Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal

Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal
Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal
Hans-Jürgen Graf von Blumenthal.JPEG
Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal
Born 23 February 1907(1907-02-23)
Potsdam, German Empire
Died 13 October 1944(1944-10-13) (aged 37)
Berlin, Plötzensee Prison
Allegiance anti-Nazi German Army Officer
Service/branch Wehrmacht
Years of service 1935 - 1944
Rank Sturmbannführer
Battles/wars World War II

Hans-Jürgen Graf von Blumenthal (February 23, 1907 – October 13, 1944) was a German aristocrat and Army officer in World War II who was executed by the Nazi régime for his role in the July 20 Plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler.[1]

Biography

Blumenthal was born in Potsdam, to Graf Hans (XII) von Blumenthal, and christened Hans-Jürgen Adam Ludwig Oscar Leopold Bernard Arthur. His father was a colonel, who was wounded in the First World War and served as military governor of the Belgian district of Neufchâteau.

Educated at the Potsdam Gymnasium until 1928, by which time (in 1926) his family, who had lost everything in the hyperinflation and had moved to Neustrelitz, Blumenthal attended the Realgymnasium there. He studied Law and Economics for two years at the Universities of Königsberg and Munich. He was an active member of the Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten (Steel Helmet Association), a conservative and fundamentally monarchist organisation originally for First World War veterans, later extended to military men generally. He edited Stahlhelm’s journal until the Nazis took the Association over in 1935. He was an instructor in the "covert" army.

In 1930 he went on a three-month debating trip in the USA. At about this time he began to take an interest in the question of how to establish international peace and the possible unification of Europe. He was at first an enthusiastic Nazi – he was Sturmbannführer (equivalent to a Major) in the SA. But he distanced himself from the Nazis more and more as he began to accept the view, common among the nobility, that war was contrary to Germany’s interests.

After finishing his studies, in 1935 he went back to Neustrelitz where he joined the 48th Infantry Regiment as a Second Lieutenant. In December 1936 he became a lieutenant.

In Summer 1938 he became a company commander and had a position for two months at the War School at Munich, and in that same year he wrote a contribution for the illustrated book for boys Wir Soldaten ("We Soldiers"). It is impossible to tell which piece was written by him. As he was writing his contribution to it, he was already conspiring against Hitler.

It was still well before the Sudeten Crisis and the invasion of Czechoslovakia that he became involved in the German Resistance. A group of officers led by General Beck was opposed to war, and it was not difficult to foresee Hitler’s intentions. Beck and his followers, Hans Oster and Erwin von Witzleben, therefore planned a coup. The idea was for a storm-party of officers including Hans-Jürgen to march into the Reich Chancery, overcome the resistance of any SS guards they found there, and arrest the Führer. However, the policy of appeasement towards Hitler espoused by the British Prime Minister Chamberlain led the conspirators to conclude that the planned coup no longer had any future.

In August 1939 be became a captain. He kept contact with the resistance, based in the Abwehr under Admiral Canaris. War broke out, and on September 9 he married Cornelia von Kries, née von Schnitzler, a 34-year-old divorcée. Her first husband, Otto von Kries, by whom she had a daughter, would die at Leningrad in 1941. Her mother was a Borsig, a family of industrialists whose locomotive works in Berlin were among the largest enterprises in the country. From September 1939 to May 1940 during the so-called Phoney War, he was based at Saarbrücken in command of a machine-gun company.

When this blissful calm ended, he took part in the offensive in Alsace, but in July the regiment was transferred to Tomaszew in Poland close to Warsaw, nearer to the Soviet frontier, where in spite of his junior rank he took command of a battalion. He was allowed home on leave during this period. When Operation Barbarossa began, his wife was pregnant. Their only son, Hubertus, was born in May 1942.

Hans-Jürgen led his battalion to the gates of Kiev, where he was badly wounded, his right arm rendered useless. He was in the army hospital in Leipzig until December 1942. By this time he was once again actively collaborating with the German Resistance.

After his recovery he joined the Führer Reserve in Berlin and worked at the General War Office. There he got to know other opponents of the regime and won the confidence of Count Stauffenberg, who was an intimate friend of Hans Jürgen’s cousin Albrecht von Blumenthal. The latter had introduced Stauffenberg to the mystical poet Stefan George, from whose circle many of the other conspirators were drawn. Furthermore, Dietrich Bonhoeffer had held his illegal seminary in the late 1930s at Albrecht's estate at Schlönwitz.

In April 1943 he was promoted to Major.

He was the liaison officer between the Berlin Group and the Stettin High Command, Army District II, and was thus closely involved in the planning of the July 20 Plot of 1944). In his book Geist der Freiheit (1956, page 135), Eberhard Zeller wrote:

It is known that in the weeks before July 20th, Major Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal was very frequently driven to Stauffenberg in the evening. His driver waited for him – he went in fatigues [Trainingsanzug] – to an appointed place close to the Barracks at Düppel, which was close to where his department (General Weidemann) was supposed to have been off the Bendlerstrasse.

Elsewhere Zeller mentions that he worked in the department of Colonel Siegfried Wagner and was therefore in contact with Goerdeler.

He spent the weekend with his family at Kümmernitz in the West Prignitz, but on July 23, 1944 he was arrested by three members of the Gestapo, who appeared in a car and took him away without him being able to say goodbye to his wife, who was thereafter unable to communicate with him. It all took place inside half an hour. What took place between then and his condemnation by the German "People's Court" (Volksgerichtshof) and immediate execution by hanging at Plötzensee Prison on October 13, 1944 is almost unknown, apart from the slender details mentioned in his last letter to his wife, because the records of the People’s Court were destroyed.

However, Zeller goes on:

von Blumenthal came from the Potsdam Tradition, his father had been a tutor to the Hohenzollerns, but in the opinion of F. W. Heinz, the former editor of the Stahlhelm, he had from the beginning viewed the German nation’s pact with Hitler as a misfortune, an opinion which grew ever stronger and made him increasingly restless as the years passed. He was close to Dohnanyi and Oster, and a childhood friend of Albrecht Mertz von Quirnheim. We know from eyewitnesses to his interrogation that he did not reveal the names of his accomplices.

In Fabian von Schlabrendorff’s book Offiziere gegen Hitler he is mentioned only in the death-roll.

In his last letter, Hans-Jürgen wrote:

My Most Tender Love!

When these lines reach your good, lovely hands, I will no longer be in this world. I have been sentenced to death and am smoking a final cigarette. Shortly I will pass into eternity, where we will once again find each other and never again be separated. I take with me a deep gratitude for everything that you have been to me and given to me in these past years... Yesterday I dreamt that Papa was standing in the doorway with his coat and hat and he said, "Come, my boy, it is time!"

Give my love to the children. It is also a difficult fate for them and they will only begin to understand it much later.

In my thoughts I take you once more in my arms. Soon that undying part of me will be with you and the children, until you all enter into eternity and you are once again united with

Your sincerest loving
Peter[2]

Why he signed himself Peter is a mystery. It was possibly an agreed sign to his wife that the letter was either genuine or not genuine. It was, however, one of his son's Christian names. The children he refers to in his letter are his son, Hubertus Peter, then 3 years old, and his stepdaughter.

Notes

  • Regarding personal names: Graf is a title, translated as Count, not a first or middle name. The female form is Gräfin.

References

  1. ^ Biography at German Resistance Memorial Center
  2. ^ Excerpt from Hans-Jürgen Count von Blumenthal's final letter to his wife, October 13, 1944, GKS 132. He was executed the same day.

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