Notes: Chapter Seventeen.


1. IMT.

2. IMT. See also: Wiesenthal].

3. Bullock p. 140, 141. Heiden p. 305, 306. Shirer p. 121. Manvell-Fraenkel p. 29, says that Hitler had issued the order replacing Erhard Heiden with Himmler on January 6, as does Höhne p. 56-59.

3.5. Höhne p. 60. Read p. 179, 180.

4. Trevor-Roper p. 167.

5. Read p. 180.

6. Read p. 203.

7. Höhne p. 64, 65. Read p. 182.

8. Bullock p. 164. Shirer p. 138, says this occurred on the 15th.

9. Shirer p. 139.

10. IMT .

11. Heiden p. 404.

12. Evans I p. 272, 273. Read p. 185. Fest p. 273, says, contrarily, that the NSDAP and the Red Front Fighters were in "the grip of virtual war . . . for days."

13. Read p. 181.

14. Read p. 181.

15. Read 181.

16. Kershaw p. 309. Bullock II p. 161, 162. Bullock p. 146, says this occurred on June 7. Payne p. 224, says the agreement was signed on August 31. Heiden p. 338, says only "spring of 1929.".

17. Trevor-Roper p. 65.

18. IMT.

19. Bullock p. 146, 147. Kershaw p. 310. Fest p. 260, 261. Toland p. 246, 247.

20. Kershaw p. 310. Read p. 185. Bullock II p. 162, 163, says that 200,000 Nazis attend, with 60,000 SA men in uniform, as does Fest p. 264. Heiden p. 316, says that there were 60,000 uniformed SA in ranks.

21. Kershaw p. 310. Read p. 185.

22. Heiden p. 341.

23. Bullock p. 149.

24. Manvell-Fraenkel p. 31.

24.5. Read p. 180, 181. Note: Although she was not present, and had no evidence to prove her case, Gudrun later claimed that her father was murdered by his British captives in the last days of World War II, denying the official (and eyewitness) story that he had committed suicide with cyanide. Gudrun is still alive at the time of this writing (2013), and she has never renounced Hitler, Nazi ideology, or the crimes of her father.

25. Kershaw p. 310. Bullock II p. 163.

26. Read p. 184. Bullock p. 140, says that Goebbels became propaganda chief of the NSDAP in November 1929.

27. IMT.

28. Bullock p. 134, 150. Kershaw p. 351. Shirer p. 131. Payne p. 222. Fest p. 266. Heiden p. 356, 384. Sigmund p. 135. Read p. 186, says that Hitler moved in on the 10th, not the 5th.

29. Toland p. 240, 241, 247.

30. Bullock p. 152. Fest p. 269. Payne p. 232

31. Bullock p. 146. Evans I p. 247. Fest p. 259. Heiden p. 338. Kershaw p. 311. Payne p. 233. Shirer p. 136. Trevor-Roper p. 51.

32. Evans I p. 234, 235. Fest p. 268. Heiden p. 331. Herzstein p. 68. Kershaw p. 313. Read p. 184, 185. Shirer p. 136

33. Toland p. 248. Sigmund p. 152.

34. Heiden p. 412. Kershaw p. 319. Read p. 182.

35. Sigmund p. 154

36. Kershaw p. 319. Read p. 182.

37. Kershaw p. 319. Read p. 183.

38. Sigmund p. 135.

39. Fest p. 263.

40. Read p. 187. Burleigh p. 118.

41. Bullock p. 150. Fest p. 265. Kershaw p. 319. Read p. 182, says that the Nazis gained six seats in the Thuringian Landtag, not three.

42. Bullock p. 151. Bullock II p. 163. Fest p. 263. Heiden p. 342. Kershaw p. 310. Read p. 185. Toland p. 249.

43. Sigmund p. 153

44. Bullock p. 150. Shirer p. 120.

45. Burleigh p. 119. Heiden p. 404. Payne p. 234, 235. Toland p. 249, 250. Read p. 189, says that Ali (Albert) Hoehler was actually a Communist Red Front Fighter, as does Evans I p. 266-268.

46. Read p. 191.

47. Read p. 191.

48. Shirer p. 139.

49. Kershaw p. 320. Shirer p. 148. Turner p. 193

50. Fest p. 266.

51. Bullock p. 167. Burleigh p. 119. Toland p. 250.

52. Burleigh p. 119.

53. Sigmund p. 114.

54. Bullock p. 155. Fest p. 267.

55. Kershaw p. 356. IMT.

56. Bullock p. 147. Read p. 192.

57. Bullock p. 167.

58. Kershaw p. 326.

59. Bullock II p. 169. Evans I p. 247. Heiden p. 345. Kershaw p. 323, 324. Read p. 193. Shirer p. 136. Turner p. 100-104.

