Hitler: Ascent, 1889-1939 (174 page)

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Authors: Volker Ullrich

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BOOK: Hitler: Ascent, 1889-1939
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200 
See Krause,
10 Jahre Kammerdiener
, p. 24.

201 
See Hitler,
Monologe
, p. 99 (entry for 21/22 Oct. 1941); Wiedemann,
Der Mann
, p. 134; Linge,
Bis zum Untergang
, p. 108.

202 
See Wiedemann’s shorthand notes dated 25 Feb. 1939: “I am the only head of state who doesn’t have a bank account.” BA Koblenz, N 1740/4.

203 
See the files in BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, NS 26/2557, NS 10/115, NS 10/116, NS 10/119, NS 10/120; Brückner’s notebook from 1935, which has an appendix containing a detailed breakdown of all expenditure. BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, NS 26/1209. See also Dietrich,
12 Jahre mit Hitler
, p. 210; Schroeder,
Er war mein Chef
, p. 72; Rose,
Julius Schaub
, p. 135; Krause,
10 Jahre Kammerdiener
, p. 45.

204 
Max Domarus,
Hitler: Reden und Proklamationen 1932–1945. Vol. 1: Triumph. Part 1: 1932–1934,
Munich, 1965, p. 200. The wages were transferred to a fund to benefit those left behind by deceased SA men and police. See Schwerin von Krosigk to Staatssekretär Lammers, 15 March 1933; BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, NS 10/115.

205 
See Guido Knopp,
Geheimnisse des “Dritten Reiches,
” Munich, 2011, pp. 177f.

206 
Wagener,
Hitler aus nächster Nähe
, pp. 358, 362; transcript of an interview with Anni Winter (undated); IfZ München, ZS 194.

207 
Hanfstaengl,
Zwischen Weissem und Braunem Haus
, p. 164. See Hitler,
Monologe
, p. 218 (dated 22 Jan. 1942): Hitler said that when he was still eating meat, he had “sweated tremendously” during his speeches and needed to drink six bottles of water to get through them. “When I became a vegetarian,” he asserted, “I only had to take a sip of water now and again.”

208 
Schirach,
Ich glaubte an Hitler
, p. 129; see Dietrich,
12 Jahre mit Hitler
, p. 219.

209 
Delmer,
Die Deutschen und ich
, p. 152.

210 
Hanfstaengl,
Zwischen Weissem und Braunem Haus
, p. 44

211 
Schirach,
Ich glaubte an Hitler
, p. 67.

212 
See Ulf Schmidt,
Hitlers Arzt Karl Brandt: Medizin und Macht im Dritten Reich
, Berlin, 2009, p. 137; Hans-Joachim Neumann and Henrik Eberle,
War Hitler krank? Ein abschliessender Befund
, Bergisch-Gladbach, 2009, pp. 110, 223f.

213 
Speer,
Erinnerungen
, p. 138. See Theodor Duesterberg,
Der Stahlhelm und Hitler
, Wolfenbüttel and Hannover, 1949, p. 99: “It was not his thing to laugh at himself.” See Goebbels,
Tagebücher
, part 1, vol. 2/3, p. 236 (entry for 27 July 1933): “Long dinner with the Führer. We laughed about Schaub’s fiasco until our cheeks started to hurt.”

214 
See
Tischgespräche
, p. 181 (dated 3 April 1942); Fest,
Hitler
, p. 709; Paul Schmidt,
Statist auf diplomatischer Bühne 1923–45: Erlebnisse des Chefdolmetschers im Auswärtigen Amt mit den Staatsmännern Europas
, Bonn, 1950, p. 366.

215 
Goebbels,
Tagebücher
, part 1, vol. 1/2, p. 189 (entry for 25 Feb. 1927). See also Hitler’s letter to Arthur Dinter dated 25 July 1928, in which he said that at the age of 39 he had “at most 20 years” to achieve what he had set out to do. Albrecht Tyrell,
Führer befiehl…Selbstzeugnisse aus der “Kampfzeit” der NS DAP: Dokumentation und Analyse
, Düsseldorf, 1969, no. 78d, p. 205.

216 
See Schirach,
Ich glaubte an Hitler
, pp. 114f. On Hitler’s stomach cramps see Goebbels,
Tagebücher
, part 1, vol. 1/3, p. 150 (entry for 23 Dec. 1928), pp. 168f. (entry for 20 Jan. 1929).

217 
Krebs,
Tendenzen und Gestalten
, pp. 136f.; see also Richard Walter Darré, Notes 1945–1948, p. 34. Darré characterised Hitler as being obsessed with the “conviction that he had to achieve everything he believed destiny had charged him with before he died.” Darré added: “That meant he was always in a kind of rush, which of course also affected the people around him and his subordinates.” IfZ München, ED 110, vol. 1.

