NSDAP Main Archive

Identifier
WLMF29
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 70994
Level of Description
Collection
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Biographical History

It may prove helpful to those consulting the “Collection NSDAP Hauptarchiv” to have an outline of the history and contents of the main archive of the German National Socialist Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP) and to know the stages whereby it reached its present form on microfilm.
In the wake of its triumphal consolidation of power, the National Socialist party decided to establish an archive to preserve for posterity its own records and those of the Deutsche Arbeitsfront.  On January 15, 1934, at the suggestion of Reichsschulungsleiter, Otto Ghodes, headquarters for an archive and library under the name “NSDAP Hauptarchiv” were established in Berlin.
The Hauptarchiv was not without its forerunners. It seems that in August 1926 Adolf Hitler asked Frau Mathilde von Scheubner-Richter (the widow of Max von Scheubner-Richter, killed in the putsch of November 9, 1923) to start a press archive for the party in Munich. Frau von Scheubner-Richter worked there, together with Heinrich Himmler, for one and a half years. The press archives, according to her recollections, had three functions: to collect material on all hostile personalities, to check and clip the Communist press, and to check and clip the emerging National Socialist press. Around 1928, the whole organization was taken over by the Reichspropagandaleitung of the NSDAP, which also collected file copies of posters, leaflets, pamphlets, and other propaganda and election material of the party for the use of various National Socialist organizations.
The NSDAP decided at the same time to bolster its political documentation by purchasing a collection on contemporary history started in 1914 by Friedrich Maria Rehse and organized in Munich as the Rehse Archiv. This collection was rich in material concerning the NSDAP. Hence, the intention was to set up the pictorial holdings and the realia of the Rehse Archiv as a separate museum on National Socialism; the printed material was to be amalgamated with the NSDAP’s own archive. These plans never materialized. The Rehse Archiv remained a separate entity, and after the war the bulk of the archive found its way to the Library of Congress; some duplicate items came to the Hoover Institution.
The NSDAP Hauptarchiv’s first director was Dr. Erich Uetrecht, from the Reichsschulungsamt. The archive moved in October 1934 from the Maerkisches Ufer in Berlin to its permanent location in Munich, 15 Barerstrasse, adjoining Gabelsbergerstrasse, and the already existing archives of the Reichspropagandaleitung were incorporated with it. In mid – 1935 the entire oranisation was made directly responsible to Stellvertreter des Fuehrers Rudolf Hess.  The purpose of the archive was no longer exclusively that of acting as a central clearing house of information for the various party organisations. In addition to collecting books, newspapers, periodicals and government publications, operating a sort of reference service for party and government figures, and presenting occasional exhibits, the party archive was to be the main depository for documents related to the party’s history from its earliest days. 
As a relative latecomer in the archival field, the Hauptarchiv had great difficulties in finding original material. The members of the party had made a revolution, but had not bothered to document it. With the help of newspaper advertising, leaflets, and questionnaires, the archivists appealed to old party members to donate their memorabilia of strife-torn days and to write down their personal recollections. The archive had still other battles to fight in its quest for source material. The old established state archives were unwilling to turn over their collections of party material. Only the Munich police and the Bavarian political police gave the Hauptarchiv their pre – 1933 documentation on the NSDAP. In 1938, Dr. Erich Uetrecht wrote an elaborate memorandum discussing the reorganization of all German archives and assigning the Hauptarchiv a central place in the scheme. The eventual result of this memorandum was a circular signed by Rudolf Hess and sent in July 1939 to the various state agencies, directing them to collaborate fully with the Hauptarchiv; in response, these agencies drew up lists which enabled the Hauptarchiv to ascertain the location of files pertinent to NSDAP history, although the documents themselves were not transferred. 
In 1939, the Hauptarchiv was designated as depository for the Stellvertreter des Fuehrers and the Kanzlei des Fuehrers, as well as the Reichsleitung der NSDAP. It was also given jurisdiction over the various Gau archives and the archives of the NSDAP “Gliederungen” (e.g., S.A., S.S., N.S.K.K., H.J., N.S. Dozentenbund (and the “angeschlossenen Verbaende” (D.A.F. and N.S.V., among others).By 1943, it had become apparent that Munich was no longer safe from aerial attack and that the more precious holdings of the Hauptarchiv would have to be moved. Three Bavarian sites were selected for storage: Passau-Feste-Oberhaus, Neumarkt-St. Veit go up to March 1945. At the end of war, the American army seized what archives it could find in Passau and Neumarkt-St. Veit. (The fate of the Lenggries material is unknown.) The confiscated documents were then reassembled at the Berlin Document Center in early 1946.

