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Hitler's field headquarters, Hitler with staff, May or June 1940, Heinrich Hoffmann front row far right
.
Heinrich Hoffmann (September 12, 1885 in
Fürth - December 11, 1957 in
Munich) was a German photographer best known for his many published photographs of
Adolf Hitler.
Early life and career
Hoffmann worked in his father's photographic shop and as a photographer in Munich from 1908.
[1] He joined the
NSDAP in 1920 and was chosen by its new leader Hitler as his official photographer. The two became close friends. Hoffmann's photographs were published as postage stamps, postcards, posters and picture books. Following Hoffmann's suggestion, both he and Hitler received
royalties from all uses of Hitler's image (even on postage stamps), which made the photographer wealthy. In 1933 he was elected to the
Reichstag and in 1938 Hitler appointed him a 'Professor'.
Family
Hoffmann married Therese "Lelly" Baumann in 1911, their daughter Henriette ("Henny") was born on February 3, 1913 and followed by a son, Heinrich ("Heini") on October 24, 1916. Henriette married Reichsjugendführer (National Youth Leader)
Baldur von Schirach, who provided introductions to many of Hoffmann's picture books, in 1932. Therese Hoffmann died a sudden and unexpected death in 1928. Hoffmann and his second wife Erna introduced his
Munich studio assistant
Eva Braun to Hitler. Braun later became Hitler's mistress and ultimately, his wife on April 29, 1945 and partner in
suicide the following day.
Youth around Hitler, a Hoffmann picture book
Publications
Later life
Hoffmann was arrested by the Americans on 10 May 1945 and after the war he was tried and sentenced to four years for Nazi
profiteering. Upon release from prison on 31 May 1950 he settled again in Munich where he died 7 years later at age 72.
Photographic archive
A large archive of his photographs was seized by the United States government during the Allied occupation of Germany. These are now held by the
National Archives and Records Administration and comprise an important source of images for scholars of the Third Reich. These photographs are considered to be in the
public domain in the US owing to their status as seized Nazi property (otherwise their copyrights would not yet have expired).
[2].
There is an archive called the 'Bildarchiv Hoffmann', at the
Bavarian State Library (or Bayerische Staatsbibliothek) in Munich, Germany.
[3]
References
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