Albert Speer

(1 of 8)


March 19, 1905: (Berthold Konrad Hermann) Albert Speer is born in Mannheim, Germany, the second of three sons. (Speer)

Note: The source for all items, unless otherwise noted, is the evidence presented to the International Military Tribunal (IMT) at the first Nuremberg Trial, between November 21, 1945 and October 1, 1946. As always, these excerpts from trial testimony should not necessarily be mistaken for fact. It should be kept in mind that they are the sometimes-desperate statements of hard-pressed defendants seeking to avoid culpability and shift responsibility from charges that, should they be found guilty, can possibly be punishable by death.

1918: The Speer family moves permanently into their summer home, Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg, in Heidelberg. (Speer)

1923: Speer enters the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology to begin architectural studies. (Speer)

From Speer's IMT testimony: I was born on 19 March 1905. My grandfather and my father were successful architects. At first I wanted to study mathematics and physics; but then I took up architecture, more because of tradition than inclination. I attended the universities at Munich and Berlin; and in 1929 at the age of 24, I was the first assistant at the technical college in Berlin. At the age of 27, in 1932, I went into business for myself until 1942.

1924: Speer transfers to the Technical University of Munich. One of his new teachers is Heinrich Tessenow. Note: Tessenow is Jewish. Speer will later intervene with the Minister of Education on Tessenow's behalf. Tessenow will verify this on his deathbed in 1950.


August 28, 1928: Speer weds Margarete 'Margret' Weber from Heidelberg. The couple will have six children; Albert (1934), Hilde (1936), Fritz (1937), Margarete Nissen (1938), Adolf, later renamed Arnold (1940) and Ernst (1942). (Speer, Sereny)

1929: Speer becomes Tessenow's First Assistant at the Technical University of Berlin. (Speer)

December 4, 1930: Speer attends a mass meeting of five-thousand students to hear Hitler speak for the first time. (Sereny)

From a letter by Speer, written in May 1953, to his daughter, Hilde, from Spandau: To start out with, when I first—I suppose one can say—encountered National Socialism about 1931, the party, probably in order not to discourage new applicants, was fairly reticent with regards to anti-Semitic propaganda, even though it certainly was part of their platform. In the economic climate of those years, communism--which has always benefited from bad times--had grown enormously and many people, including myself, came to wonder whether National Socialism, with its vitality and energy, wasn't the only valid alternative.

What was decisive for me was a speech Hitler made to students, and which my students finally persuaded me to attend. From what I had read in the opposition press, I expected to find a screaming, gesticulating fanatic in uniform, instead of which we were confronted with a quiet man in a dark suit who addressed us in the measured tones of an academic. I'm determined one day to look up newspaper of that time to see just what it was he said that so impressed me. But I don't think he attacked the Jews . . . .

[Hitler appeared]--greeted with incredible enthusiasm. Receptive as I am to atmosphere, already this had its effect on me: I felt goose-skin going down my spine. And then--I had only seen Pictures of him in uniform, his hair sort of wild, but here he was, in a good blue suit, looking civil and well-cared for . . . .

[What impressed most] was first his unexpected shyness and then the restraint he displayed, both in what he said and how he said it. Later I often noticed this tendency of shyness in Hitler when he found himself in the company of highly educated people who were superior to him in knowledge. In the second half of his speech, the shyness disappeared and he spoke with urgency and conviction ... of the need for young Germans to find pride . . . .

I can't remember Hitler berating the Jews in that speech to the students. After I became a member of the party, some very bright Jews I knew in Mannheim knew that I had joined and one day not long afterwards one of them said, to my astonishment, "If it weren't for their anti-Semitism, I'd be joining them myself." You see, it didn't look all that dangerous . . . . But anyway, as far as practicing anti-Semitism or even uttering anti-Semitic remarks, my conscience is entirely clear. I really had no aversion to them, or rather, no more than the slight discomfort all of us sometimes feel when in contact with them. (Sereny)

December 5, 1930: Goebbels' newspaper, Der Angruff, publishes excerpts from Hitler's December 4 speech:

[The First World War had] eliminated those who were the best and preserved the Minderwertigen [inferiors]. Finally the war and its corollaries left Germany to a preponderance of these inferiors. For the past twelve years the policies of this country--policies of rank egotism--have been those of inferior spirits.

