National Socialist Teachers League

The National Socialist Teachers League (German: Nationalsozialistische Lehrerbund, NSLB), was established on 21 April 1929.[1] Its original name was the Organization of National Socialist Educators.[2] Its founder and first leader was former schoolteacher Hans Schemm, the Gauleiter of Bayreuth.[3] The organization was based in Bayreuth at the House of German Education. On October 27, 1938 the NSLB opened its own Realschule for teacher training in Bayreuth.[4]

National Socialist Teachers League
Native nameNationalsozialistische Lehrerbund
Founded21 April 1929
Date dissolved1943
AffiliationNazi Party
Key peopleHans Schemm, Fritz Wachtler

After Schemm's death in 1935, the new leader, or Reichswalter, was Fritz Wächtler.[5]

This organization saw itself as "the common effort of all persons who saw themselves as teachers or wanted to be seen as educators, independently from background or education and from the type of educational institution". Its goal was to make the Nazi worldview and foundation of all education and especially of schooling. In order to achieve this it sought to have an effect on the political viewpoint of educators, insisting on the further development of their spirit along Nazi lines. Organized mountain excursions in places called Reichsaustauschlager (Exchange Camps of the Reich) were perceived as helping in this purpose.

The organization was dissolved in 1943 by the financial administration of the NSDAP.[6]

See also

References

  1. Pine, L. (2010). Education in Nazi Germany. Oxford: Berg. p. 14.
  2. Christian Zentner and Friedemann Bedürftig The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich New York: Macmillan 1991 p.435
  3. Christian Zentner and Friedemann Bedürftig The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich New York: Macmillan 1991 p.834
  4. Christian Zentner and Friedemann Bedürftig The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich New York: Macmillan 1991 pp.435-6
  5. Christian Zentner and Friedemann Bedürftig The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich New York: Macmillan 1991 pp.435-6
  6. Bedeutungsverlust und Auflösung
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