Hedwig Potthast

Hedwig Potthast

Hedwig Potthast, 1933
Personal details
Born Hedwig Potthast
5 February 1912
Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Died 1997 (aged 85; date unknown)
Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Children
  • Helge (son; born 15 February 1942)
  • Nanette-Dorothea (daughter; 20 July 1944)

Hedwig Potthast (5 February 1912 – 1997) was the private secretary and mistress of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler with whom she had two children.

Born in 1912, Potthast began as Himmler's secretary in 1936 and by 1938 she was his lover. She resigned from her duties in 1941, and subsequently had two children with Himmler, a boy and a girl. After the war, Potthast married and lived out the rest of her life outside the public eye. In post-war interviews, she refrained from answering questions about Himmler's involvement in war crimes committed by the Nazis and her own knowledge of them. She died in 1997.

Biography

Early life

Hedwig Potthast was born on 5 February 1912 in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia as the daughter of a local businessman.[1] After her final Abitur exams at secondary school, she trained as a secretary qualified in foreign languages.[1] At the end of her training in 1928, Potthast worked in Koblenz.[1]

Relationship with Himmler

Through Kurt Baron von Schröder, one of the founders of the Freundeskreis der Wirtschaft ("Circle of Friends of the Economy"), she met Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler.[1] In 1934, she was employed at Gestapo headquarters at Prinz-Albrecht-Straße in Berlin.[1] Then from early 1936 to early 1941, Potthast was Himmler's private secretary, and in this function was particularly responsible for Himmler's sponsorship and giving of awards.[1]

Although married since 1928, SS chief Heinrich Himmler would go on to father two children with Potthast

Himmler and Potthast confessed their love for each other at Christmastime in 1938.[1] At first they tried to keep it platonic, but they fell into an adulterous relationship.[1] Himmler's wife since 1928 and mother of their daughter, Margarete Himmler, found out about Himmler's relationship with Potthast at some time in February 1941.[1] She felt humiliated and bitter,[1] and Potthast's parents rejected the extramarital relationship.[2] Potthast first took up residence in Grunewald and from 1943 she lived in Brückentin, near the estate of Oswald Pohl, because she was a friend of his wife, Eleonore.[1] Lina Heydrich, wife of Himmler's right-hand man Reinhard Heydrich, and Gerda Bormann, spouse of Martin Bormann, were also counted among her friends.[3] Later she lived in Berchtesgaden, Bavaria.[1]

Potthast had two children with Himmler. Helge, a son born 15 February 1942 in the Hohenlychen Sanatorium, and Nanette-Dorothea, a daughter born 20 July 1944 in Berchtesgaden.[1] That same year, Himmler borrowed 80,000 Reichmarks from the Nazi Party Chancellery and had a house built for Potthast near Berchtesgaden.[4]

Little is known about the overall relationship between Himmler and Potthast.[1] The couple most likely saw each other only rarely due to Himmler's activity in his numerous offices.[1] Presumably, neither Potthast nor Himmler's wife were informed of his "secret work".[1] Potthast's relationship with Himmler ended in early 1945,[5]—they met for the last time in mid-March 1945, after which they shared daily telephone calls up until 19 April 1945.[6]

Post-war

When World War II in Europe ended, Potthast was in Achensee, Austria and, after learning of the death of Himmler on the radio on 23 May 1945, went into hiding, living temporarily with Eleonore Pohl in Rosenheim, Upper Bavaria.[7] In June/July 1945, she was arrested there by members of the U.S. Army and interrogated for several days in Munich.[7] Margarete and Himmler's daughter, Gudrun Burwitz, did not learn of her half-siblings until after the war.[7] When she tried to make contact with them, Potthast refused.[7] She lived in Theissendorf and kept in contact with the family of Himmler's older brother, Gebhard, as well as Himmler's former close confidant, Karl Wolff, until the 1950s.[8]

Final years

Potthast later married and took on her husband's name.[8] Her son struggled with ailments throughout his life and stayed with her; her daughter became a physician.[8] In a 1987 interview with former Der Spiegel editor Peter-Ferdinand Koch, Potthast remained silent about Himmler's responsibility for Nazi war crimes.[8] She died in 1997, aged 85, in Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg.[9]

References

Sources

Printed

Online

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.