60. Evans I p. 250. Kershaw p. 324. Payne p. 233. Shirer p. 137.

61. Bullock p. 150.

62. IMT.

63. IMT.

64. Kershaw p. 326. Read p. 194, places this meeting on the 26th. Heiden p. 327, says this occurred in May 1930.

65. Kershaw p. 329.

66. Bullock p. 156. Bullock II p. 170, 171. Fest p. 278, 279. Höhne p. 72. Kershaw p. 327. Read p. 196. Shirer p. 147. Toland, p. 251, says that these meetings took place in April.

67. Bullock p. 157. Fest p. 279, 280. Shirer p. 147.

68. Kershaw p. 238. Turner p. 121, 122.

69. Bullock p. 155. Fest p. 267. Kershaw p. 333.

70. Kershaw p. 327.

71. Fest p. 281. Toland p. 252.

72. Fest. p 281.

73. Fest. p 281. Toland p. 252.

74. Kershaw p. 327, 328. Heiden p. 349. Fest p. 281.

75. Heiden p. 328.

76. Kershaw p. 324, 328. Heiden p. 345. Bullock p. 154.

77. Bullock II p. 172, 173. Kershaw p. 324, 325. Read p. 197, 198. Toland p. 253, 254. Turner p. 108.

78. Bullock p. 162.

79. Read p. 197.

80. Biondi p. 7.

81. Heiden p. 348.

82. IMT.

83. Read p. 199.

84. Read p. 199.

85. Trevor-Roper p. 382.

86. Read p. 198.

87. Read p. 200.

88. Bullock p. 184. Bullock II p. 231. Fest p. 282. Höhne p. 75. Kershaw p. 347. Heiden p. 350. Payne p. 235. Read p. 200, 201. Toland p. 260.

89. Bullock II p. 231. Fest p. 283. Kershaw p. 347. Read p. 201, claims that Pfeffer had been removed from office earlier than this day.

90. Fest p. 295.

91. Bullock II p. 231. Fest p. 283. Heiden p. 409. Höhne p. 75. Kershaw p. 348. Payne p. 286.

92. IMT.

93. Höhne p. 75, 76.

94. Höhne p. 75.

95. Kershaw p. 330.

96. Heiden p. 316.

97. Kershaw p. 330.

98. Toland p. 254.

99. Block II p. 22. Bullock p. 161. Bullock II p. 173, 234. Burleigh p. 124. Evans I p. 259-261. Fest p. 287. Heiden p. 353. Kershaw p. 333, 335. Manchester p. 401. Payne p. 234. Read p. 201. Shirer p. 137, 138. Toland p. 254, 255. Turner p. 111, 124.

100. Bullock II p. 229, 230. Evans I p. 249. Kershaw p. 337. Fest p. 291. Shirer p. 140. Toland p. 255.

101. Bullock p. 165, 166. Fest p. 291.

102. Fest p. 292. Read p. 202. Turner p. 124.

103. Heiden p. 405. Bullock p. 166.

104. Bullock p. 166.

105. Kershaw p. 337, 338. Shirer p. 139-142.

106. Toland p. 255, 256.

107. Heiden p. 397, 398. Shirer p. 139, 140.

108. Fest p. 288. Toland p. 256.

109. Kershaw p. 337.

110. Heiden p. 355. Bullock p. 161

111. Toland p. 256.

112. Bullock p. 161, 162. Bullock II p. 227. Payne p. 234.

113. Kershaw p. 358.

114. Bullock p. 152.

115. Evans I p. 249. Kershaw p. 338.

116. Kershaw p. 339.

117. Heiden p. 364.

118. Heiden p. 363-365.

119. Trevor-Roper p. 400.

120. Speer p. 95, 96.

121. Toland p. 256. Read p. 205. Sigmund p. 40.

122. Bullock p. 172, 173. Heiden p. 404. Fest p. 301. Shirer p. 144. Turner p. 127.

123. Heiden p. 355.

124. Read p. 215. Sigmund p.75.

125. Read p. 203.

126. Fest p. 290.

127. Heiden 370, 371. Kershaw p. 348. Toland p. 260, claims that the announcement was made on January 4, 1931.

128. Speer p. 15. Toland p. 246.

129. IMT.

130. IMT.

131. Read p. 207, 208. Sigmund p.76.

132. Read p. 205. Sigmund p. 40, 41.

133. IMT.

References:

(Biondi) SS Officers List: SS-Standartenführer to SS-Oberstgruppenführer, edited by Robert Biondi. Schiffer Military History Publishing, 2000.

(Bloch) Ribbentrop, by Michael Bloch. 1992 Crown Publishers, HC

(Bullock I) Hitler, A Study In Tyranny by Alan Bullock. Harper Torchbooks TBP Edition, 1964.

(Bullock II) Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives by Alan Bullock. ALFRED A. KNOPF, HC 1992.

(Burleigh) The Third Reich: A New History, by Michael Burleigh. 2000. Hill and Wang, HC.

(Calvin) Calvin Tatsachen und Lgen um Hitler, 1932, on-line version in English.

(Collier) Germany 1919-45, by Martin Collier. Heinemann Advanced History, PB. 2000.

