 
.
.Albert
SPEER
Albert Speer, born Berthold Konrad Hermann Albert Speer, (March 19, 1905
– September 1, 1981) was a German architect who was, for part of
World War II, Minister of Armaments and War Production for the
Third Reich. Speer was Adolf Hitler's chief architect before
assuming ministerial office. As "the Nazi who said sorry", he
accepted responsibility at the Nuremberg trials and in his memoirs
for crimes of the Nazi regime. His level of involvement in the
persecution of the Jews and his level of knowledge of the
Holocaust remain matters of dispute.
Speer joined the Nazi Party in
1931. His architectural skills made him increasingly prominent
within the Party and he became a member of Hitler's inner circle.
The dictator commissioned him to design and construct a number of
structures, including the Reich Chancellery and the
Zeppelinfeld stadium in Nuremberg where Party rallies were
held. Speer also made plans to reconstruct Berlin on a grand
scale, with huge buildings, wide boulevards, and a reorganized
transportation system.
As Hitler's Minister of Armaments
and War Production, Speer was so successful that Germany's war
production continued to increase despite massive and devastating
Allied bombing. After the war, he was tried at Nuremberg and
sentenced to 20 years in prison for his role in the Nazi regime,
principally for the use of forced labor. He served his full
sentence, most of it at Spandau Prison in West Berlin.
Following his release from Spandau
in 1966, Speer published two bestselling autobiographical works,
Inside the Third Reich and Spandau: The Secret Diaries,
detailing his often close personal relationship with Hitler, and
providing readers and historians with a unique perspective within
the workings of the Nazi regime. He later wrote a third book,
Infiltration, about the SS. Speer died of natural causes in
1981 while on a visit to London.
Early years
Speer was born in Mannheim,
Germany, into a wealthy middle class family. He was the second of
three sons of Albert and Luise Speer. In 1918, the family moved
permanently to their summer home, Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg, in
Heidelberg. According to Henry T. King, deputy prosecutor at
Nuremberg who later wrote a book about Speer, "Love and warmth
were lacking in the household of Speer's youth." Speer wanted to
become a mathematician, but his father said if Speer chose this
occupation he would "lead a life without money, without a
position, and without a future". Instead, Speer followed in the
footsteps of his father and grandfather and studied architecture.
Speer began his architectural
studies at the University of Karlsruhe instead of a more highly
acclaimed institution because the hyperinflation crisis of 1923
limited his parents' income. In 1924 when the crisis had abated,
he transferred to the "much more reputable" Technical University
of Munich. In 1925 he transferred again, this time to the
Technical University of Berlin where he studied under Heinrich
Tessenow, whom Speer greatly admired. After passing his exams in
1927, Speer became Tessenow's assistant, a high honor for a man of
22. As such, Speer taught some of Tessenow's classes while
continuing his own postgraduate studies. In Munich, and continuing
in Berlin, Speer began a close friendship, ultimately spanning
over 50 years, with Rudolf Wolters, who also studied under
Tessenow.
In the summer of 1922, Speer began
to date Margarete (Margret) Weber (1905–1987). The relationship
was frowned upon by Speer's class-conscious mother, who felt that
the Webers were socially inferior (Herr Weber was a
successful craftsman who employed 50 workers). Despite this
opposition, the two married in Berlin on August 28, 1928, though
seven years were to elapse before Margarete Speer was invited to
stay at her in-laws' home.
Joining the Nazis (1930–1934)
Speer stated he was apolitical when he was a young man, and
that he attended a Berlin Nazi rally in December 1930 at the
urging of some of his students.
He was surprised to find Hitler dressed in a neat blue suit,
rather than the
brown uniform seen on Nazi Party posters, and was greatly
impressed, not only with Hitler's proposals, but also with the man
himself. Several weeks later he attended another rally, though
this one was presided over by
Joseph Goebbels. Speer was disturbed by the way Goebbels
whipped the crowd into a frenzy. Despite this unease, Speer could
not shake the impression Hitler had made on him. On March 1, 1931,
he applied to join the Nazi Party and became member number
474,481.
Speer's first Nazi Party position was as head of
the Party's motorist association for the Berlin suburb of
Wannsee; he was in fact the only Nazi in the town with a car.
Speer reported to the Party's leader for the
West End of Berlin,
Karl Hanke, who hired Speer — without fee — to redecorate a
villa he had just rented. Hanke was enthusiastic about the
resulting work.
In 1931, Speer surrendered his position as Tessenow's assistant
due to pay cuts and moved to Mannheim, hoping to use his father's
connections to get commissions. He had little success, and his
father gave him a job as manager of the elder Speer's properties.