Archival History

The following information was provided by W. Glenn Campbell,Director of the Hoover Institution, Stanford, California in December 1963.
Several years ago, the Hoover Institution undertook to microfilm in its entirety a group of documents entitled “Collection NSDAP Hauptarchiv” which were stored at the Document Center in Berlin, and administered by the U.S. Department of State. With the cooperation of the Department of State, the microfilming got under way in the autumn of 1958 and was completed before the actual documents were turned over to the Bundesarchiv in Koblenz, the current depository. 
The 134 reels of microfilm of the “Collection NSDAP Hauptarchiv” are based on the archive originally established by the National Socialist Party to preserve the most valuable documentation on the Party’s background, history and organization. These documents will provide historians with an additional precious source for the study of the growth of National Socialism. 
The microfilming was extended to cover additional material on prominent National Socialist figures held at the Berlin Document Center and includes selected items from its Collection Streicher and Collection Himmler, the originals of which are now also located at the Bundesarchiv. A listing of this material is included in this Guide although the material is not actually part of the NSDAP Hauptarchiv.
Special thanks to Dr. Bernard G. noble, the former director of the Historical Mr. Isaac A. Stone, and Mr. James S. Beddie, former Heads of the Berlin Document Center, for giving generous assistance in solving the complicated microfilming procedures. 
The completion of this costly project was made possible by a generous gift from Mr. John W. Blodgett, Jr., and Mrs. Morris Hadley, in memory of their father, John W. Blodgett. Additional financial assistance came from a gift of Mr. Richard M. Hunt.
Professor Witold S. Sworakowski, Assistant Director of the Hoover Institution, initiated the project and carried all the negotiations to a successful conclusion. 
The preparation of a detailed guide to this most complex collection of documents, comprising about 240, 000 frames of microfilm, became imperative. Without this research tool the scholar trying to find files in which he is particularly interested would lose many hours in frustrating search. The compiling of this guide was undertaken by Curator of the Hoover Institution’s Western European Collection, Mrs. Agnes F. Peterson, with the able assistance of Mrs. Grete Heinz. They deserve the gratitude of all users of this guide.

Acquisition

Donor: Hoover Institution

Scope and Content

The Hauptarchiv was set up primarily as a depository for source material on which historians of the future would draw to write the history of the party. Its emphasis, therefore, lay on the years between 1919 and 1933. Material going back as far as 1890 was collected, however, to encompass the political and ideological forerunners of National Socialism, and although the spotlight was on the party itself, considerable importance was attached to parallel nationalist “voelkisch” movements and political opponents – for example, the entire files of the Deutsche Demokratische Partei were taken over by the Hauptarchiv. With its special ties to the Stellvertreter des Fuehrers office, the Hauptarchiv had high priority as a depository for the documents of the Fuehrer himself. (This was not the case with respect to other high-ranking Nazi officials, such as Goebbels, Goering, or Himmler). Around 1937, the Hauptarchiv undertook a series of investigations to make up for its tardy arrival in the field of party history by gathering reports from old party-members, such as Anton Drexler and Dietrich Eckhardt. It also collected information on party history from the various Gaue and the many Nazi newspapers thoughout the country. As the principal depository for the “Gliederungen” and “angeschlossene Verbaende” of the NSDAP, the Hauptarchiv received a number of historically relevant files, but the files of these organisations were not collected systematically for the post – 1933 years, except where whole document collections were taken over when an organisation closed down – as in the case of the Nationalsozialistischer Studentenbund.
As a result, material for the years 1933-45 is spotty at best. It covers the Reichsparteitage (1923-39) in full organisational detail. It presents extensive information on the deployment of the “Gliederungen” and “angeschlossene Verbaende” in wartime. It includes correspondence from Germans all over the globe during the mid thirties. It covers scattered reports sent in from the Gau archives, including Austria, on party affairs, as well as on the political atmosphere in wartime Germany. As documentation on the relation of church and state during the thirties, the Hauptarchiv boasts the private archive of Abt Schachleiter, a prominent Nazi and Catholic Church dignitary.

