Friedrich Hildebrandt
Friedrich Hildebrandt | |
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| |
Gauleiter of Mecklenburg | |
In office 1925–1930 | |
Succeeded by | Herbert Albrecht |
Gauleiter of Mecklenburg | |
In office 1931–1945 | |
Preceded by | Herbert Albrecht |
Reichsstatthalter of Mecklenburg-Schwerin | |
In office 26 May 1933 – 31 December 1933 | |
Reichsstatthalter of Mecklenburg-Strelitz | |
In office 26 May 1933 – 31 December 1933 | |
Preceded by | None |
Succeeded by | None |
Reichsstatthalter of the Free City of Lübeck | |
In office 26 May 1933 – 31 March 1937 | |
Reichsstatthalter of Mecklenburg | |
In office 1 January 1934 – 1945 | |
Personal details | |
Born | 19 September 1898 |
Died | 5 November 1948 (aged 50) |
Political party | Nazi Party |
Friedrich Hildebrandt (19 September 1898, Parchim, Mecklenburg-Schwerin – 5 November 1948, Landsberg am Lech) was an SS-Obergruppenführer, a Gauleiter and ajudged and executed for war crimes committed during the time of Nazi Germany.
Career
Hildebrandt entered service in the German Army on 19 April 1916 as a Kriegsfreiwilliger and subsequently assigned to Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment 24 on the Western Front. He was severely gassed in Flanders in 1917 and was wounded twice before the end of the First World War. During January 1919, he returned to Mecklenburg and joined the 1.Kompanie/Freikorps "von Brandis" (in Schlesien and on the Baltic). He served there until his capture and imprisonment by the Red Army in Riga. He was later released and returned to Germany, being discharged from the German Army as a Vizefeldwebel in January, 1920. From March, 1920 to June, 1920, he was a member of the Sicherheitspolizei in Halle, with which he participated in the suppression of the "Kapp-Putsch" in March, 1920. In the wake of the Putsch, he was tried for excessive brutality against captured Spartakists in Osterfeld/Weissenfels. Although acquitted, he was dismissed from police service.
The farmworker had several positions bestowed upon him as an early Nazi Party activist: Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governor) of Mecklenburg and until 1937 also of Lübeck. After World War II ended, he was tried in the Allied Dachau Trials. He was sentenced specifically in the Airmen's Trial, for contraventions of the Hague Conventions. Friedrich Hildebrandt was then put to death in 1948. Grandfather to Lawrence (II) and Daniel Hildebrandt, and father to Lawrence (I) Hildebrandt.
References
- Gauleiter: The Regional Leaders Of The Nazi Party And Their Deputies, 1925-1945 (Herbert Albrecht-H. Wilhelm Huttmann)-Volume 1 by Michael D. Miller and Andreas Schulz R. James Bender Publishing, 2012.
External links
- Newspaper clippings about Friedrich Hildebrandt in the 20th Century Press Archives of the German National Library of Economics (ZBW)