In July 1932, the Speers visited Berlin to help out the Party
prior to the
Reichstag
elections. While they were there, Hanke recommended the young
architect to Goebbels to help renovate the Party's Berlin
headquarters. Speer, who had been about to leave with his wife for
a vacation in
East Prussia, agreed to do the work. When the commission was
completed, Speer returned to Mannheim and remained there as Hitler
took office in January 1933.
After the Nazis took control, Hanke recalled Speer to Berlin.
Goebbels, the new Propaganda Minister, commissioned Speer to
renovate
his Ministry's building on
Wilhelmplatz.
Speer also designed the 1933 May
Day commemoration in Berlin. In Inside the Third Reich,
he wrote that, on seeing the original design for the Berlin rally
on Hanke's desk, he remarked that the site would resemble a
Schützenfest — a rifle club meet.
Hanke, now Goebbels'
State Secretary,
challenged him to create a better design. As Speer learned later,
Hitler was enthusiastic about Speer's design (which used giant
flags), though Goebbels took credit for it. Tessenow was
dismissive: "Do you think you have created something? It's showy,
that's all."
The organizers of the 1933
Nuremberg Nazi Party rally asked Speer to submit designs for
the rally, bringing him into contact with Hitler for the first
time. Neither the organizers nor
Rudolf Hess were willing to decide whether to approve the
plans, and Hess sent Speer to Hitler's Munich apartment to seek
his approval.
When Speer entered, the new
Chancellor was busy cleaning a pistol, which he briefly laid
aside to cast a short, interested glance at the plans, approving
them without even looking at the young architect.
This work won Speer his first national post, as Nazi Party
"Commissioner for the Artistic and Technical Presentation of Party
Rallies and Demonstrations".
Speer's next major assignment was as liaison to the Berlin
building trades for
Paul Troost's renovation of the Chancellery. As Chancellor,
Hitler had a residence in the building and came by every day to be
briefed by Speer and the building supervisor on the progress of
the renovations. After one of these briefings, Hitler invited
Speer to lunch, to the architect's great excitement.
Hitler evinced considerable interest in Speer during the luncheon,
and later told Speer that he had been looking for a young
architect capable of carrying out his architectural dreams for the
new Germany. Speer quickly became part of Hitler's inner circle;
he was expected to call on Hitler in the morning for a walk or
chat, to provide consultation on architectural matters, and to
discuss Hitler's ideas. Most days he was invited to dinner.
The two men found much in common: Hitler spoke of Speer as a
"kindred spirit" for whom he had always maintained "the warmest
human feelings".
The young, ambitious architect was dazzled by his rapid rise and
close proximity to Hitler, which guaranteed him a flood of
commissions from the government and from the very highest ranks of
the Party.
Speer testified at Nuremberg, "I belonged to a circle which
consisted of other artists and his personal staff. If Hitler had
had any friends at all, I certainly would have been one of his
close friends."
First Architect of the Third Reich (1934–1939)
When Troost died on January 21, 1934, Speer effectively
replaced him as the Party's chief architect. Hitler appointed
Speer as head of the Chief Office for Construction, which placed
him nominally on Hess's staff.
One of Speer's first commissions after Troost's death was the
Zeppelinfeld stadium—the
Nuremberg
parade grounds seen in
Leni Riefenstahl's propaganda masterpiece
Triumph of the Will. This huge work was capable of holding
340,000 people.
The
tribune was influenced by the
Pergamon Altar in
Anatolia, but was magnified to an enormous scale.
Speer insisted that as many events as possible be held at night,
both to give greater prominence to his lighting effects and to
hide the individual Nazis, many of whom were overweight.
Speer surrounded the site with 130
anti-aircraft
searchlights. This created the effect of a "cathedral
of light" or, as it was called by
British
Ambassador
Sir Neville Henderson, a "cathedral of ice".
Speer described this as his most beautiful work, and as the only
one that has stood the test of time.
Nuremberg was to be the site of
many more official Nazi buildings, most of which were never built;
for example, the German Stadium would have accommodated 400,000
spectators, while an even larger rally ground would have held half
a million Nazis. While planning these structures, Speer invented
the concept of "ruin value": that major buildings should be
constructed in such a way that they would leave aesthetically
pleasing ruins for thousands of years into the future. Such ruins
would be a testament to the greatness of the Third Reich, just as
ancient Greek or Roman ruins were symbols of the greatness of
those civilizations. Hitler enthusiastically embraced this
concept, and ordered that all the Reich's important buildings be
constructed in accord with it.
Speer could not avoid seeing the
brutal excesses of the Nazi regime, although they had little
effect on him. Shortly after the Night of the Long Knives, Hitler
ordered Speer to take workmen and go to the building housing the
offices of Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen to begin its conversion
into a security headquarters, even though it was still occupied by
von Papen's officials. Speer and his group entered the building,
to be confronted with a pool of blood, apparently from the body of
Herbert von Bose, von Papen's secretary, who had been killed
there. Speer related that the sight had no effect on him, other
than to cause him to avoid that room.