System of Arrangement

It must be clearly understood that the collection microfilmed at the Berlin Document Center does not reconstitute intact that part of the Hauptarchiv which escaped destruction. No catalogue of the original archival holdings had been preserved, and the only remaining clues to the contents are surveys and lists drawn up between 1942 and 1945. These include itemised lists of holdings on particular topics (nationalist parties, Marxist parties), lists of documents, contained the Hauptarchiv’s own files (Folders 1923 I and II). The most important evidence is contained in the “Bestandbuch Archivalien Hauptarchiv, “which lists the documents, files, and groups of files (Aktenkoerper) as they were received at the evacuation depot in Neumarkt-St. Veit between August 1, 1944 and March 1945.   On the basis of these lists, statements of the Hauptarchiv’s last director (Dr. Bruegmann), it must be concluded that the bulk of the material was rescued. There are notable exceptions, such as the extensive files of the Wehrpolitisches Amt, the Rechtswahrerbund, the Allgemeiner deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund, and the Reichs-Fluechtlingshilfswerk –all of which have disappeared. The same holds true for the important file on the plot of July 20, 1944, of which there remains only the carefully itemized curator’s list of 126 documents. It seems certain that some other individual pieces have been accidentally destroyed or purposely eliminated. 
There is no evidence that the material which reached the Berlin Document Centre was ever given a definitive over-all organisation at the Hauptarchiv itself, a fact which is not surprising in view of the recent date of its acquisition, its rapid expansion, and the disarray caused by the transfers to the storage sites. The final transfer to Berlin must have compounded the confusion. Consequently, the Berlin Document Center was obliged to undertake the reorganization of the material. Most of this work was done in 1946 and 1947; minor additional reorganisation was carried out in 1959. Wherever possible, the identifiable folders of the Hauptarchiv were maintained and the original headings used. No attempt was made to use folders of uniform length. Thus folders may contain a few sheets or several thousand. The Berlin Document Center, on its own, assigned numbers to each folder for easier handling. At the same time it proceeded to set up a broader scheme which took into account the nature of the material at hand.
The material which the Hauptarchiv itself had received from the various NSDAP organization and from individual donors or collected on the basis of questionnaires and research was divided roughly into 28 groups (or Gruppen, as the Berlin document Center called them under topics such as personal documentation on Hitler, early NSDAP history, recollections of old militants, political parties, citizens’ militias, Germans abroad, and so forth.
A different procedure was adopted for the remainder of the material, which had apparently been stored in separate filing cabinets at the Hauptarchiv. This consisted of documents supplied by the various government, police, and judicial agencies. No attempt was made to impose topical groupings, and the material was organized roughly by provenance – that is, by whatever agency had turned the files over to the Hauptarchiv. The files of the Berlin police, which are to be found in Group 'Verschiedenes', constitute the only important exceptions. The main agencies are the Munich police, the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior, and the Munich tribunal. Unfortunately, additional material of the Munich and Nuremberg police, which was located in 1959, could not be filmed along with the bulk of the material from these sources; it appears in a later part of the microfilms. The Hauptarchiv’s own working files bring the microfilm to a close. 
The catalogue follows the scheme of the “Collecton NSDAP Hauptarchiv” of the Berlin Document Center. Folders 1-1421 constitute MF Doc 29/1 and are arranged into 29 subject groups supplied by the Berlin Document Center.  Folders 1426-1923 II constitute MF Doc 29/2 and are arranged by provenance, that is, by the agency heading indicated at the Berlin document Center. 
As no frame numbers were assigned at the time of the filming and the folders are of very unequal length, the Hoover Institution has supplied an approximate count of frame numbers per folder (usually on side of a page, sometimes both sides).The content heading for each folder (in German) was drawn up by the Berlin Document Center and is reproduced intact as it appears at the beginning of each folder. Where this heading was insufficient or misleading for the microfilm user, more detailed descriptions (in English) have been added at the Hoover Institution, as have cross references and technical information. Whenever a reference to related material seemed necessary, the word “consult” was used. The German abbreviations were not corrected even when inconsistent, but were kept as they appear on the film.
The problems of microfilming large amounts of material widely divergent as to shape, size, state of preservation and provenance are readily apparent. In order to solve some of these problems, three different methods were chosen. The greater part of the material was filmed on a rotating camera (flow camera) which filmed automatically both front and back pages. MF Doc /1 (excluding reels with suffix 'A' or 'B') were filmed in numerical sequence in this manner. A considerable body of material, either bound or too bulky in size to be filmed by the rotating camera, was filmed with a flat-bed camera which reproduced each page individually. Therefore entire folders or parts of folders had to be removed from the sequence and filmed by the flat-bed camera. Reels with suffix 'A' were filmed in this manner. In a few isolated cases the material was in such bad condition that is could not be microfilmed; it was photostated instead and the Photostats were then microfilmed under special conditions at Standford. Reel B covers this material. Whenever material was removed from Reels 1-96 for technical reasons, a notation was made as to its new location. For example, the notation “MF Doc 29/1/1, Folder 2: Briefe an Hitler A-Z / See also MF Doc 29/1/1A” indicates that part of the material in the folder was shifted to Reel 1A. If the entire contents were removed, the notation would be "MF Doc 29/1/1, Folder 5: Personalakte Adolf Hitler…- See Reel B.” On the average, reels contain between 90 and 115 feet of microfilms, with approximately 2, 000 frames for the rotating camera (Reels 1-96) and 600 – 1, 000 frames for the flat-bed camera (Reels 1A-37A). It must also be noted that in the course of microfilming a considerable number of folders were split between the end of one reel and the beginning of the next. The Hoover Institution has 134 reels (1-96, 1A-37A, B) of negative microfilms and an equal number of positives. The National Archives also hold a complete set of positives.

Conditions Governing Access

Open

Conditions Governing Reproduction

No restrictions apply to the use or possible publication of the material, and positives of the films can be purchased from the Hoover Institution.

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Microfilm

People

Subjects

Places

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.