This Day in History - August 2 -
1934 : Hitler becomes fuhrer
With the death of German President Paul von Hindenburg,
Chancellor Adolf Hitler becomes absolute dictator of Germany under the
title of Fuhrer, or "Leader." The German army took an oath of
allegiance to its new commander-in-chief, and the last remnants of
Germany's democratic government were dismantled to make way for
Hitler's Third Reich. The Fuhrer assured his people that the Third
Reich would last for a thousand years, but Nazi Germany collapsed just
11 years later.
Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn, Austria, in 1889. As a
young man he aspired to be a painter, but he received little public
recognition and lived in poverty in Vienna. Of German descent, he came
to detest Austria as a "patchwork nation" of various ethnic groups, and
in 1913 he moved to the German city of Munich in the state of Bavaria.
After a year of drifting, he found direction as a German soldier in
World War I, and was decorated for his bravery on the battlefield. He
was in a military hospital in 1918, recovering from a mustard gas
attack that left him temporarily blind, when Germany surrendered.
He was appalled by Germany's defeat, which he blamed on "enemies
within"--chiefly German communists and Jews--and was enraged by the
punitive peace settlement forced on Germany by the victorious Allies.
He remained in the German army after the war, and as an intelligence
agent was ordered to report on subversive activities in Munich's
political parties. It was in this capacity that he joined the tiny
German Workers' Party, made up of embittered army veterans, as the
group's seventh member. Hitler was put in charge of the party's
propaganda, and in 1920 he assumed leadership of the organization,
changing its name to Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (National Socialist German Workers' party), which was abbreviated to Nazi.
The party's socialist orientation was little more than a ploy to
attract working-class support; in fact, Hitler was fiercely right-wing.
But the economic views of the party were overshadowed by the Nazis'
fervent nationalism, which blamed Jews, communists, the Treaty of
Versailles, and Germany's ineffectual democratic government for the
country's devastated economy. In the early 1920s, the ranks of Hitler's
Bavarian-based Nazi party swelled with resentful Germans. A
paramilitary organization, the Sturmabteilung (SA), was formed
to protect the Nazis and intimidate their political opponents, and the
party adopted the ancient symbol of the swastika as its emblem.
In November 1923, after the German government resumed the payment of
war reparations to Britain and France, the Nazis launched the "Beer
Hall Putsch"--an attempt at seizing the German government by force.
Hitler hoped that his nationalist revolution in Bavaria would spread to
the dissatisfied German army, which in turn would bring down the
government in Berlin. However, the uprising was immediately suppressed,
and Hitler was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison for
treason.
Imprisoned in Landsberg fortress, he spent his time there dictating his autobiography, Mein Kampf
(My Struggle), a bitter and rambling narrative in which he sharpened
his anti-Semitic and anti-Marxist beliefs and laid out his plans for
Nazi conquest. In the work, published in a series of volumes, he
developed his concept of the FÚhrer as an absolute dictator who would
bring unity to German people and lead the "Aryan race" to world
supremacy.
Political pressure from the Nazis forced the Bavarian government to
commute Hitler's sentence, and he was released after nine months.
However, Hitler emerged to find his party disintegrated. An upturn in
the economy further reduced popular support of the party, and for
several years Hitler was forbidden to make speeches in Bavaria and
elsewhere in Germany.
The onset of the Great Depression in 1929 brought a new opportunity
for the Nazis to solidify their power. Hitler and his followers set
about reorganizing the party as a fanatical mass movement, and won
financial backing from business leaders, for whom the Nazis promised an
end to labor agitation. In the 1930 election, the Nazis won six million
votes, making the party the second largest in Germany. Two years later,
Hitler challenged Paul von Hindenburg for the presidency, but the
84-year-old president defeated Hitler with the support of an anti-Nazi
coalition.
Although the Nazis suffered a decline in votes during the November
1932 election, Hindenburg agreed to make Hitler chancellor in January
1933, hoping that Hitler could be brought to heel as a member of his
cabinet. However, Hindenburg underestimated Hitler's political
audacity, and one of the new chancellor's first acts was to exploit the
burning of the Reichstag (parliament) building as a pretext for calling
general elections. The police under Nazi Hermann Goering suppressed
much of the party's opposition before the election, and the Nazis won a
bare majority. Shortly after, Hitler took on dictatorial power through
the Enabling Acts.
Chancellor Hitler immediately set about arresting and executing
political opponents, and even purged the Nazis' own SA paramilitary
organization in a successful effort to win support from the German
army. With the death of President Hindenburg on August 2, 1934, Hitler
united the chancellorship and presidency under the new title of FÜhrer.
As the economy improved, popular support for Hitler's regime became
strong, and a cult of FÜhrer worship was propagated by Hitler's capable
propagandists.
German remilitarization and state-sanctioned anti-Semitism drew
criticism from abroad, but the foreign powers failed to stem the rise
of Nazi Germany. In 1938, Hitler implemented his plans for world
domination with the annexation of Austria, and in 1939 Germany seized
all of Czechoslovakia. Hitler's invasion of Poland on September 1,
1939, finally led to war with Germany and France. In the opening years
of World War II, Hitler's war machine won a series of stunning
victories, conquering the great part of continental Europe. However,
the tide turned in 1942 during Germany's disastrous invasion of the
USSR.
By early 1945, the British and Americans were closing in on Germany
from the west, the Soviets from the east, and Hitler was holed up in a
bunker under the chancellery in Berlin awaiting defeat. On April 30,
with the Soviets less than a mile from his headquarters, Hitler
committed suicide with Eva Braun, his mistress whom he married the
night before.
Hitler left Germany devastated and at the mercy of the Allies, who
divided the country and made it a major battlefield of Cold War
conflict. His regime exterminated nearly six millions Jews and an
estimated 250,000 Gypsies in the Holocaust, and an indeterminable
number of Slavs, political dissidents, disabled persons, homosexuals,
and others deemed unacceptable by the Nazi regime were systematically
eliminated. The war Hitler unleashed upon Europe took even more
lives--close to 20 million people killed in the USSR alone. Adolf
Hitler is reviled as one of history's greatest villains.