218 
Speer,
Erinnerungen
, p. 120. Heinrich Hoffmann recorded Hitler saying: “If some people think I insist too much on my plans being carried out quickly, I can only say that I sense I won’t live to be very old. That makes me try to complete all of my plans. After me, no one will be able to complete them.”
Das Hitler-Bild: Die Erinnerungen des Fotografen Heinrich Hoffmann
, ed. Joe J. Heydecker, St. Pölten and Salzburg, 2008, pp. 150f.; See Dietrich,
12 Jahre mit Hitler
, p. 140.

219 
Transcript of an interview with Hanskarl von Hasselbach 1951/52; IfZ München, ZS 242.

220 
See Rose,
Julius Schaub
, p. 112; Dietrich,
12 Jahre mit Hitler
, p. 218; Hanfstaengl,
Zwischen Weissem und Braunem Haus
, p. 284. See Rudolf Hess to his parents, 19 Dec. 1933: “Astonishingly the Führer is very well—despite the incredible strain he is under…” BA Bern, Nl Hess, J1.211-1989/148, 51.

221 
Hamann,
Winifred Wagner
, pp. 325f.

222 
Wagener,
Hitler aus nächster Nähe
, p. 199.

223 
See Wiedemann,
Der Mann
, p. 85; Krause,
10 Jahre Kammerdiener
, p. 38. On the safety precautions for Hitler and the Reich Chancellery see official instructions in BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, R 43 II/1104a.

224 
Krause,
10 Jahre Kammerdiener
, pp. 40f. On Schreck’s pistols see Carl Walther Waffenfabrik, Zella-Mehlis, to SS-Oberführer Schreck, 4 Dec. 1935; BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, NS 10/121.

225 
Speer,
Spandauer Tagebücher
, p. 29 (entry for 1 Nov. 1946).

226 
Schroeder,
Er war mein Chef
, p. 73.

227 
Speer,
Spandauer Tagebücher
, p. 140 (entry for 15 Feb. 1947). See Schroeder,
Er war mein Chef
, p. 73; Schirach,
Ich glaubte an Hitler
, pp. 114f.

228 
Goebbels,
Tagebücher
, part 1, vol. 5, p. 358 (entry for 24 June 1938); Max Wünsche’s daily diaries from 22 June 1938. On the following day Adjutant Schaub telephoned Schmeling and afterwards reported back to Hitler; BA Berlin-Lichterfelde, NS 10/125. The film of the boxing match was banned by the Propaganda Ministry, with the explicit approval of Hitler. Ibid. dated 14 July 1938. On Schmeling’s reception at the Reich Chancellery see Max Schmeling,
Erinnerungen
, Frankfurt am Main, Berlin and Vienna, 1977, pp. 262f., 361–5.

229 
Speer,
Erinnerungen
, p. 57.

230 
Dietrich,
12 Jahre mit Hitler
, p. 151.

231 
Goebbels,
Tagebücher
, part 1, vol. 2/2, p. 251 (entry for 29 March 1932).

232 
Quoted in Schmölders,
Hitlers Gesicht
, p. 61.

233 
Kessler,
Das Tagebuch
, vol. 9, p. 601 (entry for 6 July 1933).

14
Totalitarian Revolution


Baldur von Schirach,
Ich glaubte an Hitler
, Hamburg, 1967, p. 168.


Theodor Heuss to Peter Rassow, 7 Feb. 1933; Theodor Heuss,
In der Defensive: Briefe 1933–1945
, ed. Elke Seefried, Munich, 2009, pp. 109f.


Quoted in Josef and Ruth Becker (eds),
Hitlers Machtergreifung: Dokumente vom Machtantritt Hitlers—30. Januar 1933 bis zur Besiegelung des Einparteienstaats 14. Juli 1933
, Munich, 1983, p. 297. Typical of the attitudes of the conservative ministers in the cabinet was a statement by Schwerin von Krosigk in a letter to former Reich Chancellor Hans Luther on 16 April 1952: “Before National Socialism came to power, I had great respect for its idealistic goals, serious reservations about its methods and rowdy representatives, and fond hopes that it would ‘shed its skin.’ ” BA Koblenz N 1276/23. On the process of disillusionment for the German nationalists see Hermann Beck,
The Fateful Alliance: German Conservatives and Nazis in 1933. The “Machtergreifung” in New Light
, New York and Oxford, 2008, pp. 124ff., 133ff., 228ff.


Quoted in Becker,
Hitlers Machtergreifung
, p. 217.


See Richard Walter Darré, Notes 1945–1948, p. 42: “Nothing could be further from the truth than the belief that there had been a plan from the very start for the whole development of the Third Reich.” Darré added that Hitler had acted “as an ingenious tactician reacting to the moment.” IfZ München, ED 110, vol. 1. See also Hans-Ulrich Thamer,
Verführung und Gewalt: Deutschland 1933–1945
, Berlin, 1986, p. 232; Hans-Ulrich Wehler,
Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte 1914–1949
, Munich, 2003, p. 606.


