Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
In the Third Reich a high percentage of the civil servants in the cadres of functionaries of the National Socialist Party on the local and district levels were teachers. It is thus not surprising that some historians who studied the elementary school teaching profession in the Weimar Republic began their research with assumptions about the “ideological affinities” of teachers to fascism and discussed “the specific predispositions that made it easy for them to identify with National Socialism.” The German Teachers' Association, one scholar wrote, “proved to be more a precursor than an opponent of fascism.” At its national congress in May 1932, another historian related, the representatives of the chapters voted for a policy which, in effect, abandoned the democratic republic and “indirectly helped those political forces that would create a dictatorship in Germany within a year.” In 1932 and 1933, on the other hand, recruiters for the National Socialist Teachers’ League often complained about “hard and difficult soil” and “unpenetrable” regions.
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23. The central leadership of the German Teachers’ Association in Berlin criticized the referendum campaign as an attack on the democratic state. The proposed Freedom Law in the referendum threatened cabinet ministers who were responsible for the ratification and implementation of the Young Plan with imprisonment for high treason. Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 31 October 1929, pp. 892–95; ibid., 14 November 1929, pp. 939–40.
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31. On Knoop’s life, see Westfälische Schulzeitung, 10 June 1933, p. 339. On the effects of the government’s stabilization policy and downsizing of the civil service on the young generation of teachers in 1923–1924, see Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 25 July 1924, pp. 4493–98. See also Andreas, Kunz, Civil Servants and the Politics of Inflation in Germany, 1914–1924 (Berlin 1986), 370ff.Google Scholar
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40. Arthur, Hennig, “Der Junglehrer als Typus,” in Von den Enterbten der Schule: Ein Junglehrerbrevier, ed. Bannert, Willy Hans (Berlin, 1927), 16, 23–24Google Scholar; Max, Simoneit, “Das seelische Schicksal der schulfremden Junglehrer,”Google Scholar in ibid., 25–38; Der Junge Lehrer: Werkblatt des katholischen Junglehrerbundes des Deutschen Reichs: Beilage zur Pädagogischen Post, 12 May 1927, p. 66; ibid., 12 May 1927, pp. 69–70; ibid., 26 May 1928, pp. 73–74.
41. Der Junge Lehrer, 12 January 1927, pp. 2–4.
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43. Allgemeine Deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 2 July 1931, pp. 544–45; Pädagogische Post, 29 October 1931, pp. 701–02.
44. In the elections for the student union (Allgemeiner Studentenausschuss) at the Pädagogisches Institut in Leipzig, the Nazi slate won 39.4 percent of the votes cast in 1931. In 1932, the votes for the Nazi slate increased slightly in absolute numbers, and, with a lower turnout, the number of students voting for the other partisan lists of candidates dropped steeply. Neue sächsische Schulzeitung, 9 March 1932, p. 75. On the attraction of students in the Pädagogische Akademien to National Socialism, see Breyvogel, , Die soziale Lage, 196.Google Scholar
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50. A more extensive discussion of the conflicts over school reforms is given in my forthcoming book entitled “Schoolteachers, Educational Reform, and the Politics of Culture in Weimar Germany.” See also Wolfgang, Wittwer, Die sozialdemokratische Schulpolitik in der Weimarer Republik (Berlin, 1980)Google Scholar; Günther, Grünthal, Reichsschulgesetz und Zentrumspartei in der Weimarer Republik (D¨sseldorf, 1968)Google Scholar; Ludwig, Richter, Kirche und Schule in den Beratungen der Weimarer National-versammlung (Düsseldorf, 1996)Google Scholar; Detlef, Lehnert and Klaus, Megerle, “Problems of Identity and Consensus in a Fragmented Society: The Weimar Republic,” in Political Culture in Germany, ed. Dirk, Berg-Schlosser and Ralf, Rythlewski (New York, 1993), 43–59.Google Scholar
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53. Nationalsozialistische Lehrerzeitung, 8 June 1931, pp. 6–7; ibid., 6 June 1933, p. 10.