When Hitler deprecated Werner
March's design for the Olympic Stadium for the 1936 Summer
Olympics as too modernistic, Speer modified the plans by adding a
stone exterior. Speer designed the German Pavilion for the 1937
international exposition in Paris. The German and Soviet pavilion
sites were opposite each other. On learning (through a clandestine
look at the Soviet plans) that the Soviet design included two
colossal figures seemingly about to overrun the German site, Speer
modified his design to include a cubic mass which would check
their advance, with a huge eagle on top looking down on the Soviet
figures. Both pavilions were awarded gold medals for their
designs. Speer would also receive, from Hitler Youth Leader and
later fellow Spandau prisoner Baldur von Schirach, the Golden
Hitler Youth Honor Badge with oak leaves.
In
1937, Hitler appointed Speer as
General Building Inspector for the Reich Capital with the rank
of undersecretary of state in the Reich government. The position
carried with it extraordinary powers over the Berlin city
government and made Speer answerable to Hitler alone.
It also made Speer a member of the Reichstag, though the
body by then
had little effective power.
Hitler ordered Speer to make plans to rebuild Berlin. The plans
centered around a three-mile long grand boulevard running from
north to south, which Speer called the Prachtstrasse, or
Street of Magnificence;
he also referred to it as the "North-South Axis".
At the north end of the boulevard, Speer planned to build the
Volkshalle, a huge assembly hall with a dome which would
have been over 700 feet (210 m) high, with floor space for 180,000
people. At the southern end of the avenue would be a huge
triumphal arch; it would be almost 400 feet (120 m) high, and able
to fit the
Arc de Triomphe inside its opening. The outbreak of
World War II in 1939 led to the postponement, and eventual
abandonment, of these plans.
Part of the land for the boulevard was to be obtained by
consolidating Berlin's railway system.
Speer hired Wolters as part of his design team, with special
responsibility for the Prachtstrasse.
When Speer's father saw the model for the new Berlin, he said to
his son, "You've all gone completely insane."
In January 1938, Hitler asked Speer to build a new Reich
Chancellery on the same site as the existing structure, and said
he needed it for urgent foreign policy reasons no later than his
next New Year's reception for diplomats on January 10, 1939. This
was a huge undertaking, especially since the existing Chancellery
was in full operation. After consultation with his assistants,
Speer agreed. Although the site could not be cleared until April,
Speer was successful in building the large, impressive structure
in nine months. The structure included the "Marble Gallery": at
146 metres long, almost twice as long as the
Hall of Mirrors in the
Palace of Versailles. Speer employed thousands of workers in
two shifts. Hitler, who had remained away from the project, was
overwhelmed when Speer turned it over, fully furnished, two days
early.
In appreciation for the architect's work on the Chancellery,
Hitler awarded Speer the Nazi
Golden Party Badge.
Tessenow was less impressed, suggesting to Speer that he should
have taken nine years over the project.
The second Chancellery was damaged by the
Battle of Berlin in 1945
and was eventually dismantled by the Soviets, its stone used for a
war memorial.
During the Chancellery project, the
pogrom of
Kristallnacht took place. Speer would make no mention of it in
the first draft of Inside the Third Reich, and it was only
on the urgent advice of his publisher that he added a mention of
seeing the ruins of the Central Synagogue in Berlin from his car.
Speer was under significant psychological pressure during this
period of his life. In his
Spandau diaries, he recalled in an entry made on Nov, 20,
1949:
Soon after Hitler had given me the first large architectural
commissions, I began to suffer from anxiety in long tunnels, in
airplanes, or in small rooms. My heart would begin to race, I
would become breathless, the diaphragm would seem to grow heavy,
and I would get the impression that my blood pressure was rising
tremendously... Anxiety amidst all my freedom and power!
Wartime architect (1939–1942)
Speer supported the
German invasion of Poland and
subsequent war, though he recognized that it would lead to the
postponement, at the least, of his architectural dreams.
In his later years, Speer, talking with his biographer-to-be
Gitta Sereny, explained how he felt in 1939: "Of course I was
perfectly aware that [Hitler] sought world domination ... [A]t
that time I asked for nothing better. That was the whole point of
my buildings. They would have looked grotesque if Hitler had sat
still in Germany. All I wanted was for this great man to
dominate the globe."
Speer placed his department at the disposal of the
Wehrmacht. When Hitler remonstrated, and said it was not
for Speer to decide how his workers should be used, Speer simply
ignored him.
Among Speer's innovations were quick-reaction squads to construct
roads or clear away debris; before long, these units would be used
to clear bomb sites.
