Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Wilhelm Bruckner

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Wilhelm Bruckner

Wilhelm Bruckner

Weill - Die Dreigroschenoper - Wilhelm Brückner-Rüggeberg


Wilhelm Bruckner (11 December 1884 in Baden-Baden – 18 August 1954 in Herbsdorf, Upper Bavaria) was until 1940 Adolf Hitler's chief adjutant.

Contents

Life

Bruckner grew up in Baden-Baden and also did his Abitur there. Afterwards he studied law and economics in Strasbourg (then Strasburg, Germany), Freiburg, Heidelberg and Munich.

In the First World War, Bruckner was an officer in a Bavarian infantry regiment and was discharged as a lieutenant. After the war, he joined the Freikorp Epp and participated in Schutzenregiment 42 as a member of the Reichswehr in suppressing the Bavarian Soviet Republic.

Towards the end of 1919 Bruckner was once again going to university, but became for three years a film recording technician. In late 1922 he joined the NSDAP (Nazi Party) and on 1 February 1923 became leader of the Munich SA Regiment. He was among those who were active in spurring on the Putsch. He delivered the quote: "The day is coming when I cannot hold the people. If nothing happens now, then the people will slip away."

On 9 November 1923 Bruckner took part in the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, as a result of which he was sentenced to a year and a half in prison. He was released only four and a half months later and once again took over his old SA regiment's leadership. Shortly thereafter, he worked until 1927 as the third general secretary at the Association for the German Community Abroad (Verein fur das Deutschtum im Ausland or VDA). Over the next few years he lived on his income as a sales representative, until 1929 when he found a steady job at the German Foreign Institute.

By the next year, Bruckner had become Adolf Hitler's adjutant and bodyguard, later rising to chief adjutant. In that role he supervised all of the Fuhrer's personal servants, valets, bodyguards, and adjutants. He thereby counted among those who were in Hitler's innermost personal circle, playing as one of Hitler's closest confidants next to Joseph Goebbels and Sepp Dietrich in the propaganda film "Hitler uber Deutschland" (1932).

On 9 November 1934, Bruckner was appointed an SA-Obergruppenfuhrer by Hitler. It was through a car accident later that same year that Bruckner managed to procure for Hitler his personal doctor, Karl Brandt, who stayed with Hitler for years.

On 15 January 1936, Bruckner became an honorary citizen of Detmold (he was stripped of this honour by city council on 9 November 1945). Bruckner, who was well liked by applicants and everyday visitors at the Reich Chancellery for his straightforwardness and affability, lost ever more importance with the war's outbreak. He found that he had to yield more and more ground to Wehrmacht and SS adjutants. He was fired on 18 October 1940.

He was succeeded by Julius Schaub. Bruckner went into the Wehrmacht, becoming a colonel by war's end. He died on 18 August 1954 in Herbsdorf, Upper Bavaria.

References

Wilhelm Bruckner Wikipedia