanks for the extra details. 
Sounds as if you have some compelling material for your book. 

No luck with preliminary searches for the young Englishman - but I'll
keep thinking about possible approaches - and may send out one or two
email inquiries.

As for internet research - I'm sure your writer's verbal skills must
be a huge asset here.
So often searching hinges on being able to imagine which words might
appear on the page you're hoping to find - and being able to think of
synonyms.

You'll find lots more suggestions, including books, for building up
search techniques in this answer (plus comments):
http://answers.google.com/answers/main?cmd=threadview&id=211065

I'll get back to you within the next two days to let you know if I've
managed to get anywhere with naming your spy.

Leli

Clarification of Answer by leli-ga on 02 Jul 2003 11:37 PDT
Hi Butch13

No good news, I'm afraid, and no trace of the spy your subject
remembers reading about.

Exploring the topic in general has turned up very little about British
agents actually in Germany, although there are many tales of
undercover operations in France or Belgium. It sounds like the sort of
mission that would have been undertaken by the Special Operations
Executive/ SOE, or possibly the SIS, as they were responsible for
intelligence gathering. If you're interested, there is background
information available about how the SOE trained agents. (links below)

Three emails I've sent to possible sources of help have not yet been
answered and so I'm becoming less and less hopeful of finding a way to
track this down, even if we could get a more specific fix on the
newspaper story (which newspaper, which year?).

I can only offer you book titles and three suggestions for
people/places you might ask.

One is Professor MRD Foot whose name keeps cropping up in this
context. He wrote "Special Operations Executive 1940-46" published by
the BBC in 1984. This is an agency contact for him:
http://www.pfd.co.uk/scripts/get.py/books/?authors%20Professor%20M%20R%20D%20Foot
(I didn't email him because I thought it would be slow going through
an agency.)

Another is a historian, Mark Seaman, who's connected with the Imperial
War Museum in London.
"Mark Seaman is an intelligence historian and has written extensively
on the Special Operations Executive."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/wwtwo/foxley_report_06.shtml
Although I did email the museum, I just sent it as a general
information request. It's possible that something marked for the
attention of Mr. Seaman might get through to him personally.
Email address at the bottom of this page:
http://www.iwm.org.uk/lambeth/index.htm

The Tangmere Museum at a World War Two air base has "a permanent
exhibition that tells the base's history of involvement with wartime
SOE and SIS missions."
http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/trlout_gfx_en/TRA14055.html
http://www.tangmere-museum.org.uk/history.htm

Their email is at the bottom of this page:
http://www.tangmere-museum.org.uk/

Then there are the books suggested here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/wwtwo/soe_training_06.shtml

The booklist comes at the end of a few pages of information which
start here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/wwtwo/soe_training_01.shtml

A book which I've looked at which doesn't help (except with general
background) is "Within Two Cloaks" by Philip Johns   Kimber (1979)

I really wish I could have helped with this. The information must be
out there somewhere, though I'm pretty sure it's not online. Of course
I'll let you know at once if I do hear anything from an email
correspondent.

In the meantime, good luck with your research and the biography.
Please don't hesitate to ask if I can clarify anything further.

Leli

Clarification of Answer by leli-ga on 20 Aug 2003 10:47 PDT
Hi again

I heard back from the Imperial War Museum, who say a search of their
library hasn't turned up anything helpful.

They agree that the agent would probably have been an SOE operative
and say that the only source of information will be:
"the original War Office archive material held at the 
National Archives, 
Ruskin Avenue, 
Kew,
Richmond, 
Surrey, 
TW9 4DU.  
They hold the official records of the SOE, which are held in the HS
File Series."

It's possible to ask for a paid search there but my email says that
"it is frequently still necessary to visit in person (having first
arranged to have a reader's ticket issued) or else to employ a
professional researcher to visit for you."

The National Archives site is here:
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/

Hope the book's going well.

Best wishes - Leli
butch13-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars and gave an additional tip of: $5.00
Nice work, Leli.  I'd rate you 6 stars.  Thanks.

Comments  
Subject: Re: Information about a German synthetic oil-producing company active in 1944
From: leli-ga on 03 Jul 2003 11:07 PDT
 
Butch13, thank-you very much for nice comments, rating and tip!

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