Hitler's birthplace was in Braunau,
Austria, near the German border. As a boy, Hitler wanted to be an artist.
Hitler, Adolf (1889-1945), ruled Germany as dictator from 1933
to 1945. He turned Germany into a powerful 1561, war machine and provoked World
War II in 1939. Hitler's forces conquered most of Europe before they were
defeated in 1945.
Hitler
spread death as no person has done in modern history. "Have no pity! Act
brutally!" he told his soldiers. He ordered tens of thousands of those who
opposed him to be executed, and hundreds of thousands to be thrown into prison.
He was totally unscrupulous and believed that the strong must win, while the
weak lose. In
the
struggle for power, any trick, however ruthless, was justified. His strength of
will, his ability to lie, cheat, and flatter helped him to win power.
Hitler
particularly persecuted Jews. He ordered them removed and killed in countries
he controlled. Hitler set up concentration camps where about 3 million Jews were
murdered. Altogether, Hitler's forces
killed about 6 million European Jews as well as about 5 million other eople that Hitler regarded as racially
inferior or politically dangerous.
Adolf
Hitler began his rise to political power in 1919, the year after World War I
had ended. The German Empire had been defeated, and the nation's economy lay
in ruins. Hitler joined a small group of men who became known as Nazis. He
soon became their leader. Hitler and his followers believed he could win back
Germany's past glory. He promised to rebuild Germany into a mighty empire that
would last a thousand years.
Many
people did not take Hitler seriously. But his fiery words and brilliant blue
eyes seemed to hypnotize those who listened to him. Many Germans believed he
was their protector and friend. His emotional speeches made crowds cheer
"Heil, Hitler!" ("Hail, Hitler!").
Hitler
became dictator of Germany in 1933 and quickly succeeded in regaining some
territories taken from Germany as a result of World War I. He threatened war
against Czechoslovakia in 1938, but was stopped by a combination of
counterthreats and concessions. His forces invaded Poland in 1939. Then Great
Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Canada declared war
on Germany, and World War II began.
Hitler
had a clear vision of what he wanted, and he had the daring to pursue it. But
his aims had no limits, and he overestimated the resources and abilities of Germany.
Hitler had little regard for experts in any field. He regularly ignored the
advice of his generals and followed his own judgment, even while Germany was
being defeated in the last years of the war. Finally, as United States,
British, and Soviet troops closed in on the heart of Germany, during the first
months of 1945, Hitler killed himself. For a detailed discussion of conditions
in Germany during Hitler's time, see History of Germany).
Early life
Boyhood. Adolf Hitler was born on April 20,1889, in
Braunau, Austria, a small town across the Inn River from Germany. He was the
fourth child of the third marriage of Alois Hitler, a customs official. Alois
Hitler was 51 years old when Adolf was born. Adolfs mother, Klara Polzl, was 28
years old. She was a farmer's daughter.
Alois
Hitler was born to an unmarried woman named Anna Maria Schicklgruber. A
wandering miller named Johann Georg Hiedler married her about five years later.
Hiedler died in 1856, when Alois was 20 years old, having never recognized
Alois as his child. In 1876,
Hiedler's
brother arranged for Alois to be registered as the legitimate son of Johann
Georg and Maria Hiedler. The priest who made the entry spelled the name
"Hitler." Years later, before he came to power, some of Hitler's
political opponents called him Schicklgruber as an insult. Only four of Alois
Hitler's eight children lived to adulthood. Adolf had a sister, Paula; a half
brother,
Alois;
and a half sister, Angela.
About
six years after Adolfs birth, his father retired and moved near Linz, Austria.
Adolf received good marks in primary school, but he was a poor student in
secondary school. His low marks angered his harsh, ill- tempered father. Alois
wanted his son to have a career as a civil servant. But the boy wanted to be an
artist.
Alois
Hitler died in 1903, and Adolf left secondary school 2} years later at the age
of 16. His mother drew a widow's pension and owned some property. Adolf did not
have to go to work. He spent his time daydreaming, drawing pictures, and
reading books.
Years in Vienna. In 1907, Hitler went to
Vienna, the capital of Austria-Hungary. He wanted to be an art student, but he
failed the entrance examination of the Academy of Fine Arts twice. His mother
died in 1907. Adolf had an income from the money his mother left her children
and inherited some money from his aunt. He also claimed an orphan's pension.