When nations abandon the old and traditional concepts of honor and heroism in the mistaken belief that they are old-fashioned and outdated, it leads to a slow weakening of the people's fiber . . . . Heroic ideas attract heroic elements. Cowardly ideas rally cowards . . . . Examine our times, examine what gives life and verve to our time. Then make up your minds and make your choice. You need to find a way that allows you to become part of—to absorb you into—the life and future of this nation.

March 1, 1931: Speer quits his position as Tessenow's First Assistant, moves to Mannheim, becomes an independent architect and joins the SA and the Nazi Party as member number 474,481. (Speer, Sereny)

July 27, 1932: Goebbels' Diary:

The Fuehrer, late at night addresses 120,000 people at the Gruenewalder Stadium. The largest open-air rally the movement has ever organized. His words are greeted with indescribable ovations.

July 28, 1932: Speer receives his first architectural commission from the Nazi Party; renovating the new Nazi District Headquarters in Berlin. (Speer, Sereny)

From Speer's Spandau Draft: Our flatboats were packed [we were preparing to leave for a boating vacation] and we were to take the train to East Prussia that same night, but when I went to take my leave from Nagel [Speer's assistant] he told me that Hanke--who by now [had] become organizational chief [under Goebbels as Gauleiter] of the Gau Berlin--wanted to see me. And when I hurried over there he immediately said, "I've been looking for you everywhere. Wouldn't you like to build our new district HQ"? "I said, "Yes, certainly, if you want to entrust it to me."

"I'll propose it to 'the Doctor' [Goebbels] today, Hanke said. A few hours more and I would have been out of reach in the isolation of the Prussian lakes. For years after that, I considered it the luckiest coincidence of my life. And now? Well, anyway, it shows us how dizzyingly one's whole life can be affected by a few hours more or less . . . .

I worked day and night, easy enough for a 27-year-old with good nerves. A valuable support for me then was a young secretary [Annemarie Kemp] of Goebbels', who took on working overtime to type my tenders at night . . . . I didn't see much of Goebbels. They were preparing for the November election and he only came around a few times, hoarse and worn out, and didn't pretend much interest when we showed him around. (Sereny)

Note: The Spandau Draft is a first draft of Speer's best-selling memoir, Inside the Third Reich. Written during his post-Nuremberg incarceration, it differs in some respects from the published version. These differences strike the reader as being a more honest account when compared to the more calculated prose of the published version.

October 1, 1932: Speer completes his renovation of the Nazi District Headquarters in Berlin. (Speer, Sereny)

October 1, 1932 Goebbels' Diary:

Today we moved from our old, by now much-loved HQ to Vosstrasse, smack in the middle of the government district. How long will it be before we move again--to the Wilhelmstrasse [the Chancellery]?"

November 6, 1932: The Nazis suffer an electoral setback at the polls. Due to this change in fortune, money for architectural work on Nazi buildings will soon dry up completely, eventually forcing the Speers to move back to Mannheim. (Shirer)

January 30, 1933: Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany. (Shirer)

January 31, 1933 Goebbels' Diary:

It is almost like a dream. Wilhelmstrasse is ours. The Fuehrer is already working in the Chancellery. We are standing on the windows up there and watch as hundreds of thousands upon hundreds of thousands stream by their ancient President and young Chancellor and, by the light of thousands of torches, cheer and sing their gratitude . . . . The new Reich is born ... victory after a struggle of fourteen years ... we have today reached our goal. The German revolution begins.

March 5, 1933: Four weeks after the Reichstag Fire--and the subsequent suppression of opposition parties--the Nazis consolidate their power at the polls. (Shirer, Read)

March 10, 1933: Hanke telephones Speer. He tells him that commissions will now be coming his way and urges him to leave Mannheim and make his way to Berlin. The Speers leave the same day, arriving in Berlin on the 11th. (Speer, Sereny)

March 11, 1933: Goebbels is appointed Reich Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda (Volksaufklaerung und Propaganda). Speer accompanies Goebbels to his new offices in the 18th-century Leopold Palace--built by the famous architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel--on Wilhelmstrasse, just across from Hitler's offices in the Reich Chancellery. Goebbels looks around and immediately offers Speer a commission to completely renovate the old building. Speer will accomplish the task in a mere two weeks, much to Goebbels' satisfaction. (Shirer, Speer)

March 11, 1933 Goebbels' Diary:

The sun high in the sky shines warmly upon this wonderful Germany. The joy in work has returned. But an inspection of the working conditions in my new house ... shows them to be very unsatisfactory. Workmen will have to be brought in to clean up these rooms. They'll have to get rid of all this stucco, and throw away the musty plush curtains: I can't function in these dark rooms; I need sunlight, clean, clear lines--I hate twilight.

