Hitler's rise to power

Hitler's rise to power

Hitler's rise to power began with Hitler's NSDAP as a fringe political party within the government of the Weimar Republic. Throughout the early history of the party the events of the Beer hall putsch and the release of his book Mein Kampf introduced piced Hitler to a wider audience. These years were characterized by many electoral battles that Hitler participated in and the street battles and violence between the Rotfrontkämpferbund and the Sturmabteilung (SA) that raged across Germany.

Once in power the Nazis created a mythology around the rise to power and described the events as the Kampfzeit (the time of struggle) and similarly the Kampfjahre (years of struggle).

Early years (1919 - 1926)

In September 1919 the army assigned Adolf Hitler, in his new position as investigative officer, to a meeting of the Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (German Workers' Party, abbreviated DAP). During the meeting Hitler took umbrage with Gottfried Feder, the speaker, arguing that Bavaria should be wholly independent from Germany, and two days later on 14 September, Hitler joined the party as member 555 (he was actually only the 55th member, the DAP added a digit to make itself look more popular than it was). By early 1920 the DAP had 190 members (this was listed as 1,900 by the party).Hitler began to transform the party, renaming its militia from the Rollkommandos to the Ordnertruppen. On 20 February, the party added National Socialist (Nationalsozialistische) to form the initials NSDAP, or Nazi Party. Four days later Dr. Gottfried Feder and Hitler announced the 25-point programme of the party. Throughout the year Hitler began to lecture at Munich's beer halls, particularly the Hofbräuhaus, Sterneckerbräu and Bürgerbräukeller. By this time the police were already monitoring the speeches, and their own surviving records reveal Hitler delivered lectures with titles such as Political Phemenenon, Jews and the Treaty of Versailles. At the end of the year party membership was recorded at 2,000.

On 11 July 1921, Hitler resigned from the party after Anton Drexler, the party's leader, proposed dissolving the party into a larger Kampfbund coalition. Hitler rejoined once the policy was abandoned as a result of his withdrawal and on 28 July assumed control of the party by outcasting Drexler.

On 14 September 1921, Hitler and a small number of Ordnertruppen disrupted a meeting of the Bayernbund lead by Otto Ballerstedt. Hitler himself was violent during this time and was arrested. He was sentenced to 3 months imprisonment and ended up serving only a little over one month.

On 4 November 1921, the Nazi Party held a large public meeting in the Munich Hofbräuhaus. After Hitler had spoken for some time the meeting erupted into a melee in which a small company of Ordnertruppen defeated the opposition. After this point, the Ordnertruppen was renamed and came to be called the Storm Division (Sturmabteilung) or SA.

In the few months between the end of 1922 and the beginning of 1923, Hitler formed two organisations that would grow to have huge significance, the first was the Jungsturm and Jugendbund, which would later become the Hitler Youth and the Stabswache, the first incarnation of what would later become the Schutzstaffeln.

Inspired by Mussolini's March on Rome Hitler decided that a coup d'état had to be instigated in order to seize control of the country. In May, elements loyal to Hitler within the army helped the SA to procure a barracks and its weaponry but the order to march never came.

A pivotal moment came when Hitler led the beer hall putsch, an attempted coup d'état on November 8, 1923. After it failed, Hitler was put on trial, gaining him great public attention. [cite book
last=Shirer
first=William L.
authorlink=
coauthors=
title=The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany
publisher=Simon and Schuster
year=1960
location=New York
]

While he was sentenced to five years imprisonment, he served only a little over eight months and used the time in jail to dictate the first volume of Mein Kampf. After the putsch the party was banned, but contested 1924's two elections by proxy as the National Socialist Freedom Movement. In the German election, May 1924 the party gained seats in the Reichstag, with 6.55% (1,918,329) voting for the Movement. In the German election, December 1924 the National Socialist Freedom Movement (NSFB) (Combination of the Deutschvölkische Freiheitspartei (DVFP) and the Nazi Party (NSDAP)) lost 18 seats, only holding on to 14 seats, with 3% (907,242) of the electorate voting for Hitler's party.

Hitler was released from Landsberg Prison on 20 December 1924, and prompted by his promise to attain power only through legal means, the ban on the Nazi party was lifted less than three months later on 16 February 1925. For six years there would be no further prohibitions of the party (see Rise to power: 1925-1933).

