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Authors: Peter Ross Range

Tags: #History / Europe / Germany, #History / Holocaust, #History / Military / World War Ii

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“Hitler Free!” proclaims a Nazi newspaper on Hitler’s release. (Fotoarchiv Heinrich Hoffmann, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek)

An early edition of
Mein Kampf
, first published in 1925, had a simple look and included on its cover the subtitle
Eine Abrechnung
(A Reckoning). (Hermann Historica)

Later editions of
Mein Kampf
had a dramatic book jacket and no subtitle. (Author’s copy)

Hitler revisits his cell in Landsberg Prison in 1934, ten years after he lived there and wrote
Mein Kampf
. He was now dictator of Germany. (Yad Vashem)

After World War II, Landsberg Prison became U.S. Army War Criminal Prison No. 1. Two hundred fifty-nine Germans convicted of crimes against humanity were hanged just fifty feet from the building where Hitler lived in 1924. (National Archives)

Acknowledgments

The special joy of writing a research-based book lies in contact with the impressive scholars who have devoted much of their professional lives to the subject. Again and again, I was the lucky recipient of generous advice and guidance from Othmar Plöckinger in Salzburg; Paul Hoser and Christian Hartmann in Munich; Jeffrey Herf in Maryland; and Alan E. Steinweis in both Vermont and Munich. At the same time, I benefited from the contribution to my understanding of German politics and history over many years from Robert Gerald Livingston, Jackson Janes, and Jeremiah Riemer. Other scholars and experts who willingly gave of their time and experience were Roman Töppel, Reinhard Weber, David Clay Large, Christoph Safferling, Dan Michman, and Jakob Zollmann.

Laurence Latourette and Jonathan M. Weisgall, exceptionally thoughtful men with writerly minds, read my manuscript and were more than generous with counsel and encouragement.

Underlying it all are my rich friendships with some of Germany’s best writers and journalists: Claus Christian Malzahn, Gabor Steingart, Clemens Wergin, Gregor Peter Schmitz, and Henryk Broder. Thanks to Schmitz, I also had the benefit of research talent at
Der Spiegel
in the hot pursuit of elusive documents, including
Hauke Janssen and Conny Neumann. Munich photographer Wolfgang Weber added useful details to the sought-after story.

A special case among these supportive colleagues is Michael S. Cullen, an American author in Berlin who is uniquely qualified to guide anyone writing about Germany. Cullen writes serious history and essays in German, and has been my close friend for nearly fifty years.

Every researcher is existentially dependent on archivists and librarians. This book benefited from the guiding and sometimes warning hand of Klaus Lankheit, a deep reservoir of knowledge of Hitler and the Third Reich and chief archivist at Munich’s indispensible Institut für Zeitgeschichte (Institute for Contemporary History)—where Simone Paulmichl facilitated my access to scholars and resources. I also received timely support from David Morris, Mark Dimunation, and Amber Paranick at the Library of Congress; from Holly Reed and Sharon Culley at the U.S. National Archives; from Evi Hartmann at Washington’s German Historical Institute; from Sylvia Krauss, Johann Pörnbacher, and Josef Anker at the Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv; from Christoph Bachmann and his crack crew at the Staatsarchiv München; from Peter Fleischmann at the Staatsarchiv Nürnberg; from numerous staffers at Munich’s huge and deeply endowed Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (BSB). Special thanks to Angelika Betz in the amazing photo archive of the BSB.

My work in these institutions was made far more efficient by the outstanding research assistance of Courtney Marie Burrell, a gifted graduate student at Munich’s Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität.

To Harald Eichinger, along with prison director Monika Gross, I am indebted for a revealing tour of Landsberg Prison and the spot where Hitler lived, worked, and slept. Thanks also go to Daniella Philippi, spokesperson of Bavarian governor Horst Seehofer, for making the visit possible, and to retired prison historian Klaus Weichert for responding willingly to my queries.

But one Landsberger deserves special gratitude. Manfred Deiler is a leader of the brave, sometimes isolated association of citizen activists and historians who have gradually uncovered Landsberg’s role in mistreating Jewish slave laborers near the end of World War II. Deiler and his colleagues have for two decades worked to preserve the remains of the degrading earthen barracks that housed the doomed prisoners. In the process, Deiler has become a repository of data and documents about Hitler’s stay in Landsberg Prison and its conversion into a shrine after Hitler took power. Deiler welcomed me into his home, guided me through the thicket of his holdings, and repeatedly responded to my requests for clarification. He does righteous labor and it is all plain to see at http://www.buergervereinigung-landsberg.org.

Writers need writers as friends and supporters in the sometimes daunting business of opening a new window on difficult subject matter. My indispensable circle of support includes James Reston Jr., Laurence Leamer, Roger M. Williams, Erla Zwingle, Mark Olshaker, Ann Blackman, Michael Putzel, Mark Perry, Joel Swerdlow, and Dan Moldea.

Books arise in numerous ways. This one began with an essay in the
New York Times,
and I am grateful to op-ed editor Clay Risen for his help in shaping and running the piece. Nothing goes anywhere in publishing without good agents and editors, and I had both in Gail Ross and Dara Kaye, at Ross Yoon Agency, and John Parsley and Jean Garnett, at Little, Brown—all masters at guiding a writer toward the finish line.

Finally, my efforts would still be somewhere between wishful and flailing if it were not for the steady, editorially incisive and devoted support of my wife, Linda Harris. As always, I owe the greatest debt to her.

About the Author

Peter Ross Range is a world-traveled journalist who has covered war, politics, and international affairs. A specialist on Germany, he has written extensively for
Time,
the
New York Times, National Geographic,
the London
Sunday Times Magazine, Playboy,
and
U.S. News & World Report,
where he was a national and White House correspondent. He has also been an Institute of Politics Fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, a guest scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, and a Distinguished International Visiting Fellow at the University of North Carolina Journalism School. He lives in Washington, D.C.

Bibliography

Abel, Theodore.
Why Hitler Came Into Power.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1938.

Arendt, Hannah.
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil.
New York: Penguin, 1964.

Baynes, N. H., ed.
Speeches of Adolf Hitler: Early Speeches, 1922–1924, and Other Selections.
New York: Howard Fertig, 2006.

Beierl, Florian, and Othmar Plöckinger. “Neue Dokumente zu Hitlers Buch
Mein Kampf
.”
Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte
57, no. 2 (2009): 261–279.

Berchem, Otto Freiherr von, in Gritschneder Nachlass, 238–258, Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, author’s notes.

Bessel, Richard.
Germany After the First World War.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993.

Bonn, M. J.
Wandering Scholar.
London: Cohen and West, 1949.

Boone, J. C.
Hitler at the Obersalzberg.
Self-published, 2008.

Bullock, Alan.
Hitler: A Study in Tyranny.
1952. Rev. ed., New York: Konecky and Konecky, 1962.

Bytwerk, Randall L., ed.
Landmark Speeches of National Socialism.
College Station: TX: A&M University Press, 2008.

Chamberlain, Houston Stewart.
Die Grundlagen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts
(The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century). 1899. Translated by John Lees. 1911. Reprinted facsimile of 1899 edition, Chestnut Hill, MA: Adamant Media Corporation, 2003.

BOOK: 1924: The Year That Made Hitler
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