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  1. Hermann Esser

    Hermann Esser

    Founding member of the Nazi Party

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  1. Hermann Esser (29 July 1900 – 7 February 1981) was an early member of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). A journalist, Esser was the editor of the Nazi paper, Völkischer Beobachter, a Propaganda Leader, and a Vice President of the Reichstag. In the early days of the party, he was a de facto deputy of Adolf Hitler.

    • Position abolished
    • World War I
    • 1917-1918
    • Nazi Party
  2. Herman Esser was an effective public speaker and was its first chief of propaganda. After the Beer Hall Putsch fiasco, he was influential in the reorganization of the party. From 1929 to 1933, he was the Nazi party floor leader in Munich's city council.

  3. The treacherous murder of the young German diplomat Ernst vom Rath in the office of the German embassy in Paris on 7 November 1938 by a 17-year-old Jew named Herschel Grünspan is rightly viewed by the entire German people as a contemptible sneaky attack on Adolf Hitler’s new Greater Germany.

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  5. Hermann Esser (29 July 1900 – 7 February 1981) was an early member of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). A journalist, Esser was the editor of the Nazi paper, Völkischer Beobachter, a Propaganda Leader, and a Vice President of the Reichstag. In the early days of the party, he was a de facto deputy of Adolf Hitler. As one of Hitler's earliest followers ...

  6. May 22, 2015 · Hermann Esser was one of the Nazi PartysOld Guard’ (Alte Kämper) – one of the earliest members of the party. Esser was one of Adolf Hitler’s closest comrades in the early days of the party and was effectively deputy leader of the NSDAP up to the Beer Hall Putsch of 1923 .

  7. Hermann Esser. Hermann Esser, the son of a civil servant, was born in Röhrmoos, Bavaria, on 29th July, 1900. He served in the German Army in the later stages of the First World War. Esser returned to Germany as a radical socialist and took a job working for a left-wing provincial newspaper.

  8. Aug 5, 2015 · Hermann Esser's Die jüdische Weltpest, first published in 1927 and updated in 1939, included four pages of quotations from The Protocols, though with little commentary.

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