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58. Neue sächsische Schulzeitung, 11 May 1932, p. 141.
59. Neue sächsische Schulzeitung, 26 March 1932, p. 91.
61. Deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 28 October 1932, pp. 443–44, 448; ibid., 9 September 1932, pp. 367–68; Schulpflege, 30 July 1932, pp. 338–46.
62. Neue sächsische Schulzeitung, 4 March 1931, p. 41; ibid., 9 March 1932, pp. 75–76; ibid., 24 August 1932, p. 214. On the high intensity of the Nazi agitation in Saxony, see Benjamin, Lapp, Revolution from the Right: Politics, Class, and the Rise of Nazism in Saxony, 1919–1933 (Boston, 1997), 188ffGoogle Scholar; Claus-Christian, Szejnmann, Nazism in Central Germany: The Brownshirts in “Red” Saxony (New York, 1999), 55, 75–76.Google Scholar
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64. Lehrerzeitung für Ost- und Westpreussen, 21 October 1932, 429–31.
65. Neue sächsische Schulzeitung, 25 November 1931, pp. 314–15.
66. Westfälische Schulzeitung, 23 July 1932, pp. 401–7, 409.
67. See, for example, Bölling, , Volksschullehrer und Politik, 209–16Google Scholar. Bölling’s reconstruction of the German Teachers’ Association’s response to the challenge of National Socialism in 1932 is based too heavily on the views of Georg Wolff, the chairman of the executive board. The strategy of neutrality and “dialogue” recommended by Wolff “was contested and not adopted at the national congress in 1932. The German Teachers’ Association during these fateful years has a more complex history than the story of its last chairman’s political myopia and opportunism. This difference in interpretation in no way diminishes the value of Bölling’s careful research on this professional organization during the Weimar Republic.
69. Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 2 January 1932, pp. 1–3.
72. Ibid., 26 March 1932, Beilage, pp. 2–4.
73. Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 30 April 1932, p. 331. See also the article written by Ernst, Müller of Dortmund in Preussische Lehrerzeitung, 26 03 1932, pp. 1–3Google Scholar. For the objections to Wolff’s strategy voiced by Karl Trinks and other members of the Saxon Teachers’ Association, Sächsische Schulzeitung, 3 February 1932, pp. 77–82; ibid., 9 March 1932, pp. 194–96; Vertreterversammlung des sächsischen Lehrervereins vom 21. bis 23. März 1932 in Zwickau, 62–63.
74. Schlesische Schulzeitung, 28 April 1932, p. 329.
75. Schulblatt der Provinz Sachsen, 11 February 1932, p. 56.
76. Preussische Lehrerzeitung, 27 February 1932, pp. 1–2; ibid., 21 April 1932, pp. 3–4. At the congress of the German Teachers’ Association in May 1932, Pretzel contended that it was “not the most essential task of the leadership at this time to protect the Constitution” but to ensure the unity of the association. Although he admired the democratic state ideal, he confessed openly that he did not consider the “existing form of the republic” to be the best state. Deutscher Lehrerverein, Verhandlungen der 40. Vertreterversammlung am 17. und 18. Mai 1932 in Rostock, (Berlin, 1932), 91ffGoogle Scholar. On the failure of the German State Party to revitalize the liberal movement and the pessimism and resignation of liberal Democrats in these years, see Jones, , German Liberalism and the Dissolution of the Weimar Party System, 378ff.Google Scholar
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78. The Schulwissenschaftlicher Bildungsverein in Hamburg had a membership of 416. After the congress this organization broke its loose ties to the German Teachers’ Association. Günther’s Nazi sympathies were revealed when he joined the Kampfbund für deutscher Kultur in Hamburg.
79. Verhandlungen der 40. Vertreterversammlung, 91ff, 118–19, 122.
80. See the report of the congress in Westfälische Schulzeitung, 28 May 1932, pp. 277–82.
81. Verhandlungen der 40. Vertreterversammlung, 200.
82. Ibid., 173ff.
83. Sächsische Schulzeitung, 25 May 1932, p. 385. Wolff was sharply criticized in the report published in the Hamburger Lehrerzeitung, reprinted in Schlesische Schulzeitung, 11 August 1932, p. 607.