From Speer's Spandau Draft: Again it was to be done in a great hurry, and again we worked day and night. Aside from designing some new furniture for the Minister's rooms--my first opportunity to apply what I had learned from Tessenow--I tried to respect Schinkel's interior designs. (Sereny)

March 13, 1933 Goebbels' Diary:

As I have encountered nothing but problems for the reconstruction of the building and even the furnishing of my own rooms, I brought in without further ado some experienced old building hands I knew from the SA [Note: Goebbels will not mention Speer by name in his diary until December 19, 1935. The two will soon become allies, and remain so until quite near the end.] and the same night tore out plaster and wood lining and threw it all down the ceremonial staircase. The next morning, when the worthy old bureaucrats arrived (who will be the next I'll throw down those stairs) they murmured their warning that I could end up in prison for what I had done. They haven't caught on that our revolution will not be stopped either by old men, old files, or old stucco.

March 22, 1933: Dachau concentration camp opens near Munich, soon to be followed by Ravensbrueck for women, Sachsenhausen near Berlin in northern Germany, and Buchenwald near Weimar in central Germany. (THC)

March 23, 1933 Goebbels' Diary:

Today my definitive move to my new ministry. The new rooms suit my taste; sunny, airy, full of light--here one can work. In the evening I celebrate the completion with my construction workers, all old comrades from the SA.

March 25, 1933: Just days after finishing Goebbels' digs, Speer visits the propaganda ministry and finds the designs for the decor of the upcoming May 1 rally at Berlin's Tempelhof Field on Goebbels' desk. When Speer remarks that they look like decorations for a shooting match, Hanke--recently promoted to Minister's Secretary--challenges him to come up with something better. In the evening, Speer conceptualizes large banners on long, upright poles surrounded by a large number of searchlights. His ideas will be approved by Goebbels. (Speer, Read)


May 1, 1933: Hitler's Nazis co-opt the International Workers' Day--or May Day--as around 500,000 gather to hear Hitler speak at a field near Berlin's Tempelhof airport. Speers banners and searchlights--which Goebbels takes credit for--are praised by Hitler for their effectiveness and will become standard trappings for all subsequent Nazi mass rallies. (Shirer)

From Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris by Ian Kershaw: Along the lines of the 'Day of Potsdam,' Goebbels prepared another huge spectacular for 1 May, when the National Socialists usurped the traditional celebration of the International and turned it into the 'Day of National Labor.' The ADGB [German Labor Front] took a full part in the rallies and parades. Over ten million people altogether turned out--though for many a factory work-force attendance was scarcely voluntary. Hitler spoke, as on so many occasions, to the half million assembled on the Tempelhof Field in Berlin, the wide expanse of open land adjacent to the aerodrome, of the need to leave the divisions of class struggle behind and come together in a united national community. Many who were far from sympathetic to National Socialism were moved by the occasion.

The following day, the razzmatazz over, SA and NSBO squads occupied the offices and bank branches of the Social Democratic trade union movement, confiscated its funds, and arrested its functionaries. Within an hour, the 'action' was finished. The largest democratic trade union movement in the world had been destroyed.

May 2, 1933: Throughout Germany, union buildings are occupied, high union officials taken into custody, and union funds seized. All independent trade unions are abolished and replaced by the German Labor Front [Deutsche Arbeitsfront, DAF], a quasi-union under the leadership of Dr. Robert Ley. The workers are given an annual May Day holiday under Nazi control in compensation. (Shirer)

May 3, 1933 Goebbels' Diary: "We are the masters of Germany."

Note: Soon after the successful May Day rally, Goebbels awards Speer yet another commission; to redesign his new residence, including the addition of a large reception hall. Speer accepts, promising Goebbels that he can have the job done in a mere 8 weeks. Speer will meet this deadline.

