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The Bank der deutschen Arbeit (BdA, lit. 'Bank of German Labor') was a financial institution of the German Labor Front (DAF), based in Berlin.
Overview
Founded in 1924 as the Bank of Workers, Employees, and Civil Servants (German: Bank der Arbeiter, Angestellten und Beamten AG) by organizations representing these groups, the bank was taken over by the DAF and renamed after the Nazi government banned all independent trade unions on 2 May 1933. Its assets expanded rapidly under the Nazi government, from 151 million Reichsmarks at end-1931 to 918 million in 1939.
The existence of the BdA came to an abrupt end in 1945, as the allied occupation forces agreed to liquidate it.
Head office
The BdA appropriated an office building at Wallstrasse 61-65 in Berlin, which had been commissioned by the General German Trade Union Federation (ADGB, dissolved in 1933) from architects Max Taut and Franz Hoffmann [de] and built in 1922-1923, then extended in 1930-1932 along Wallstrasse on a design by Walter Würzbach [de]. From 1945 to 1990, it became the seat of the Free German Trade Union Federation. It has since been used as a commercial office building.
See also
Notes
- Christian Zentner & Friedemann Bedürftig (1991), The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich, New York: Macmillan
- Federal Reserve Board (March 1945), Army Service Forces Manual M356-5 / Military Government Handbook - Germany - Section 5: Money and Banking, Washington DC: U.S. Army Service Forces
- Hans A. Adler (August 1949), "The Post-War Reorganization of the German Banking System", Quarterly Journal of Economics (63:3), Oxford University Press: 322–341
- "Bürohaus des Allgemeinen Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbundes, Hermann-Schlimme-Haus". Landesdenkmalamt Berlin.
External links
- Documents and clippings about Bank der Deutschen Arbeit in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
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