- Christa Schroeder
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Christa Schroeder Born March 19, 1908
Hannoversch Münden, Lower Saxony, GermanyDied June 18, 1984 (aged 76)
Munich, Bavaria, GermanyNationality German Ethnicity White Occupation Secretary, stenotypist, memoirist Employer Adolf Hitler Known for Adolf Hitler's personal secretary before and during the Second World War. Christa Schroeder (born Emilie Christine Schroeder; March 19, 1908 – June 18, 1984) was one of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler’s personal secretaries before and during World War II.
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Early life
She was born in the small town of Hannoversch Münden and moved to Nagold after her parents died. There she worked for a lawyer in 1929 and 1930.
Nazi career
After leaving Nagold for Munich, Schroeder was employed as a stenotypist in the Oberste SA-Führung, the Sturmabteilung high command.[1] There she got to know Hitler in early 1933, when he had just been appointed chancellor. He took a liking to Schroeder and hired her same year.
Schroeder lived at the Wolfsschanze (Wolf's Lair) near Rastenburg, Adolf Hitler's first World War II Eastern Front military headquarters from 1941 until he and his staff departed for the last time on 20 November 1944. She remained one of Hitler's secretaries until his suicide on 30 April 1945 in Berlin. Her account of her service as Hitler's secretary (Er war mein Chef, Herbig, 2002) is an important source in the study of the Nazi years.
Life after the war
After the war, Schroeder was interrogated in 1945 by the French liaison officer Albert Zoller serving to the 7th US-Army. This interrogation and later interviews in 1948 formed the basis for the first book published about Hitler after World War II in 1949, Hitler privat (“Hitler in private”). An English translation of Schroeder's book Er war mein Chef was published in 2009 under the title He Was My Chief: The Memoirs of Adolf Hitler's Secretary (Frontline Books, London). The book includes Anton Joachimsthaler's introduction from the original German edition of the book and a new introduction by Roger Moorhouse. The book was serialised in The Sunday Telegraph magazine "Seven", The Week magazine and the New York Post newspaper.
Schroeder died in 1984 in Munich.
References
- ^ I was Hitler's secretary, The Daily Telegraph, April 26, 2009.
Sources
- Zoller, Albert: Hitler privat (“Hitler in private”)
- Schroeder, Christa: Er war mein Chef (“He was my boss”). Herbig, 2002
- Schroeder, Christa: He Was My Chief, Frontline, 2009
Final occupants of the Führerbunker by date of departure (1945) 21 April 22 April - Karl Gebhardt
- Julius Schaub
- Christa Schroeder
- Johanna Wolf
- Eckhard Christian
23 April 24 April 28 April 29 April - Bernd Freytag von Loringhoven
- Gerhard Boldt
- Rudolf Weiss
- Wilhelm Zander
- Heinz Lorenz
- Willy Johannmeyer
30 April 1 May - Wilhelm Mohnke
- Traudl Junge
- Gerda Christian
- Constanze Manziarly
- Else Krüger
- Otto Günsche
- Walther Hewel
- Ernst-Günther Schenck
- Hans-Erich Voss
- Johann Rattenhuber
- Peter Högl
- Werner Naumann
- Martin Bormann
- Heinz Linge
- Erich Kempka
- Hans Baur
- Georg Betz
- Ludwig Stumpfegger
- Artur Axmann
- Günther Schwägermann
- Ewald Lindloff
- Hans Reisser
- Armin D. Lehmann
- Heinrich Doose
- Gerhard Schach
- Heinz Krüger
- Josef Ochs
2 May Date uncertain Still present on 2 May - Erna Flegel
- Werner Haase
- Fritz Tornow
- Johannes Hentschel
Committed suicide - Alwin-Broder Albrecht
- Ernst-Robert Grawitz
- Adolf Hitler
- Eva Hitler (Eva Braun)
- Joseph Goebbels
- Magda Goebbels
- Wilhelm Burgdorf
- Hans Krebs
- Franz Schädle
Killed Unknown Categories:- 1908 births
- 1983 deaths
- People from Hann. Münden
- Secretaries to Adolf Hitler
- German people of World War II
- Female Nazis
- People from the Province of Hanover
- Nazi Germany stubs
- German people stubs
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