How Did Adolf Hitler's Rise To Power

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How did Adolf Hitler go from a corporal in the German military to the Der Fuhrer or “The Leader” of Germany? Adolf Hitler is perhaps one of the most well known names in history, being known for his role as the Nazi Party leader and one of the most powerful dictators in the twentieth century, with the blood of more than six million Jews from the Holocaust on his hands (“Adolf Hitler”). Adolf Hitler’s rise to power was dependent upon his time in the German military, his work and leadership in the Nazi Party, his appointment to Chancellor of Germany, and, finally, his self-appointment as both the Fuhrer and Chancellor of Germany. With strategic moves in the military, with the Nazi Party, and in the German government, Adolf Hitler rose to power …show more content…

After the war, Hitler worked for the army as an undercover intelligence officer and was sent to check on the German Worker’s Party (“Hitler Comes to Power”), where he was to keep watch for anti-nationalist ideas coming from German troops (Bradley, 12). He joined the party in September 1919, however, because he agreed with their nationalist, anti-Semitic beliefs, and he became in charge of the party’s propaganda and publicity, using the color red and a swastika to represent the party and planning marches and rallies to draw people in (Bradley, 12-13). He renamed the party the National Socialist German Worker’s Party, or Nazi Party for short, and became the party chairman in 1921 (“Adolf Hitler Biography”). Furthermore, the US Holocaust Memorial Museum states,“Hitler was a powerful and spellbinding speaker who attracted a wide following of Germans desperate for change” (“Hitler Comes to Power”). In the 1930’s, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party made good use of the economic decline of Germany, while millions were unemployed and had no confidence in the weak government of the Weimar Republic after the war (“Hitler Comes to Power”). More and more people came to hear him, and Hitler learned how to capture his listener’s emotions, telling them the Jews, Socialists, and Communists were to blame for Germany’s problems and that the Germans were the master race (Bradley, 13). In addition, Hitler attempted to stage a revolt to take over the government called the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923, but it failed, and he was sentenced to jail for treason (“Adolf Hitler Biography”). Although the Nazi party became disorganized while he served the 9 months in jail, the whole nation now knew who Hitler was and what he stood for due to the press he received and speeches he made during his trial (Gavin). Even from his jail cell he continued his rise to

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