(Evans I) The Coming of the Third Reich, by Richard J. Evans. 2003 Penguin HC

(Fest I) The Face of the Third Reich by J. Fest, 1970, online version.

(Fest II) Hitler. Joachim Fest. A Helen and Kurt Wolf Book. Hardcover. 1974.

(Fischer) The Ruhr Crisis, 1923-1924. By Conan Fischer. Oxford. 2003

(Flood) Hitler: The Path to Power. Charles Bracelen Flood. Houghton Mifflen Company. First Printing, Hardcover.1989

(Hamann) Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship by Brigitte Hamann, Translated from the German by Thomas Thornton. Oxford University Press, 1999

(Heiden) Der Fuehrer: Hitler's Rise to Power by Konrad Heiden. Translated by Ralph Manheim. Houghton Mifflin first printing, 1944

(Hepp) The Hepp Letter online version.

(Herzstein) Adolf Hitler and the German Trauma 1913-1945: An Interpretation of the Nazi Phenomenon. Robert Edwin Herzstein. 1974 Perigee TPB

(Höhne) The Order of the Death's Head: The Story of Hitler's S.S. by Heinz Höhne. 1989 Ballantine PB

(Kershaw) Vol. 1, Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris by I. Kershaw, 1998 First American Trade Paperback Edition. Vol. 2, Hitler: 1936-1945 Nemesis by I. Kershaw, First American Hardcover Edition, 2000.

(Kubizek) Adolf Hitler, Mein Jugendfreund by A. Kubizek, 1953

(Manchester) The Arms of Krupp, 1587・968: The Rise and Fall of the Industrial Dynasty That Armed Germany at War. By William Raymond Manchester. Little, Brown and Company. HC 1968

(Manvell-Fraenkel) Himmler. By Roger Manvell and Heinrich Fraenkel. Warner Paperback Library. Second Printing, July 1972.

(Maser) Hitler: Legand, Myth, And Reality by W. Maser

(MK) Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler. 2 volumes, 1926-1927, on-line version.

(Nagorski) Truman Smith. By Andrew Nagorski - on-line.

(Nicholls} Weimar and the Rise of Hitler, by A.J. Nicholls. 2000. New York: St. Martin's Press

(Paula Hitler) Paula Hitler Interview at Berchtesgaden, 5th June 1946, Records of the Army Staff (G2), Record Group 319 IRR XE575580.

(Payne) The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler by Robert Payne, Praeger Publishers, 1973.

(Pyta) Hindenburg. Herrschaft zwischen Hohenzollern und Hitler, by Wolfram Pyta. 2009. Siedler Verlag, München (Read) The Devil's Disciples: Hitler's Inner Circle. By Anthony Read. W.W. Norton & Company. First American Edition, 2004

(Rosenbaum) Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of his Evil by Ron Rosenbaum. Harper Perennial TPB, 1999

(Schwarzschild) World in Trance. By Leopold Schwarzschild. Hamish Hamilton. 1943

(Shirer II) The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. By William L. Shirer. Simon and Shuster Trade Paperback, 1981 Edition. 1960

(Smith) Adolf Hitler: His Family, Childhood and Youth by Bradley F. Smith, Hoover Institute, 1967

(Speer) Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs, by Albert Speer. 1970. Collier Books, Macmillan Publishing New York, TPB.

(Sigmund) Women of the Third Reich. Anna Maria Sigmund. 2000. NDE Publishing, HC

(Toland) Adolf Hitler by John Toland. In two volumes, hardcover, Doubleday, 1976.

(Tooley) National Identity and Weimar Germany: Upper Silesia and the Eastern Border, 1918-1922. By T. Hunt Tooley. The University of Nebraska Press. 1997

(Turner) German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler, by Henry Ahby Turner, Jr. Oxford University Press HC. 1985.

(Trevor-Roper) Hitler's Table Talk 1941-1944: His Private Conversations, edited by Hugh Trevor-Roper. Enigma Books, HC.

(Waite II) Vanguard of Nazism: The Free Corps Movement in Postwar Germany 1918-1923. By Robert G. L. Waite. 1969

(Wheeler-Bennett) The Nemesis of Power: German Army in Politics, 1918-1945. By Sir John Wheeler-Bennett. Palgrave Macmillan Publishing Company. 2005

(Williams) Corporal Hitler and the Great War 1914-1918, The List Regiment by John F. Williams. Cass Military Studies, 2005.

(Weber) Hitler's First War by Thomas Weber. Oxford University Press, 2010.



Click to join 3rdReichStudies

Click to join 3rdReichStudies





Disclaimer:The Propagander!™ includes diverse and controversial materials--such as excerpts from the writings of racists and anti-Semites--so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and anti-Semitic discourse. It is our sincere belief that only the informed citizen can prevail over the ignorance of Racialist "thought." Far from approving these writings, The Propagander!™ condemns racism in all of its forms and manifestations.

Fair Use Notice: This site--The Propagander!™--may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of historical, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, environmental, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a "fair use" of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.