Sometimes he sold his drawings and paintings. He lived comfortably and idly
during most of his stay in Vienna, considering himself an artist.
Hitler
also concerned himself with political observations, admiring the effective
leadership and organization of the Social Democratic Party in
Vienna. He developed a growing hatred for Jews and Slavs. Like many German-
speaking Austrians, Hitler became fiercely nationalistic No form of government
could last, he thought, if it treated people of different nationalities
equally.
Corporal Hitler. In 1913, Hitler moved
to Munich, Germany. The Austrian Army called him for a physical examination,
but he was found unfit for service.
World
War I began in August 1914. Hitler volunteered immediately for service in the
German Army and was accepted. He served valiantly as a messenger on the West-
ern Front for most of the war, taking part in some of the bloodiest battles. He
was wounded and twice decorated for bravery. But Hitler rose only to the rank
of corporal. When Germany surrendered in November 1918, he was in a military
hospital recovering from temporary blindness that resulted from his exposure
in battle to mustard gas. He was deeply shaken by news of the armistice. He
believed that the unity of the German nation was threatened, and that he must
attempt to save Germany.
Rise to power
Defeat
in World War I shocked the German people. Despair and turmoil increased as the
army returned to a bankrupt country. Millions of Germans could not find work. A
socialist-liberal republic replaced the defeated empire (see Germany
[The Weimar Republic!).
After
World War I, Germany was forced to sign the Treaty of Versailles. The treaty held
Germany responsible for the war. It stripped the nation of much territory and
restricted the German Army to 100,000 men. It also provided for a 15-year
foreign occupation of an area of western Germany called the Rhineland. But the
harshest part was the demand that Germany pay huge reparations
(payments for war damages). The sums demanded the
treaty were so great that they made peace difficult Nationalists, Communists,
and others attacked the new government. The nationalists demanded punishment
for the "criminals" who had signed the treaty.
Important dates in Hitler's life
1914
(April 20) Born in Braunau, Austria.
1914-1918.1 Fought
in the German Army in World War I.
1923 Led
the Beer Hall Putsch.
1924 Began to write Mein
Kampf while imprisoned for treason 1933 Named chancellor
of
Germany; began rearming Germany.
1936 Sent his troops into the Rhineland.
1939 Began World War II by invading Poland.
1945 Committed suicide in Berlin.
Birth of the Nazi Party. After Hitler recovered
from the effects of the mustard gas, he returned to Munich and
remained in the army until March 1920. In the autumn of 1919, he began to
attend meetings of a small nationalist group called the German Workers' Party.
He joined the party and changed its name to the National Socialist German
Workers' Party. The group became known as the Nazi Party. The Nazis called for
the union of all Germans into one nation, including the Austrians and German
minorities in Czechoslovakia and other countries. They demanded that citizens
of non-German or Jewish origin be deprived of German citizenship, and they called
for the cancellation of the Treaty of Versailles.
Hitler
was a skilful politician and organizer. He became leader of the Nazis and
quickly built up party membership—partly by his ability to stir crowds with his
speeches. Hitler attacked the government and declared that the Nazi Party could
restore the economy, assure work for all, and lead Germany to greatness again.
Hitler
also organized a private army he called storm troopers. He
used brown-shirted uniforms and the swastika emblem to give his party and the
storm troopers— known as the SA—a sense of unity and power (see Swastika). The
troopers fought the armies of the Communist, Social Democratic, and other
parties who opposed Nazi ideas or tried to break up Nazi Party rallies.
By
October 1923, the storm troopers numbered 15,000 members. They had a
considerable number of machine guns and rifles.
The Beer Hall Putsch. In 1923, Germany was in
deep trouble. France and Belgium had sent troops to occupy the Ruhr District,
the chief industrial region. German . workers there responded by going on
strike. The strike aggravated a crisis in Germany's economy, which had already
been weakened by the reparations payments, and German money lost almost all
value. Communist and nationalist revolts flared up throughout Germany, and the
state of Bavaria was in open conflict with the central government in Berlin.
