Hello Eric,
at least that was the plan for the future, the AHS as the lowest structure for the party leader of tomorrow. I quoted when the first graduate would have been available, in the fifties. Before that, of course, others also graduated from the order castles.
So the AHS pupils would have gone through each of the three castles you mentioned, one after the other, and as a crowning finale the Marienburg.
So, here is part two which is very long again, bring patience and interest ;-).
The selection of potential pupils began at the Jungbann level and ended with the personal muster by the Gauleiter at the head of the examination board.
The requirements were Aryan descent, complete health (people who wore glasses were already excluded!), a positive attitude of the parents towards the state and - crucially - an endorsement by the HJ. Since 1938, good performance at school was no longer necessary, which once again showed the hostility of the system towards education. Functioning was more important.
The NSDAP districts were allowed to provide a certain quota of AHS pupils according to their population, the large ones like Berlin, Saxony, Silesia 18, the new Ostmark Gaue only 4.
In 1937, a total of 600 pupils were still planned, but the number had to be halved just one year later because Sonthofen was simply not ready.
The initial plan was to run an AHS school in all 32 NSDAP Gaue existing at the time.
By 1942, however, only 10 schools existed, and it was not until 1943 that two new ones were added.
From April to autumn 1937, the initial seat was in Crössinsee (also spelled K). Then all ten existing schools found themselves in Sonthofen, because at most one foundation stone had been laid in the Gau because of the war *).
In 1941, the hygienic and school situation in Sonthofen had become intolerable, so 4 of the schools were relocated to makeshift buildings: Saxony, Thuringia (to Blankenhain in a former lunatic asylum), East Prussia and Cologne-Aachen.
At the end of 1943, there were 2027 pupils at the AHS, which represented only 0.4 per cent of the total number of secondary school attendants in the German Reich.
Then schooling came to a standstill anyway, for lack of teachers, because of conscription, etc.
Finally, the names of the schools in Sonthofen:
The ten Adolf Hitler schools in the Ordensburg Sonthofen were under the control of the headmaster (Hauptschulführer) Hans Klauke and his deputy Ernst Senkel.
The schools were named after their planned locations or districts and were each headed by a high-ranking HJ leader who
occasionally came from the teaching profession: AHS Tilsit/Ostpreußen, headed by Hans Klauke; AHS Potsdam/
Mark Brandenburg, headed by Hans Klauke, who was deputised by Reinhard Meinung; AHS Waldbröl/Köln-Aachen, headed by Werner Kirsch; AHS Koblenz-Trier/Westmark, headed by August Buttkereit; AHS Plauen-Pirna/Sachsen, led by Rudolf Raab; AHS Weimar-Blankenhain/Thüringen, led by Horst Munske; AHS Hesselberg-Chiemsee/München-Oberbayern, led by Hans Kreißl; AHS Heiligendamm/Mecklenburg, led by Max Klüver, represented by Helmut Gause; AHS Landstuhl/Saarpfalz, ? In 1943, the schools in Wartha/Niederschlesien and Iglau/Böhmen und Mähren were added.
*)In the summer of 1938, construction work had begun at the planned sites in Plauen, Heiligendamm, Hesselberg, Koblenz, Waldbröl and Landstuhl; however, this was initially postponed due to "buildings important to the war". "At the outbreak of the war, work was stopped on all construction sites." By 1941, RM 6 million had been spent on planning and construction work that had already begun.