Description:

MARTIN BORMANN
(1900 - 1945?) Head of the Nazi Party Chancellery and private secretary to Adolf Hitler, by the end of World War II Bormann had become second only to Hitler himself in terms of real political power. Important typed D.S., 1p. 4to. on "DER SEKRETAR DES FUHRERS REICHSLEITER MARTIN BORMANN" letterhead, Munich, Mar. 1, 1944. Bormann issues a statement to all potential visitors to the Berghof, Hitler's retreat at Berchtesgaden. In part: "...It is my responsibility to remind everyone that in accordance with directives by the Fuehrer, nobody without special permission is allowed to set foot at the Berghof. This naturally also applies to persons intending to visit guests already at the Berghof. Such visitors need to file with the Personnel Adjutant on duty well in advance for permission...it is [also] advisable to notify beforehand the Reichssicherheitsdienst, at the same time providing personal data...The Berghof is the private residence of the Fuhrer. Only for a compelling reason will one be admitted...". File holes at left, else fine.
Eleven days after Bormann issued this directive, Capt. Eberhard von Breitenbuch, recruited by Claus von Stauffenberg, arrived at the Berghof with a concealed pistol with the intention of killing Hitler. Von Breitenbuch, who had come as an aide to Field Marshal Ernst Busch, was thwarted in his attempt due to an SS directive prohibiting aides from being in the same room as the Fuhrer. In June 1944, von Stauffenberg again proposed to make an assassination attempt at Berghof, but his comrades disapproved, noting that neither Goering nor Himmler would be present. Even the British planned to kill the Fuehrer at Berghof. Operation Foxley called for a sniper to kill Hitler as he made his daily walk from the Berghof to his teahouse. The operation was called off after British intelligence concluded that Hitler's bad decisions were actually hastening an end to the war.

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February 10, 2015 10:00 AM EST
Elkton, MD, US

Alexander Historical Auctions LLC

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