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Aaron Ellenburg

Mr. Neuberger
English 102-110 Composition II
2/28/2011
Annotated Bibliography
Nazi Death Camps

“Auschwitz” N.p.: Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project:, n.d. Web. 28 Feb. 2011.
Isurvived.org is a website that is a tribute to The Holocaust survivors. It soes this by publicizing
different Holocaust websites that are grouped into ten subject pages that make up the sites
able of contents.This site contains information on the Holocausts history, who its targets were,
he several iconic figures who participated in it, such as Hitler and Mengele, the different
concentration camps and the survivors.

A Teachers Guide to the Holocaust: The Camps. N.p.: n.p., 1953. Web. 2 Mar. 2011.
A timeline of the different Nazi camps and other major events during WWII. The first type of
concentration camps were built to take advantage of their prisoners through forced labor to
supplement Germany’s economy during the WWII. The first to be built was Dachau, and it was
intended to hold only the Nazis political enemies, but grew to hold a more diverse group of
prisoners.

Bülow, Louis. “Gates to Hell-The Nazi Death Camps.” N.p.: www.deathcamps.info, n.d. Web.

28 Feb. 2011.
In the 1930’s Nazis started killing handicapped Germans by lethal injection and poison gas. After
the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union, they sent mobile killing squads to conquered cities to round
up and shoot Jews and Gypsies. They then upgraded to death camps, where they could
systematically kill thousands of Jews and gypsies. There were six of these death camps,
Auschwitz, Sobibor, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, and Treblinka. These camps were designed for
mass murder by poison gas chambers and disposal of bodies by crematoriums.

"Inside a Nazi Death Camp, 1944" EyeWitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2004).


The first concentration camp was established in 1933. It quickly spread to over a hundred camps
consisting of two types: forced labor camps and death camps; both contained the Nazis
“undesirables”, which were mainly Jews, homosexuals, Gypsies, the mentaly retarded, and
others. This site contains the description of a London Sunday Times reporter as he follows the
Soviet troops as they liberated the Maidanek death camp.
“Yad Vashem”. N.p.: n.p., 1953. Web. 2 Mar. 2011.
Yad Vashem is a memorial to the Holocaust. It was founded in 1953 as a center for
documentation, research, and the education of the Holocaust for future generations. It contains
information on the holocaust in general.

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