From Speer's Spandau Draft: When Goebbels told Hitler, he said it couldn't be done and Goebbels, no doubt to spur me on, told me of the Fuehrer's doubts . . . . This started a wild 24-hour-a-day construction program in three shifts, with me snatching an hour's sleep here and there. Hitler, with his passion for construction, came over every few evenings to observe our progress and apparently continued to express his doubts--never to me, because Goebbels kept me in the background. (Sereny)

June 27, 1933>: Adolf Hitler issues a decree establishing a Reichsautobahnen project to construct an entire network of highways. Fritz Todt as named General Inspector of German Roadways (Generalinspektor fer das deutsche Straenwesen). Note: The Organization Todt (OT) will eventually direct a huge range of engineering projects both in pre-World War II Germany, and in Germany itself and occupied territories from France to Russia during the war.

When those planning the upcoming Nuremberg Party Rally encounter problems, someone recalls the young architect who had done such a good job on the May Day celebrations decor and Speer is flown down to Nuremberg for a consultation. Speer sketches out some ideas of his own, including an even larger bank of searchlights and banners framing a large Nazi eagle. When Speers plans are presented to Rudolf Hess--who is in charge of the preparations, Hess claims that "Only Hitler can approve this" and sends Speer to Hitler's Munich apartment to seek his OK. (Speer, Sereny)

From Speer's Spandau Draft: And there I stood, before Hitler, the Chancellor, who, it would seem, had just taken a pistol apart that was lying in pieces on the table in front of him. "Put your drawings down here," he said without looking up, pushing the pistol parts aside. He looked at the sketches with interest, but never looked at me. "Agreed," he said then and, ignoring my presence, turned back to cleaning his gun. I left. (Sereny)

August 30-September 3, 1933: The first Reichsparteitag (Reich national party convention) since Hitler gained power is held in Nuremberg. The 5th annual Party Congress, it is titled the "Rally of Victory" (Reichsparteitag des Sieges). The Leni Riefenstahl film Der Sieg des Glaubens (Victory of Faith) is made at this rally. (Shirer)

Autumn 1933: Hitler commissions master architect Paul Ludwig Troost to rebuild the Reich Chancellor's apartment in Berlin. Troost, who lives in Munich, knows no one on the building scene in Berlin, so Hitler—remembering that some young architect (Speer is 28) in Berlin had finished Goebbels' residence in record time—orders that Speer join Troosts team. Hitler's interest in the project will compel him to visit the site often.

It is during this time that Hitler comes in close contact with Speer, who walks with him and Troost during these frequent inspections, answering his questions. Speer is impressed by the easy manner and lack of pretension Hitler displays toward the 'common' workman on the site. During one of these visits, Hitler surprises Speer by inviting him to join him for lunch. Speer protests that he is not properly dressed, so Hitler loans him his own dark blue suit jacket. When Hitler and Speer join the already assembled lunch gathering, Goebbels eyes bug out when he notices Hitler's Gold Party Badge on the suit. The Propaganda Minister begins to admonish Speer when Hitler cuts him off with: "He is wearing my jacket." Hitler directs Speer to sit in the seat next to him. Note: Hitler will eventually appoint Speer the "Commissioner for the Artistic and Technical Presentation of Party Rallies and Demonstrations." It will soon becomes clear that Hitler and Speer share a number of common interests, which leads to a sort of friendship between the two. (Shirer, Read, Speer, Sereny)

From Speer's Spandau Draft: During and after this lunch was the first time that Hitler asked me some personal questions. Only then did he discover that it was I who had been the designer for the May 1 celebration. "Is that so?" he said. "And Nuremberg, was that also your design? There was an architect who came to see me with plans; but of course, that was you, wasn't it? Well, I would never have believed that you could have finished the Goebbels project by deadline."

He asked nothing about my affiliation or activities in the party. Later, when I had occasion to observe him with others from whom he commissioned works of art, I realized that with artists he simply didn't care [about their politics]. Aside from my career as an architect, what he did ask a lot about, as I remember, were the buildings designed by my father and grandfather.