Move towards power (1927 - 1930)

In the German election, May 1928 the Party achieved just 12 seats (2.8% of the vote) in the Reichstag. The highest provincial gain was again in Bavaria (5.11%) though in three areas the NSDAP fail to gain even 1% of the vote. Overall the NSDAP gained 2.63% (810,127) of the vote. Partially, due to the poor results, Hitler decided that Germany needed to know more of his aims. Despite being discourage by his publisher, he wrote a second book that was discovered and released posthumously as Zweites Buch. At this time the SA began a period of deliberate antagonism to the Rotfront by marching into Communist strongholds and starting violent altercations.

At the end of 1928 party membership was recorded at 130,000. In March 1929 Erich Ludendorff represented the Nazi party in the Presidential elections. He gained 280,000 votes (1.1%), and was the only candidate to poll fewer than a million votes. Outside of electoral methods the battle on the streets grew increasingly more violent. After the Rotfront interrupted a speech by Hitler the SA marched into the streets of Nuremberg and killed two bystanders. In a tit-for-tat action the SA stormed a Rotfront meeting on August 25 and days later the Berlin headquarters of the KPD itself. In September Goebbels led his men into Neukölln, a KPD stronghold, and the two warring parties exchanged pistol and revolver fire.

On 14 January 1930 Horst Wessel got into an argument with his landlady – the Nazis said it was about rent, but the Communists alleged it was over Wessel’s soliciting of prostitution on her premises – which would have fatal consequences. The landlady happened to be a member of the KPD, and contacted one of her Rotfront friends, Albert Hochter, who shot Wessel in the head at point-blank range. Wessel had penned a song months before his death which would become Germany’s national anthem for 12 years as the Horst-Wessel-Lied). Goebbels also seized upon the attack and the two weeks Wessel spent on his deathbed to premier the song. The funeral was designed to be a propaganda opportunity for the Nazis, however the Rotfront stole Wessel’s wreath and wrote ‘pimp’ onto it. Along with Horst Wessel, the year 1930 resulted in more deaths due to political struggles than the previous two years combined.

On 1 April Hannover enacted a law banning the Hitlerjugend (the Hitler Youth), and Goebbels was convicted of high treason at the end of May. Bavaria banned all political uniforms on 2 June and on 11 June Prussia prohibited the wearing of SA brown shirts and associated insignia. The next month Prussia passed a law against its officials holding membership of either the NSDAP or KPD. Later in July Goebbels was again tried, this time for ‘public insult’, and fined. The government also placed army officers on trial for 'forming national socialist cells'.

Against this violent backdrop Hitler sent shockwaves through the Reichstag obtaining 107 seats (18.3%, 6,406,397 votes) and becoming the second largest party. In Bavaria the party gained 17.9% of the vote though for the first time this total is outnumbered by most other provinces: Oldenburg (27.3%), Braunschweig (26.6%), Waldeck (26.5%), Mecklenburg-Strelitz (22.6%), Lippe (22.3%) Mecklenburg-Schwerin (20.1%), Anhalt (19.8%), Thuringen (19.5%), Baden (19.2%), Hamburg (19.2%), Prussia (18.4%), Hessen (18.4%), Sachsen (18.3%), Lubeck (18.3%) and Schaumburg-Lippe (18.1%).

An unprecedented amount of money was thrown behind the campaign. Well over one million pamphlets were produced and distributed; sixty trucks were commandeered for usage in Berlin alone. Furthermore in areas where NSDAP campaigning was less rigorous the total was as low as 9%. The Great Depression was also a factor in Hitler's electoral success. Yet against this legal backdrop the SA began its first major anti-Jewish action on 13 October 1930 when groups of brownshirts smashed the windows of Jewish-owned stores at Potsdamer Platz. [cite book
last=Hakim
first=Joy
authorlink=
coauthors=
title=A History of Us: War, Peace and all that Jazz
publisher=Oxford University Press
year=1995
location=New York
pages=
url=
doi=
id=
isbn=0-19-509514-6
]

eizure of control (1931 - 1933)

In March 10 1931, with street violence between the Rotfront and SA spiralling out of control, breaking all previous barriers and expectations, Prussia re-enacted its ban on brown shirts. Days after the ban SA-men shot dead two communists in a street fight, which led to a ban being placed on the public speaking of Goebbels, who side-stepped the prohibition by recording speeches and playing them to an audience in his absence.

