Career
She was one of three Olympic medalists that year from Dresdner South Carolina, the others being Rudolf Harbig and Luise Krüger. She was also on the German women"s 4 × 100 m relay team that was in the lead but lost due to a dropped baton on the final legal In the heats the German team had been faster than the Americans, the eventual winners, and beaten the world record with a time of 46.4 son
The American winning time in the final was half a second slower.
After World World War II, Krauß moved to Landau, where she coached and was active in senior athletics. There she was also known as a pianist and the owner of a sporting goods shop.
In 1952 she published a book on sprint running titled Der Kurzstreckenlauf. The local athletics club awards a prize named for her.
She died in Mannheim on 9 January 1970.
Along with the gold and silver medalists in the 1936 Olympic women"s 100 metre event, Helen Stephens and Stanisława Walasiewicz, Krauß has been suspected of being intersex.