It was quite obvious to me that this luncheon would be of decisive significance for my future. A few years later, Hitler came back to it: "I noticed you during my visits to the site," he said. "I was searching for a young architect to whom I would be able to entrust my building plans one day. He had to be young because, as you know, these plans extend far into the future. I needed someone who, with the authority I conferred upon him now, would be capable of carrying on after my death. And that man I found in you." (Sereny)

From Speer's IMT testimony: In 1934 Hitler noticed me for the first time. I became acquainted with him and from that period of time onward I exercised my architect's profession with joy and enthusiasm, for Hitler was quite fanatical on the subject of architecture; and I received many important construction contracts from him. Along with putting up a new Reich Chancellery in Berlin and various buildings on the Party Rally grounds here in Nuremberg, I was entrusted with the re-planning of the cities of Berlin and Nuremberg. I had sketched buildings which would have been among the largest in the world, and the carrying through of these plans would have cost no more than 2 months of Germany's war expenditure. Through this predilection which Hitler had for architecture I had a close personal contact with him. I belonged to a circle which consisted of other artists and his personal staff. If Hitler had had any friends at all, I certainly would have been one of his close friends. Despite the war, this peaceful construction work was carried on until December 1941, and only the winter catastrophe in Russia put an end to it. The German part of the manpower was furnished by me for the reconstruction of the destroyed railroad installations in Russia.

March 21, 1934: Hitler's chief architect, Paul Ludwig Troost, dies after a serious illness. (Shirer, Speer)

March 23, 1934: Speer replaces Troost, becoming the Nazi Party's chief architect. Speer's first big project is the Zeppelinfeld stadium, capable of holding 340,000 people. This stadium, along with the Nuremberg parade grounds, will be featured in Leni Riefenstahl's propaganda film Triumph of the Will. (Speer)

July 2, 1934: The Night of the Long Knives (the Roehm-Putsch), a series of political executions, takes place. Soon after, Hitler orders Speer to convert the offices of Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen into a security headquarters. Upon first entering the building, Speer comes across a pool of blood from the body of Herbert von Bose, von Papen's secretary, who had been killed there. Speer will later write that the sight had no effect on him, other than to cause him to avoid that room. (Read)

July 28, 1934: Margret gives birth to Speer's eldest son, Albert. (Speer, Sereny)

June 26, 1935: A law is passed requiring that all male Germans between the ages of 18 and 25 perform six months of state service.

From The Fuehrer's Buildings by Albert Speer: The Fuehrer's buildings use hand-hewn natural stone. Natural stone and Nordic bricks are our most durable building materials. Although they are more expensive in the short term, in the long term they are the most economical. Durability is always the most important principle. The buildings of our Fuehrer will speak of the greatness of our age to future millennia. As the eternal buildings of the movement rise in the various cities of Germany, they will be buildings of which people can be proud...

March 7, 1936: Hitler occupies the Rhineland. (Shirer)

January 3, 1937: Hitler speaks before the Reichstag: The Four-Year Plan will give permanent employment to those workmen who are now being released from the armament industry. It is significant for the gigantic economic development of our people that there is today a lack of trained workmen in many industries. There will be no strikes or lockouts in Germany, because every one has to serve the interests of the entire nation. Education of the people will never come to an end, and this education includes the Hitler Youth, the Labor Service, the Party, and the Army...

January 30, 1937: Hitler appoints the 32-year-old Speer Generalbauinspektor (Inspector General) for the Construction of Berlin, a position that will commonly be known as the GBI. This appointment comes with an automatic rank of State Secretary and a place in the Reichstag right next to Fritz Todt. Note: This is essentially the position held in 1830 by Speer's hero, architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, as Oberbaudirektor of Prussia. (Speer, Sereny)

From the Spandau Draft: Hitler made no more fuss about that official appointment than he had about the commission [to rebuild Berlin] in the first place. Not uncharacteristic of him, one could almost have thought him shy when, at the end of lunch, he handed me the nomination document. "Make a good job of it," he said, and that was that. (Sereny)

From the Memoirs of Rudolf Wolters, a long-time friend, fellow architect, and subordinate of Speer: The task entrusted to him [Speer] exceeded anything one could imagine. Berlin was to be rebuilt and expanded to serve a potential estimated population of eight million people . . . . Central to the concept would be a cross of four main thoroughfares of unprecedented generosity [each of them wider and greener than Hitler's favorite avenue, the Champs Élysées in Paris] and, with money no object, an entirely new railway system . . . . My part of the project [aside from the railway network, Wolters' specialty]--the most important--was the North-South Axis, the great representational avenue for which I could freely commission our finest architects, painters and sculptors. (Sereny)

From Speer's IMT testimony: My closest contact with him [Hitler], in my capacity of architect, was probably during the period from 1937 to September 1939; after that, the relationship was no longer so close on account of the circumstances of the war. After I was appointed successor to Todt a closer but much more official working relationship was again established.