84. Schlesische Schulzeitung, 21 July 1932, pp. 552–54; ibid., 18 August 1932, p. 631.
85. Reports published in the Schulblatt für Braunschweig und Anhalt, Hessische Schulzeitung, and Badische Schulzeitung, reprinted in Schlesische Schulzeitung, 11 August 1932, pp. 606–8.
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87. See Max, Karstedt’s discussion of the meaning of parteipolitische Neutralität in Brandenburgische Schulzeitung, 25 02 1933, pp. 80–81.Google Scholar
88. Jahrbuch des deutschen Lehrervereins 1932 (Berlin, 1932), pp. 126–27.
89. Brandenburgische Schulzeitung, 15 January 1931, p. 20; ibid., 23 April 1931, pp. 185–86.
90. Nationalozialistische Erziehung, 10 August 1932, pp. 29–30; ibid., 25 August 1932, pp. 47–48.
91. On the expansion of the league in the province of Brandenburg, , Nationalsozialistische Erziehung, 10 08 1932, pp. 31–32Google Scholar; ibid., 25 August 1932, p. 54; ibid., 10 February 1933, p. 43.
92. Nationalsozialistische Erziehung, 25 August 1932, p. 46; ibid., 10 October 1932, pp. 1045; ibid., 29 October 1932, pp. 114–15. Polemical speeches against the educational reforms were also delivered by Hans Schemm and Heinrich Scharrelmann, a disgruntled left-wing reformer in Bremen who converted to National Socialism in the early 1930s, at the rallies organized by the National Socialist Teachers’ League in Berlin. See Nationalsozialistische Lehrerzeitung 2, February 1932, p. 9; ibid., 5, May 1932, pp. 1–14; ibid., 9, September 1932, pp. 5–8
93. This attitude toward big-city teachers can be seen in an article by Ernst Rudolf, a rural teacher who became a National Socialist, in Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 6 May 1933, pp. 318–20. On the unhappiness of rural schoolteachers in their situation of social and cultural isolation, see Paul, Bode, “Grenzen und Aufgaben moderner Landschularbeit,” in Stimmen zur Landschulreform, ed. Franz, Kade (Frankfurt am Main, 1932), 1–3Google Scholar; Max Wolf, “Zur Landschulre-form,” in ibid., 124–29; Hugo, Hennig, Die einklassige Schule: Eine statistische Erhebung aus dem Regierungsbezirk GumbinnenGoogle Scholar, published by the East Prussian Provincial Teachers’ Association and based on a study conducted in 1927 of more than 500 teachers.
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99. See the report of the speech delivered in Potsdam by Blum, R., a teacher who was born in the Ostmark, in Brandenburgische Schulzeitung, 8 April 1933, p. 154Google Scholar. See also ibid., 11 March 1933, p. 109; Nationalsozialistische Erziehung, 25 February 1933, p. 60.
100. Nationalsozialistische Erziehung, 10 August 1932, p. 35; ibid., 25 August 1932, p. 45.
101. Brandenburgische Schulzeitung, 27 August 1932, p. 356.
103. Ibid., 5 November 1932, pp. 450–51, 456.
104. Ibid., 11 February 1933, pp. 60–61; ibid., 25 February 1933, pp. 80–83. For their criticism of the National Socialists in government offices and Nazi political terrorism in the election campaign, see also Allgemeine deutsche Lehrerzeitung, 11 February 1933, p. 108; ibid., 18 February 1933, pp. 132–33; ibid., 25 February 1933, pp. 153–54; Sächsische Schulzeitung, 8 February 1933, p. 117; ibid., 22 February 1933, pp. 169–74; ibid., 1 March 1933, pp. 201–6.
106. Ibid., 11 March 1933, p. 110.
107. See Table A.17 in Jarausch, , The Unfree Professions, 255.Google Scholar
108. See Breyvogel’s study of the league’s membership in the province of Hesse-Nassau and the state of Hesse in Die soziale Lage, 201.
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