Heinrich Hoffmann (1885 – 1957) served as Adolf Hitler’s official photographer from when Hitler took control of the Nazi party in 1921 until his death in 1945. Hoffmann estimates he took over half a million photographs of Hitler over the course of his career. His portraits were the most significant source of Nazi propaganda materials published over the course of close to 25 years, everything from postcards, posters, magazines, postage stamps and picture books. Click on each theme below to see a complete photo album devoted to that particular event or topic.

This album of photographs includes pictures from the Gautag of Gau Essen that took place exactly 91 years ago on 30 October 1932. Adolf Hitler also spoke at the Westfalenhalle in Dortmund on this day as part of the 1932 election campaign. There are also photos from Josef Terboven‘s wedding, the Gauleiter of Essen, and Hitler with his daughter Inga. Several highlights of Adolf Hitler’s many visits and speeches given at the Krupp factory located in Essen are also included.

Adolf Hitler, Julius Schaub and Ernst Roehm at the 1932 Gautag of Gau Essen on 30 October 1932.
Adolf Hitler at the 1932 Gautag of Gau Essen on 30 October 1932.
Adolf Hitler arrives for his speech to be delivered at the Gautag Essen held on 30 October 1932.

The commemorative Gautag (District Day) badge issued for the Gau Essen district, dating to the October 1932 event. The tinnie featured a design of crossed hammers with a central sword. 

I have recently discovered a huge mystery surrounding the following group of photographs. Although Hitler is wearing the Gautag Essen badge in these photos, these photographs were actually taken three months earlier in the Swabian town of Kempten. These were taken at a campaign speech that was titled as the Hitlertage in Kempten. At 1:00 p.m. on 30 July 1932, Hitler delivered a thirty minute speech on the grounds of the Allgäuer Tierzuchthalle located at Kotterner Straße 54, now known as the Allgäuhalle in front of 18,000 listeners. The photographs were taken by Erwin Hefel, an Austrian photographer who had traveled up to Kempten from Feldkirch. In 1923 Hefel co-founded the first local group of the German-Austrian branch of the NSDAP and had risen to the leader of the SA in Feldkirch by 1936. The mystery still remains as to why he’s wearing the Essen badge on this day…

Wahlkampfauftritt Adolf Hitlers in Kempten 30. Juli 1932 im Rahmen des Reichstagswahlkampfs. 
Adolf Hitler at a campaign event held on the grounds of the Allgäuer Tierzuchthalle in Kempten on 30 July 1932.
Hitlertage in Kempten, Adolf Hitler spricht!

The following photographs and film footage appear to be from the Gautag Essen event, and yet it’s still very difficult to tell due to the confusion with the badge. If anyone can explain this badge mystery please let me know as it makes it very difficult to sort these photographs into the correct category…

Adolf Hitler at the 1932 Gautag of Gau Essen on 30 October 1932.
Adolf Hitler at the 1932 Gautag of Gau Essen on 30 October 1932.

Adolf Hitler’s speech on the Essen Gautag of 1932 took place in the Essen exhibition hall (Ausstellungs-Gebäude Halle) in front of 50,000 listeners with radio transmission to Wesel, Kleve, Mörs and Geldern. The old Essen exhibition hall was destroyed in WW2 bombing raids but stood where the current Messe Essen now stands in the Grugapark located southwest of the city center on Norbertstrasse 2.

Hitler also gave a speech in the städtischen Saalbau (municipal hall building), later Philharmonie in the Huyssenallee, in front of 6500 listeners on 22 November 1926. This rare film footage shows his arrival at the Essen Hauptbahnhof and later departing by car from the Hotel Vereinshaus wearing his leather driving cap. 

Adolf Hitler speaks in Essen with Gauleiter Terboven, Julius Schaub, and von Papen in attendance on 2 November 1933. Speech was given in the exhibition hall with an overnight stay in the Hotel Kaiserhof. 
Adolf Hitler with Ilse Stahl in Essen on 29 June 1934; Adolf Hitler on the day before the disempowerment of the SA, as a witness to the bride of Josef Terboven, Ilse Stahl, the former secretary of Joseph Goebbels, in the Essen Minster.
Wedding of Ilse and Josef Terboven, 1934. Adolf Hitler (center) participates at the wedding of the Gauleiter of Essen Josef Terboven in the Essen Cathedral Church. Behind Hitler, his adjutants Julius Schaub and Wilhelm Brueckner, on the right, Hermann Goering. Next to Terboven his bride, Ilse Stahl, former secretary of Joseph Goebbels. 28.06.1934.
Adolf Hitler with Ilse and Inga Terboven during a visit to Josef Terboven in hospital, in Essen on 16 July 1938.
Adolf Hitler with Inga Terboven during a visit to Josef Terboven in hospital, in Essen on 16 July 1938. Josef committed suicide on 8 May 1945 by detonating 50 kg of dynamite in his bunker in Norway. In 1964 Inga killed her two-year old daughter by strangulation. Josef Terboven’s wife, Ilse (Stahl) died in 1972.
Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler with Inga Terboven during a visit to Josef Terboven in hospital, in Essen on 16 July 1938.
Adolf Hitler with Ilse and Inga Terboven during a visit to Josef Terboven in hospital, in Essen on 16 July 1938.
Nazi leader Adolf Hitler gives a speech at the Krupp factories in Essen, Germany on 28 March 1936.
Nazi leader Adolf Hitler gives a speech at the Krupp factories in Essen, Germany on 28 March 1936.
Adolf Hitler salutes workers in front of the Krupps factory in Essen on 8 April 1936.
German industrialist Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach and Adolf Hitler during a visit to the Krupp Factory in Essen.
Adolf Hitler leaving the factory building of the Krupp works after a speech to the staff in Essen in August 1940.
Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini drive through Essen on 27 September 1937.
Adolf Hitler with company, visiting the cast steel factory, 3rd from left Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, 4th from left Alfried von Bohlen und Halbach on 13 October 1938.

The Krupp family is a prominent 400-year-old German dynasty from Essen, noted for its production of steel, artillery, ammunition and other armaments. Hitler had tried to gain entry to the Krupp factories back in 1929, but was rebuffed because Krupp felt he would see some of the secret armament work there and reveal it to the world. Bertha Krupp never liked Hitler, though she never complained when the company’s bottom line rose through the armaments contracts and production. She referred to him as “that certain gentleman” (Dieser gewisse Herr) and even pleaded illness when Hitler came on an official tour in 1934. Her daughter Irmgard acted as hostess to Hitler on that occasion.

Guest on the hill: Hitler with Bertha and Gustav Krupp around 1939 in the garden of the Villa Hügel in Essen. Hitler walks through the garden behind the house. Unlike previous guest Kaiser Wilhelm II, the Nazi leader was undesirable as an overnight guest because Bertha could not stand him.

On 7 August 1940 Hitler flew to Essen-Haarzopf from Berlin to visit the Krupp family on the occasion of German industrialist Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach’s birthday. Krupp’s 70th birthday party was held at Villa Huegel where Hitler presented him with special gifts of a chess set and the Golden Party Badge of the NSDAP.

Adolf Hitler greets Gustav Krupp in front of his Essen estate on the occasion of his 70th birthday on 7 August 1940.
Adolf Hitler gives a speech at the Krupp factory in Essen on 10 December 1940.

One response to “Hitler in Essen”

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    […] Hitler, Julius Schaub and Ernst Roehm at the 1932 Gautag of Gau Essen on 30 October 1932. Adolf Hitler spoke at the Westfalenhalle in Dortmund on this day as part of the […]

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