1

Holocaust Timeline

By reba111
  • Nazi Assault 1933-1939 part 1

    Nazi Assault 1933-1939 part 1
    Within the concentration camp system, colored, tri-angular badges identified various prisoner categories, as seen in this image of a roll call at the Buchenwald concentration camp.
  • Night of the broken glass part 1

    Night of the broken glass part 1
    Residents of Rostock, Germany, view a burning synagogue the morning after Kristallnacht (“Night of Broken Glass”). On the night of November 9–10, 1938, the Nazi regime unleashed orchestrated anti-Jewish violence across greater Germany.
  • Night of the broken glass part 2

    Night of the broken glass part 2
    Within 48 hours, synagogues were vandalized and burned, 7,500 Jewish businesses were damaged or destroyed, 96 Jews were killed, and nearly 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and sent to concentration camps.
  • Final Solution 1939-1945

    Final Solution 1939-1945
    Sections of Warsaw lay in ruins following the invasion
    and conquest of Poland by the German military begun in September 1939 that propelled Europe into World War II.
  • Nazi Assault 1933-1939 part 2

    Nazi Assault 1933-1939 part 2
    Although Jews were their primary targets, the Nazis also persecuted Roma (Gypsies), persons with mental and physical disabilities, and Poles for racial, ethnic, or national reasons.
  • Final Solution 1939-1945 part 2

    Final Solution 1939-1945 part 2
    By the end of 1942, however, the Allies were on the offensive and ultimately drove back the German forces.
  • Final Solution 1939-1945 part 3 worst past I think

    Final Solution 1939-1945 part 3 worst past I think
    Between 1942 and 1944, trains carrying Jews from German-controlled Europe rolled into one of the six killing centers located along rail lines in occupied Poland.
  • Final Solution 1939-1945 part 4

    Final Solution 1939-1945 part 4
    Commonly between 80 and 100 people were crammed into railcars of this type. Deportation trains usually carried 1,000 to 2,000 people.