Victor Klemperer,
Ich will Zeugnis ablegen bis zum letzten: Tagebücher 1933–1941,
ed. Walter Nowojski with Hadwig Klemperer, Berlin, 1995, p. 9 (entry for 10 March 1933). In April 1933, during a conversation about “the horrendous situation in Germany,” the Franco-American publisher Jacques Schiffrin said that he could not understand how “there was no resistance anywhere from anyone.” Count Harry Kessler remarked, “I couldn’t give him an explanation either.” Harry Graf Kessler,
Das Tagebuch. Vol. 9: 1926–1937
, ed. Sabine Gruber and Ulrich Ott with Christoph Hilse and Nadin Weiss, Stuttgart, 2010, p. 555 (entry for 5 April 1933).


Sebastian Haffner,
Geschichte eines Deutschen: Die Erinnerungen 1914–1933
, Stuttgart and Munich, 2000, pp. 145–8, 152, 176–8.


Cabinet meeting on 30 Jan. 1933;
Akten der Reichskanzlei: Die Regierung Hitler. Part 1: 1933/34. Vol. 1: 30 Januar bis 31 April 1933
, ed. Karl-Heinz Minuth, Boppard am Rhein, 1983, no. 1, pp. 1–4 (quotations on p. 2).


See Rudolf Morsey, “Hitlers Verhandlungen mit der Zentrumsführung am 31. 1. 1933,” in
Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte
, 9 (1961), pp. 182–94.

10 
Cabinet meeting on 3 Jan. 1933;
Die Regierung Hitler
, part 1, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 5–8 (quotations on p. 6)

11 
Hindenburg’s decree dated 1 Feb. 1933; ibid., no. 3, p. 10n6. No one insisted on written confirmation of Hitler’s assurance that the make-up of the cabinet would not change regardless of the outcome of the election. When Schwerin von Krosigk protested to Papen, the latter replied that “you can’t begin cooperating with an act of mistrust.” Schwerin von Krosigk to Holm Eggers, 21 Aug. 1974; BA Koblenz, N 1276/42.

12 
Hjalmar Schacht,
Abrechnung mit Hitler
, Hamburg, 1948, p. 31; see also Hjalmar Schacht,
76 Jahre meines Lebens
, Bad Wörishofen, 1953, p. 379: “My impression was that Hitler was weighed down by the burden of responsibility placed upon him.”

13 
Government appeal to the German people, 1 Feb. 1933; Max Domarus,
Hitler: Reden und Proklamationen 1932–1945. Vol. 1: Triumph. Part 1: 1932–1934
, Munich, 1965, pp. 191–4.

14 
Quoted in Hans Magnus Enzensberger,
Hammerstein oder Der Eigensinn: Eine deutsche Geschichte
, Frankfurt am Main, 2008, p. 114.

15 
Hitler’s speech to military commanders has survived in three forms: 1. notes of Lieutenant General Curt Liebmann; first reprinted in Thilo Vogelsang, “Neue Dokumente zur Geschichte der Reichswehr 1930–1933,” in
Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte
, 2 (1954), pp. 397–439 (text on pp. 434f.); 2. notes of General Horst von Mellenthin; first reprinted in Carl Dirks and Karl-Heinz Janssen,
Der Krieg der Generäle: Hitler als Werkzeug der Wehrmacht
, Berlin, 1999, pp. 232–6; 3. a transcript, probably made by one of Hammerstein’s daughters, which was sent by KPD agents to Moscow on 14 Feb.; reprinted in Andreas Wirsching, “ ‘Man kann nur Boden germanisieren’: Ein neue Quelle zu Hitlers Rede vor den Spitzen der Reichswehr am 3. Februar 1933,” in
Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte
, 49 (2001), pp. 517–50 (text on pp. 545–8). Liebmann’s notes are the most extensive, which is why they are the source for all further quotes, unless otherwise noted.

16 
Mellenthin’s notes read: “Marxism must be pulled up by the roots and eradicated”; Dirks and Janssen,
Der Krieg der Generäle
, p. 235. The Hammerstein transcript reads: “Our goal is the subjugation of Marxism by any means necessary.” Wirsching, “Eine neue Quelle,” p. 547.

17 
In the Hammerstein transcript, the language of this passage is sharper: “The army will then be capable of conducting an active foreign policy, and the goal of increasing the German people’s living space will be reached through military force. The goal will probably be the East. Nonetheless, it is impossible to Germanicise the populations of land that has been annexed or conquered. You can only Germanicise territory. As Poland and France have done, several million people will have to be ruthlessly expelled.” Wirsching, “Eine neue Quelle,” p. 547.

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