Hitler saw an opportunity amid these troubles to overthrow both the Bavarian
and national German governments.
On
Nov. 8,1923, at a rally in a Munich beer hall, Hitler proclaimed a Nazi
revolution, or putsch. The next day, he tried to seize the Bavarian government in what
became known as the Beer Hall Putsch. Hitler, supported by the German General
Erich F. W. Ludendorff, led over 2,000 storm troopers on a march against the
Bavarian government. But state police opened fire and stopped the procession,
killing 16 marchers. The plot failed. Hitler was arrested and sentenced to
five years in prison.
Mein Kampf. While he was
imprisoned, Hitler began writing his book Mein Kampf (My
Struggle). In the book, he stated his beliefs and his ideas for Germany's
future, including his plan to conquer much of Europe. Territories lost in
World War I would be recovered. Austria and parts of Czechoslovakia where
Germans lived would be added to Germany. The growing German nation would seize
lebensraum (living space) from Poland, the Soviet
Union, and other countries to the east.
Hitler
also wrote that Germans represented a superior form of humanity. They must
stay "pure," he said, by avoiding marriage to Jews and Slavs. Hitler
blamed the Jews for the evils of the world. He accused them of corrupting
everything of ethical and national value. He said: "By defending myself
against the Jews, I am doing the Lord's work." Democracy, said Hitler,
could lead only to Communism. A dictatorship was the only way to save Germany
from the threats of Communism and Jewish treason.
Rise of the Nazis. Hitler was freed about nine months after his
trial. He left prison in December 1924.
Great
changes had taken place in Germany during 1924. A schedule for Germany's
reparations payments helped stabilize the German currency, and the nation
showed signs of recovering from the war. Most people had work, homes, food, and
hope for the future.
The
government had outlawed the Nazis after the Beer Hall Putsch. Many party
members had drifted into other political groups. After Hitler was released from
prison, he began to rebuild his party. He gradually convinced the government
that the party would act legally, and the government lifted its ban on the
Nazis. Hitler won friends in small towns, in trade unions, and among farmers
and a few business people and industrialists. He also set up an elite party
guard, the Schutzstaffel, known as the SS. By 1929, though the Nazis
had not yet gained substantial voter support, their organization and discipline
had made them an important minority party.
By
this time, Hitler had assembled some of the people who would help him rise to
power. They included Joseph Goebbels, the chief Nazi propagandist; Hermann
Goering, who became second in command to Hitler; Rudolf Hess, Hitler's
faithful private secretary; Heinrich Himmler, the leader of the SS; Ernst Rohm,
the chief of the SA; and Alfred Rosenberg, the party philosopher.
In
1930, the worldwide Great Depression hit Germany. Workers again faced
unemployment and hunger. That same year, Germany agreed to the Young Plan of
1929 to reschedule reparations payments. In 1929, Hitler had launched a
campaign to defeat the plan. This campaign made him a political force
throughout the country. He led protest marches, organized mass meetings, and
delivered speeches all over Germany.
Hitler
used his old arguments in the campaign against the Young Plan and in a national
election campaign that took place in 1930. But he toned down his violent
speeches against Jews, which had failed to attract many votes. Hitler promised
to rid Germany of Communists and other "enemies" and to reunite
Germany and all the other parts of Europe in which German was spoken.
In
1932, five major elections were held in Germany as its leaders struggled to
give the nation political stability. In the July elections for the Reichstag
(parliament), the Nazis became Germany's strongest party, receiving nearly 38
per cent of the vote. Leaders of the other parties offered Hitler Cabinet
posts in exchange for Nazi support But as leader of the strongest party, he
refused to accept any arrangement that did not make him chancellor
[prime
minister) of Germany.
The
majority of the German people and the leading politicians did not want Hitler
to become chancellor. They understood that he would make himself dictator and
set up a reign of terror. Germany's president, Paul Von Hindenburg, also had serious misgivings about Hitler.
But the 85-year-old Hindenburg, persuaded by his friends and his son Oskar,
accepted Hitler's promise to act lawfully if he were named to form a
government. On Jan. 30,1933, Hindenburg named Hitler chancellor.
Dictator of Germany
There
were only two Nazis in, the Cabinet besides Hitler— Goering and Wilhelm Frick.