March 14, 1937 Goebbels' Diary:

The Fuehrer loves Berlin ... more and more. Discussions with Speer about building projects, especially the new Munich Opera. . . . Excellent about Austria and Czechoslovakia. We have to have both these to round off our territory. And we'll get them, too. . . . Those little states suffer from a kind of primitive megalomania. When their citizens come to Germany, they are bowled over by our size and power. We need to emphasize it more; this is also the reason for the Fuehrer's gigantic building projects. (Sereny)

May 25, 1937: The last International Exposition to be held in Paris—an 'International Exposition dedicated to Art and Technology in Modern Life'—is held. Made up of various pavilions constructed by participating nations, the two most notable pavilions were those of Nazi Germany and the USSR. Hitler had initially been inclined to decline participation, but Speer convinced him to participate after showing his Fuehrer his plans for the German pavilion.

Speer will later reveal that he had had a clandestine look at the plans for the Soviet pavilion, and had, in response, designed the German pavilion to represent a bulwark against Communism. Five hundred feet high—purposely higher than the USSR's—Speer's pavilion dominated the scene with a tall tower crowned with the symbols of the Nazi state: an eagle and the swastika. The pavilion was conceived as a monument to 'German pride and achievement.' The Exposition is a triumph for Speer, who is not only awarded a gold medal for the German pavilion, but also for his model of the Nuremberg party rally grounds. (Shirer, Read)

1937: Hitler Youth Leader Baldur von Schirach awards Speer the Golden Hitler Youth Honor Badge with oak leaves.


January 31, 1938: Hitler summons Speer to the Reich Chancellery:

"I have an urgent assignment for you," Hitler tells Speer. "I shall be holding extremely important conferences in the near future. For these, I need grand halls and salons which will make an impression on people, especially on the smaller dignitaries. For the site I am placing the whole of Voss Strasse at your disposal. The cost is immaterial. But it must be done very quickly and be of solid construction. How long do you need? For plans, blueprints, everything? Even a year and a half or two years would be too long for me. Can you be done by January 10, 1939? I want to hold the next diplomatic reception in the new Chancellory." (Speer)

From the Memoirs of Rudolf Wolters: The first time [I met Hitler] was at Speer's studio on the Obersalzberg. Three or four of us [architects from Speer's team] were there that night. Hitler came up to see us, joking because all of us, including Speer, were well over six feet tall. He shook hands with each of us and looked quietly in our eyes for rather longer than one usually does. He was smaller than I had imagined. His walk and his movements were slow and relaxed, his manner of speaking unstrained; rather unexpectedly, he spoke in a strong Austrian accent. Oddly, none of us felt the least shy.

The second time was when Speer took me to one of his lunches at the Reich Chancellory . . . . There were about twenty other guests, among them Goebbels and four other ministers. The conversation at table was mostly [about] how one could best deal with British radio propaganda. Here I noticed how Hitler's factual questions embarrassed [Wilhelm] Ohnesorge, the minister of communications, when Hitler showed himself to be better informed than he on broadcast capacity . . . .

The third and fourth meetings were in Speer's Modellhallen [model halls] at the GBI when Hitler came to view the Berlin plans . . . . He arrived through a back door which had been put in especially for his convenience, dressed in a gray suit. As is was forbidden to take notes in his presence, I always wrote detailed minutes immediately afterwards.

Of course from these few experiance I cannot judge Hitler's personality, but having shared with Speer his virtually daily contacts with him, and being familiar with Hitler's ideas, for example, on town planning, I think that commentators are making it easy on themselves now when, as they frequently do, they resort in their descriptions to simplistic epitaphs such as 'buck private,' 'wall painter,' 'petit-bourgeois philistine,' or 'history's greatest criminal.'