Ernst Röhm, in charge of the SA, put Count Micah von Helldorff, a convicted murderer and vehement antisemite, in charge of the Berlin SA. The deaths mounted up, with many more on the Rotfront side, and by the end of 1931 the SA had 47 men killed, and the Rotfront recorded losses of approximately 80. Street fights and beer hall battles resulting in deaths occurred throughout February and April 1932, all against the backdrop of Adolf Hitler’s competition in the presidential election which pitted him against the monumentally popular Hindenburg. In the first round on 13 March Hitler had polled over 11 million votes but was still behind Hindenburg. The second and final round took place on 10 April: Hitler (36.8% 13,418,547) lost out narrowly to Paul von Hindenburg (40% 19,359,983) whilst KPD candidate Thälmann gained a meagre percentage of the vote (10.2% 3,706,759).

At this time the Nazi party had just over 800,000 card-carrying members. Three days after the presidential elections, the German government passed the Law for the Maintenance of State Authority which banned the NSDAP and its paramilitaries. This action was largely prompted by details which emerged at a trial of SA men for assaulting unarmed Jews in Berlin. But after less than a month the law was repealed by Franz von Papen, Chancellor of Germany, on 30 May. Such ambivalence about the fate of Jews was supported by the culture of antisemitism that pervaded the German public at the time. [cite book
last=Goldhagen
first=Daniel
authorlink=
coauthors=
title=Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust
publisher=Knopf
year=1996
location=New York
]

Dwarfed by Hitler’s electoral gains, the KPD turned away from legal means and increasingly towards violence. One resulting battle in Silesia resulted in the army being dispatched, each shot sending Germany further into a potential all-out civil war. By this time both sides marched into each other's strongholds hoping to spark rivalry. Hermann Göring, as speaker of the Reichstag, asked the Papen government to prosecute shooters. Laws were then passed which made political violence a capital crime.

The attacks continued, and reached fever pitch when SA storm leader Axel Schaffeld was assassinated. At the end of July the Nazi party gained almost 14,000,000 votes securing 230 seats in the Reichstag. Energised by the incredible results Hitler asked to be made Chancellor. Papen offered the position of Vice Chancellor but Hitler refused.

Hermann Göring, in his position of Reichstag president, asked that decisive measures to be taken by the government over the spate in murders of national socialists. On 9 August amendments were made to the Reichstrafgesetzbuch statute on ‘acts of political violence’ increasing the penalty to ‘lifetime imprisonment, 20 years hard labour or death’. Special Courts were announced to try such offences, when in power less than half a year later, Hitler would use this legislation against his opponents with devastating effect.

The law was applied almost immediately but did not bring the perpetrators behind the recent massacres to trial as expected. Instead, five SA men who were alleged to have murdered a KPD member in Potempa (Upper Silesia) were tried. Adolf Hitler appeared at the trial as a defence witness but on 22 August the five were convicted and sentenced to death. On appeal this sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in early September. They would serve just over four months before Hitler freed all imprisoned Nazis in a 1933 amnesty.

The Nazi party lost 34 seats in the November 1932 election but remained the Reichstag's largest party.The most shocking move of the early election campaign was to send the SA to support a Rotfront action against the transport agency and in support of a strike.

After chancellor Papen left office, he secretly told Hitler that he still held considerable sway with president Hindenburg and that he would make Hitler chancellor as long as he, Papen, could be the vice chancellor. On 30 January 1933 Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor of a coalition government of the NSDAP-DNVP-Centre Party. The SA and SS led torchlight parades throughout Berlin. In the coalition government three members of the cabinet were Nazis: Hitler, Wilhelm Frick (Minister of the Interior) and Hermann Göring (Minister Without Portfolio).

With Germans who opposed Nazism failing to unite against it, Hitler soon moved to consolidate absolute power.

References

ee also

*Early Nazi Timeline
*Weimar paramilitary groups
*Weimar political parties


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