The rest of the 11 - member Cabinet was made up of politicians who were more
moderate than the Nazis. The vice chancellor, Franz von Papen, and his
political allies thought this arrangement would limit Hitler's power. But
Hitler had never settled for anything less than full control. He moved steadily
toward dictatorship. There was no place for freedom under his government, which
Hitler called the Third Reich (see Reich).
The New Order. The Nazis, through
Frick's key position as minister of the interior, controlled all national
police authority. Goering controlled the Prussian police. An emergency decree
signed by Hindenburg on Feb. 4, 1933, gave the Nazis legal authority to prohibit assemblies, to
outlaw newspapers and other publications, and to arrest people on suspicion of
treason. The Nazis were thus able to put down much of their political
opposition. Goering created an auxiliary police force made up of thousands of
storm troopers and ordered them to shoot in encounters with
"enemies."
On
Feb. 27,1933, a fire began that destroyed the Reichstag building. Many
historians believe that it was planned by the Nazis. A pro-Communist Dutch
anarchist was found at the site of the fire and admitted that he had started
it. The Nazis quickly blamed the Communists. Hindenburg signed another
emergency decree that gave the government almost unlimited powers.
Elections
for a new Reichstag were held on March 5, 1933. Hitler hoped to win more than
50 per cent of the vote for the Nazi Party. But the party received only 43.9
per cent despite using terror to influence voters.
After
the election, the Communist deputies were arrested or not admitted to the
Reichstag. This gave the Nazis a majority of the seats. On March 23,1933, the Nazi-dominated
Reichstag passed a law "for the removal of distress from the people and
the state." This law, known as the Enabling Act, gave the government full
dictatorial powers and, in effect, suspended basic civil and human rights for
four years. When the president had signed it, Hitler had a firm
"legal" basis on which to govern as he pleased. He had also destroyed
the constitution through outwardly legal means.
By
mid-July 1933, the government had outlawed freedom of the press, all trade
unions, and all political parties except the Nazis. The Gestapo
(secret state police) hunted down the enemies and opponents of the government.
People were jailed or shot on suspicion alone. By the time Hindenburg died in
August 1934, Hitler ruled Germany completely. He assumed the title Fiihrer
undReichskanzler (leader and reich chancellor).
The
Nazis used the press, radio, and films to flood Germany with propaganda
praising the New Order, Hitler's term for his reordering of German
society and for his plans to reorder the rest of Europe. The regime applauded
military training, rearmament, national pride, and industry. Jews were forced
out of the civil service, universities and schools, and the professions and
managerial positions. In 1935, German Jews were declared citizens of lesser
rights. Thousands left the country. Many who stayed were sent to concentration
camps along with hundreds of thousands of political suspects. A person needed
official permission to accept work, change jobs, move, or travel abroad. The government
regulated wages, housing, and production of goods. All workers and employers
were supposed to belong to the German Labour Front, which was intended to
replace Germany's trade unions. Through the Labour Front, the government
regulated production, wages, working hours, and leisure activities.
Hitler
also set up organizations for young people between the ages of 6 and 18. These
groups included the Hitler Youth for boys 14 years and older and the Society
of German Maidens for girls 14 years and older. The organizations were designed to
condition German children to military discipline and to win their loyalty to
the Nazi government. All German children were required to join such groups from
the age of 10. They wore uniforms, marched, exercised, and learned Nazi
beliefs.
The
Nazis taught children to spy on their own families and report any anti-Nazi
criticism they might hear.
A
network of spies kept watch on the German people and maintained an atmosphere
of terror. The Reichstag met only to listen to Hitler's public speeches. Judges
and courts continued to function, but Hitler or his lieutenants reversed any
decision they did not agree with.
The road
to war. From 1933 onward, Hitler prepared Germany for war. He rearmed the
nation, first secretly, then in open violation of the Treaty of Versailles. No
nation acted to stop him, and so Hitler's steps became bolder. Hitler planned
to establish Germany as the world's leading power and to destroy the Jewish
people.
In
1936, Hitler sent troops into the Rhineland, again violating the Treaty of
Versailles. His generals had opposed this dangerous challenge to France. But
Hitler guessed correctly that France would not stop him. The stationing of
German troops in the Rhineland was the first of the Nazi dictators victories
without war.
