- for Pest Control), oft
shortened to
Degesch, was a
German chemical corporation which manufactured pesticides.
Degesch held the
patent on the
infamous pesticide...
- was
first used as a
pesticide in
California in the 1880s.
Research at
Degesch of
Germany led to the
development of
Zyklon (later
known as
Zyklon A),...
- IG
Farben subsidiary,
Degesch (Deutsche
Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung MbH, or
German Company for Pest Control).
Degesch originally supplied the...
- the
manufacture and sale.
Peters joined Degesch and
would become managing director during World War II.
Degesch was
designated by the
German government...
- ****
atrocities and the
Holocaust in
Western Europe.
Weinbacher worked at
Degesch (Deutsche
Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung,
which translates as German...
-
distributor of
Zyklon on
behalf of
Degesch east of the Elbe. In 1927,
Stabenow left the firm; Dr.
Bruno Tesch became 45% owner,
Degesch had 55% of the shares; in...
- of
Zyklon B were
manufactured by
several companies under licenses for
Degesch, a
corporation co-owned by IG Farben,
Degussa and Th.
Goldschmidt AG. It...
-
fabrication of
explosives such as gunpowder,
dynamite or TNT.) In
World War II,
Degesch (42.5 per cent
owned by IG Farben) was the
trademark holder of
Zyklon B...
- Silber-Scheide-Anstalt, "German Gold and
Silver Refining") subsidiaries,
Degesch (translation:
German Corporation for Pest Control), was the main manufacturer...
- businesspeople.
These included Hermann Schlosser, a
business manager for
Degesch –
which supplied Zyklon B for use at
death camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau...