Weimar and Nazi Germany
The Weimar Constitution
The impact of the Treaty of Versailles
1919 -1923: years of crisis?
The Munich Putsch
The Origins of the Nazi Party
Mein Kampf
1924 - 1929: A Golden era?
Gustav Stresemann
German Foreign Policy 1919 to 1933
Germany in the Depression
The Rise of the Nazi party
- Why did people vote for Hitler?
From Chancellor to Fuhrer
The failures of Weimar
Creating a totalitarian state
Nazi methods of control
- Organisation of the Nazi Party
- Obedience to the Fuhrer
Opposition to the Nazi's
- Nazi Ideology
The Economy under the Nazi's
- Schacht
- The 2nd 4 Year Plan
- Evaluation of the 4 Year Plan
- How successful was the policy of Autarky?
- German Labour Front
- Dr Robert Ley
Nazi Foreign Policy
- Did Hitler plan to have a Second World War?
Education in Nazi Germany
Women in Nazi Germany
The Holocaust
- The Jewish Problem in 1933
- Kristallnacht
- Anti-Jewish Legislation
- Policy 1933 - 1937
- Origins of Anti-Semitism
THE ORGANISATION OF THE NAZI PARTY AND THE IMPORTANCE OF HITLER
1. Hitler's Role
a. Note the sources p.112 for an idea of Hitler's skills as orator.
b. Note his charismatic leadership -
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belief in his own importance in Germany's future
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demonic willpower
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speeches - timing
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expression
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content
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"hypnotic" gaze
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identification with the people in their emotions and expectation
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his importance in holding the Party together
c. He virtually re-founded the Party in 1925, based upon the Führerprinzip. Cohesion and discipline was important in preventing the break up of the Party 1932-1933.
d. He personally designed the flag.
e. He recognised the importance of propaganda and was prepared to use every modern means available to spread the message during election campaigns.
2. Party Organisation
a. The country was divided into Gaus (areas), each headed by a Gauleiter, appointed by Hitler and subordinate to him but with considerable local freedom.
b. Associated organisations were set up for women, young people, students, lawyers, factory workers. Especially important was the "Nazi Welfare Organisation" which ran soup kitchens for people in distress.
c. Central propaganda machine under Goebbels.
d. Stress on local contacts. Nazis targeted key individuals in local communities, hoping they would influence others. (Note the example of Northeim)
e. Growing membership allowed for door-to-door campaigning and leafleting. Distribution of posters was widespread.
f. Considerable effort was made to train speakers. Over 6,000 had been trained by 1933. Speakers were licensed by the Party to ensure quality and were provided with booklets on policies and techniques. (Note the sources on p.115 SHP)
g. Use of a variety of strategies and modern technology:
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mass rallies; marches in uniform; music; lighting; disciplined enthusiasm; loudspeakers; film; slides; plans. Once in power they had access to radio and films. Their newspaper was the "Völkischer Beobachter".
h. They had a powerful message:
- volksgemeinschaft
- an end to economic ills
- Germany first
- strong leadership
- smash Communism and Jewish interests
- end Versailles
- secure lebensraum
i. An alliance with Alfred Hugenberg (DNVP) over opposition to the 1929 Young Plan, gave Hitler access to Hugenberg's vast media empire and to funds, enabling the Party to compete more effectively in elections. Through this, Hitler won apparent respectability, campaigning side by side with an established political party on a popular issue.
j. Most Party funds came from ordinary members and charges made for attending meetings. Some industrialists provided money, notably Thyssen, but this was not a major factor in success. Efficient cash collections made the Nazis better off than less well organised parties of the right.
k. The Nazis organised special sections to appeal to particular interest groups - students, lawyers, doctors, teachers, self-employed craftsmen and small businessmen. They also made a concerted effort to win farming votes. Walther Darré drew up an agrarian programme in 1930. The Nazis told the farmers what they wanted to hear: that their way of life was morally superior to urban life and should be preserved. The Nazi Party was therefore quick to take advantage of local grievances and to respond to national and regional issues.
3. The Role of the SA
Formed as the Sportabteilung 1920 (sports department) intended primarily to protect Nazi speakers, it was re-named Sturm-Abteilung 1921. By 1933, membership was 500,000. Brown shirts came from cheap, surplus German army tropical shirts, which were used after 1924.
- Röhm led them
"Since I am an immature and wicked man, war and unrest appeal to me more than good bourgeois order."
· over half came from the working class
· many were ruffians and bullies
· distributed pamphlets
· protected meetings
· used violence against Communists
· Brüning banned them in 1932. (They paraded instead without shirts)
· Papen allowed them back in an attempt to win Nazis support in June 1932
· many died as a result in street battles, nearly 100 in July1932 alone
· the SA focused attention on Hitler's determination to ban Communism: it appeared that he at least was doing something about it
· the SA created the impression of discipline and firm government
· fear of the SA persuaded some in power to bring Hitler into government, so that he would control the SA
4. Conclusion
Nazi success at the polls lay in combination of charismatic leadership; detailed Party organisation at a local level; impressive displays of unity and discipline; their powerful message of future national unity and pride, and terror tactics employed to intimidate the opposition and to coerce support. The example of Northeim gives a good indication of how these different factors could be employed. It must be remembered, however, that only 37% of Germans ever voted for Hitler. Many remained unpersuaded. Hitler's appeal was not universal nor was it inevitable that the tide of public support would bring him to power, as he later claimed
Adolf Hitler was raised Roman Catholic but later rejected organized religion and promoted a form of spiritualism that incorporated elements of Germanic paganism.
I'm only guessing, but maybe Hitler associated organized labor unions with communism. He disliked communism. I would research this more. There must be much written about it.
Hitler occupied the Czechoslovakian Sudetenland in late 1938, after the Munich Pact was organized by France and Great Britain on September 28, 1938.
Hitler is the last name of Adolf Hitler.
Hitler's father was beating him up and pushing him, when Hitler was just a child.
Adolf Hitler, My Role Model ;)
The organized name of the racial discrimination of Jews was called the holocoast. The holocoast was lead by Adolf Hitler the leader of his Nazi party
Adolf Hitler was raised Roman Catholic but later rejected organized religion and promoted a form of spiritualism that incorporated elements of Germanic paganism.
Adolf Hitler
Hilter was the leader of the Natzi's who rounded up and through the Jews in concentration campsYes Hitler blamed the Jews for all of Germany's problems. Also yes gave the orders to put them into concentration, but Hitler did not give the order to kill the Jews. He left that in the hands of his trusted henchmanHeinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich. So technically Hitler himself did not organize the killing of all of those jews. He just authorized it.
I'm only guessing, but maybe Hitler associated organized labor unions with communism. He disliked communism. I would research this more. There must be much written about it.
Hitler occupied the Czechoslovakian Sudetenland in late 1938, after the Munich Pact was organized by France and Great Britain on September 28, 1938.
if your question is how did he mantaine power? well id say through the nazi party and a real well organized facist goverment.
Hitler devoted a whole page in Mein Kampf to discussing cricket. He described the game as too complex and inefficient, contrasting it with his preference for more organized and disciplined sports like gymnastics and soccer.
Although the Hitler Youth ("Hitlerjugend") had a central leadership, most activities were the domain of local leaders of HY community groups. So the HY was very much a decentralized organization. Central management was largely supporting, a place where for instance local leaders could submit the names of promising boys for enrolment in an SS officer training school. And they organized periodically nationwide HY manifestations.
Hitler is the last name of Adolf Hitler.
Daddy hitler