In
March 1938, Hitler's troops invaded Austria. Austria then became part of
Germany. In September, France and Great Britain consented to Hitler's
occupation of the German-speaking areas of Czechoslovakia that had belonged to
Austria-Hungary before World War I ended (see Munich Agreement). After this
move, Hitler said he wanted no more territory. But after each success, he
planned a new take-over. He took control of the rest of Czechoslovakia in March
1939.
Poland
came next on Hitler's list. But Britain and France took action to try to stop
any further German expansion. They guaranteed Poland's independence, saying
that they would go to war against Germany if Hitler attacked Poland. Hitler doubted
that they would do so.
In
August 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed treaties of friendship. They
promised mutual cooperation, trade privileges, and neutrality in case of war
with other countries. A secret part of the treaties divided Poland between
Germany and the Soviet Union and promised the Soviet Union other territory in
eastern Europe. On Sept 1,1939, Germany invaded Poland. Britain and France
declared war on Germany two days later.
World War II. Hitler's armies overran Poland in just a few
weeks. In the spring of 1940, they easily conquered Denmark, Norway, the
Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France. Benito Mussolini, Italy's
dictator, declared war on France and Britain on June 10,1940, when the defeat
of France seemed certain. On June 22,1940, France signed an armistice with
Germany.
Britain
fought on alone. A major German air offensive failed to weaken British
resistance. Hitler kept delaying an invasion of Britain. Instead, in July 1940,
he began to consider an invasion of the Soviet Union. He explained to his
generals that Britain would not surrender until its last potential ally on the
European continent had been defeated.
In
June 1941, the attack on the Soviet Union began. At first, the German forces
made rapid progress. But their advance began to slow in November. By December,
it was halted outside Moscow. An unusually bitter winter, Soviet
reinforcements, and supplies sent by the United States helped the Soviet forces
stop the Germans and begin to push them back during the winter. Renewed German
attacks in 1942 and 1943 could not break through. During the Battle of
Stalingrad, which lasted for five months during 1942 and 1943, the Soviets
wiped out an entire German army of 300,000 men. This German defeat was a major
turning point in the war.
While
his empire lasted, Hitler directed the storm troopers, Nazi officials, and
members of the army and the civil service in a campaign of mass slaughter.
About 6 million Jews—over two-thirds of the Jews of Europe— were murdered. More
than 3 million Soviet prisoners of war were starved and worked to death. Hitler’s
victims also included large numbers of Gypsies, Poles, Slavs, Jehovah's
Witnesses, priests and ministers, mental patients, and Communists and other
political opponents.
The
German resistance had tried since 1938 to kill Hitler and overthrow the Nazis.
But repeated plots failed.
On
July 20,1944, Hitler narrowly escaped death when a German Army officer placed a
bomb in Hitler's briefing room.
Early
in 1945, the Allies marched into the heart of Germany against rapidly
dwindling opposition. For a detailed story of Germany in the war, see World
War II.
Death. By April 1945, Hitler had become a broken man. His head, hands,
and feet trembled, and he was tortured by stomach cramps. Eva Braun, Hitler's
mistress since the 1930's, joined him at his headquarters in a bomb shelter
under the Reich Chancellery in Berlin. She and Hitler were married there on
April 29. The next day, they killed themselves. Aides burned their bodies. Seven
days later, Germany surrendered.
Early life
Boyhood
Years in
Vienna
Rise to power
Birth of the
Nazi Party
The Beer
Hall Putsch
Mein Kampf
Rise of the
Nazis
Dictator of Germany
The New
Order
The road to
war
World War II
Death
Questions
As a young man,
what did Hitler want to study?
What was the
Beer Hall Putsch? Mein Kampf? Why
was Hitler named chancellor of Germany?
How did
Hitler touch off World War II?
How did
Hitler win the support of the German people?
What were
Hitler's main goals as dictator?
Why did
Hitler order the invasion of the Soviet Union during
World War
II?
How did
Hitler set young Germans against their parents?
As a boy,
how did Hitler anger his father?
Why did no
nation challenge Hitler before 1939?
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