February 4, 1938 Konsolidierung: Hitler's Cabinet meets for the final time. (Shirer)

April 10, 1938 Annexionvolksabstimmung: In a national plebiscite, Austrian voters register 99.75% in favor of union with Germany: Austria becomes part of the Reich as a new state, divided into seven Gau (states). Austria withdraws as a member state from the League of Nations. (Shirer)

1938: The Organization Todt proper is founded as a consortium of Todt's administrative offices combined with private company subcontractors, primary sources of technical engineering expertise, and the Labor Service as the manpower source.

From one of Speer's post-war interviews with the SBS: The Todt Organization originated as a part of the General Inspector for the German Highway System and only got the name 'OT' on the West Wall job. With the march into France, it was brought by Dr. Todt into the form which it now has, that is, a half-military construction organization based on private economic principles. In general with us, in contrast to you--there is a difference--military rank has to be earned (sweated out). In the OT rank was bestowed on the basis of capability and professional accomplishment.

September 29, 1938 Jodl's Diary:

The Munich Pact is signed, Czechoslovakia as a power is out. Four zones as set forth will be occupied between the 2d and 7th of October. The remaining part of mainly German character will be occupied by the 10th of October. The genius of the Fuehrer and his determination not to shun even a world war have again won the victory without the use of force. The hope remains that the incredulous, the weak, and the doubtful people have been converted and will remain that way.

Late 1938: Hitler awards Speer the Golden Party Badge.

From Speer's IMT testimony: I received the Golden Party Badge from Hitler in 1938. It was because I had completed the plans for a new building program in Berlin. Besides myself, five other artists received this Golden Party Badge at the same time.

From the Spandau Draft: [The Berlin Project] became my life and I realize that I cannot tear myself loose from it even now. If I look deep into myself for the reasons now for my rejection of Hitler, then I think that aside from the horror in him that now stands revealed, my personal disappointment plays a small part--my disappointment also that his political power game drove us into war and thereby destroyed what would have been my life. [Note: It is telling that Speer does not make this admission in Inside the Third Reich.] (Sereny)


January 7, 1939: Three days early, Hitler's new Chancellory is completed. Speer will later tell Gitta Sereny: "Of course I was perfectly aware that [Hitler] sought world domination . . . That was the whole point of my buildings. They would have looked grotesque if Hitler had sat still in Germany. All I wanted was for this great man to dominate the globe."

From Speer's memoirs, Inside the Third Reich: From Wilhelmsplatz an arriving diplomat drove through great gates into a court of honor. By way of an outside staircase he first entered a medium-sized reception room from which double doors almost seventeen feet high opened into a large hall clad in mosaic. He then ascended several steps, passed through a round room with domed ceiling, and saw before him a gallery 480 feet long. Hitler was particularly impressed by my gallery because it was twice as long as the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. Hitler was delighted: "On the long walk from the entrance to the reception hall they'll get a taste of the power and grandeur of the German Reich!" During the next several months he asked to see the plans again and again but interfered remarkably little in this building, even though it was designed for him personally. He let me work freely. (Speer)

March 15, 1939: German troops occupy the Sudetenland, Bohemia and Moravia; the Czech government disintegrates. (Shirer)

August 23, 1939: The German-Soviet Non-aggression Pact is signed in Moscow. It is sometimes called the Ribbentrop-Molotov Agreement of Non-aggression, or simply the 'Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact.' (Shirer, Clark II)

September 1, 1939: After some delays, Hitler's forces invade Poland. (Shirer)

Twitter: @3rdReichStudies
Featured Sites:
 
Austria: The Other Germany
Adolf Hitler: The First Super-Villian
Third Reich History: What Happened Today?
Countdown to Infamy: Timeline to Pearl Harbor
Biographical Timeline: of the Infamous Adolf Hitler
Countdown To WW2: August 22 - September 1, 1939
The Nuremberg Nazis: Detailed, Documented Biographies
Wunderwaffen: Hitler's Deception and the History of Rocketry
 
Main Sites:

Adolf Hitler: The Volkswagen
Adolf Hitler: The Fuehrer's Mercedes
Adolf Hitler: Mein Kampf Examined
In the Shadow of Frederick the Great
Hitler's Battleship: Sink The Bismarck!
Non-Fiction Comics: Military Periodicals
History of Olympic Boycotts: From Berlin to Beijing
Hogan's Jews: 5 Cast Members Were Jews; Their Stories
>

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: 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.