Service record of Heinrich Himmler
The service record of Heinrich Himmler was a collection of official SS documents maintained at the SS Personalhauptamt in Berlin from 1934 until the fall of Nazi Germany in 1945. Prior to 1934, Himmler's SS records were maintained at the Brown House, the Nazi Party headquarters in Munich.
Today, Himmler's original paper service record is maintained at the German Federal Archives. A microfilm copy of the record is also available at the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Maryland.
Summary of SS service
- SS number: 168
- Nazi Party number: 14303
- Primary position: Reichsführer-SS und Chef der Deutschen Polizei
- Previous SS positions: SS-Leader (1925), SS-District Leader (1926), Deputy-Reichsführer (1927)
- Waffen-SS service: Supreme Commander by default as Reichsführer-SS. Exercised little operational authority.
- Political positions: Reichsleiter der NSDAP
Dates of rank
Himmler joined the SS in the summer of 1925, during the group's earliest stage of existence. SS ranks at this point were very simple. Himmler was appointed as an "SS-Leader" and assigned to work in the Nazi headquarters in Munich. A year later, he was appointed as the "SS-District Leader" for Bavaria and, a year after that, appointed as a Deputy to the National Leader of the SS, Erhard Heiden.
Between 1925 and 1927, Himmler wore a variety of Nazi paramilitary uniforms. His first recognizable SS uniform may be seen in photographs from 1928, when Himmler wears the double oak leaf insignia of an SS-Oberführer. In 1929, Himmler was appointed to succeed Heiden and after this point referred to himself solely by his title of "Reichsführer" (this was not an actual rank until 1934). In a Nazi rally photograph from 1930, Himmler can be seen wearing an SS uniform with a striped swastika armband, with three stripes denoting his position as Reichsführer-SS. The armband stripe system was in fact utilised before the introduction of collar patches and it is uncertain why Himmler would have reverted to this insignia for one particular rally.
Between 1929 and 1933, Himmler wore insignia for the SS ranks of Oberführer, Gruppenführer, and in 1933 was promoted to SS-Obergruppenführer (the highest SS rank at the time). In June 1934, Himmler's position of Reichsführer-SS became an actual rank and Himmler began wearing the wreathed three leaf insignia which he would display for the rest of his career in the SS.
Himmler's official SS record does not list his promotions prior to that of Reichsführer-SS, instead simply backdating to Himmler's original appointment date in January 1929.[1] Alternate and photographic evidence, however, offer the following dates of rank.
Himmler's SS-ranks | |
---|---|
Date | Rank |
February 1925 | SS-Führer |
September 1926 | SS-Gauführer |
March 1927 | SS-Oberführer |
6 January 1929 | SS-Gruppenführer |
1 January 1933 | SS-Obergruppenführer |
1 July 1934 | Reichsführer-SS |
Nazi awards and decorations
As head of the SS, Himmler was in the unique position of having the ability to award himself many Nazi military, civil, and political decorations. However, Himmler's official awards and decorations qualified him for mainly service decorations and qualification badges, this being apparently by design.[2] Himmler was never awarded the Knight's Cross, German Cross, Iron Cross or the War Merit Cross, the last of which his duties as Chief of the SS and Police would have qualified.[3]
Himmler's authorized decorations were as follows:[4]
- Nazi political awards
- Blood Order
- Golden Nazi Party Badge
- Golden Hitler Youth Badge
- Nazi Party General Gau Badge
- Nuremberg Party Day Badge
- Nazi Party Long Service Award (10 and 15 years service)
- Honour Chevron for the Old Guard
- SS and police awards
- SS Long Service Award (12 years service)
- SS Honor Ring
- SS Honor Sword
- SS Zivilabzeichen (#2)
- SS Julleuchter
- German civil decorations
- Olympic Games Decoration (First Class)
- Social Welfare Decoration
- Military badges
- Combined Pilots-Observation Badge (in gold with diamonds)
- Military service awards
- Anschluss Medal (Commemorative Medal of 13 March 1938)
- Sudetenland Medal (w/Prague Castle Bar) (Commemorative Medal of 1 October 1938)
- Memel Medal (Commemorative Medal for the Return of the Memel Region)
- West Wall Medal (1944)
- Sports badges
- German Sports Badge (in silver)
- SA Sports Badge (in bronze)
Himmler was granted foreign awards from Germany's allies, Romania, Italy and Croatia[5] which bestowed Himmler with high ranking orders. Himmler held claim to several German state decorations, most significantly from Bavaria, where he had previously served as Police President. Himmler rarely wore these additional medals, except at the most formal of state functions, when a full dress uniform was required.
Other offices
- Officer Cadet (11th Bavarian Infantry Regiment): 1918
- Chief, SS-Reichssicherheitshauptamt: June 1942 to January 1943
- Reich Minister of the Interior: 1943
- Chief of the Home Army: 1944
- Commander, Army Group Upper Rhein and Vistula: 1944
References
Notes
- ↑ SS Master Personnel Card of Heinrich Himmler, SS records cabinet, U.S. National Archives, College Park, Maryland
- ↑ SS service record of Heinrich Himmler; United States National Archives, College Park, Maryland
- ↑ Månsson 2001.
- ↑ Ailsby 1997, p. 73.
- ↑ Popović 1986, p. 95.
Bibliography
- Ailsby, Christopher (1997). SS: Roll of Infamy. Osceola, WI: Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0-7603-0409-9.
- Månsson, Martin (2001). Heinrich Himmler: A Photographic Chronicle of Hitler's Reichsfuhrer-SS. Atglen, PA: Schiffer. ISBN 978-0-7643-1202-1.
- Popović, Jovo (1986). Suđenje Andriji Artukoviću i što nije rečeno (in Serbian). Stvarnost. ISBN 978-86-7075-066-1.