As the war progressed, initially to great German success, Speer
continued preliminary work on the Berlin and Nuremberg plans, at
Hitler's insistence, but failed to convince him of the need to
suspend peacetime construction projects.
Speer also oversaw the construction of buildings for the
Wehrmacht and
Luftwaffe, and developed a considerable organization to
deal with this work.
In 1940,
Joseph Stalin proposed that Speer pay a visit to Moscow.
Stalin had been particularly impressed by Speer's work in Paris,
and wished to meet the "Architect of the Reich". Hitler,
alternating between amusement and anger, did not allow Speer to
go, fearing that Stalin would put Speer in a "rat hole" until a
new Moscow arose.
When
Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, Speer came to doubt,
despite Hitler's reassurances, that his projects for Berlin would
ever be completed.
Minister of
Armaments
On February 8, 1942, Minister of Armaments
Fritz Todt died in a plane crash shortly after taking off from
Hitler's
eastern headquarters at
Rastenburg. Speer, who had arrived in Rastenburg the previous
evening, had accepted Todt's offer to fly with him to Berlin, but
had canceled some hours before takeoff (Speer stated in his
memoirs that the cancellation was due to exhaustion from travel
and a late-night meeting with Hitler). Later that day, Hitler
appointed Speer as Todt's successor to all of his posts. In
Inside the Third Reich, Speer recounts his meeting with Hitler
and his reluctance to take ministerial office, only doing so
because Hitler commanded it. Speer also states that
Hermann Göring raced to Hitler's headquarters on hearing of
Todt's death, hoping to claim Todt's powers. Hitler instead
presented Göring with the fait accompli of Speer's
appointment, causing Göring to leave without even attending Todt's
funeral.
At the time of Speer's accession to the office, the German
economy, unlike the British one, was not fully geared for war
production. Consumer goods were still being produced at nearly as
high a level as during peacetime. No fewer than five "Supreme
Authorities" had jurisdiction over armament production — one of
which, the Ministry of Economic Affairs, had declared in November
1941 that conditions did not permit an increase in armament
production. Few women were employed in the factories, which were
running only one shift. One evening soon after his appointment,
Speer went to visit a Berlin armament factory; he found no one on
the premises.
Speer overcame these difficulties by centralizing power over
the war economy in himself. Factories were given autonomy, or as
Speer put it, "self-responsibility", and each factory concentrated
on a single product.
Backed by Hitler's strong support (the dictator stated, "Speer,
I'll sign anything that comes from you"),
he divided the armament field according to weapon system, with
experts rather than civil servants overseeing each department. No
department head could be older than 55 — anyone older being
susceptible to "routine and arrogance"
— and no deputy older than 40. Over these departments was a
central planning committee headed by Speer, which took increasing
responsibility for war production, and as time went by, for the
German economy itself. According to the minutes of a conference at
Wehrmacht High Command in March 1942, "It is only Speer's
word that counts nowadays. He can interfere in all departments.
Already he overrides all departments ... On the whole, Speer's
attitude is to the point."
Goebbels would note in his diary in June 1943, "Speer is still
tops with the Führer. He is truly a genius with
organization."
Speer was so successful in his position that by late 1943, he was
widely regarded among the Nazi elite as a possible successor to
Hitler.
While Speer had tremendous power, he was of course subordinate
to Hitler. Nazi officials sometimes went around Speer by seeking
direct orders from the dictator. When Speer ordered peacetime
building work suspended, the
Gauleiters (Nazi Party district leaders) obtained an
exemption for their pet projects. When Speer sought the
appointment of Hanke as a labor czar to optimize the use of German
labor, Hitler, under the influence of
Martin Bormann, instead appointed
Fritz Sauckel. Rather than increasing female labor and taking
other steps to better organize German labor, as Speer favored,
Sauckel advocated importing labor from the occupied nations — and
did so, obtaining workers for (among other things) Speer's
armament factories, using the most brutal methods.
On December 10, 1943, Speer visited the underground
Mittelwerk
V-2 rocket factory that used
concentration camp labor. Shocked by the conditions there (5.7
percent of the work force died that month), and to ensure the
workers were in good enough shape to perform the labor,
Speer ordered improved conditions for the workers and the
construction of the above-ground
Dora camp. In spite of these changes, half of the workers at
Mittelwerk eventually died. Speer later commented, "[t]he
conditions for these prisoners were in fact barbarous, and a sense
of profound involvement and personal guilt seizes me whenever I
think of them."
By 1943, the
Allies had gained air superiority over Germany, and bombings
of German cities and industry had become commonplace. However, the
Allies in their
strategic bombing campaign did not concentrate on industry,
and Speer, with his improvisational skill, was able to overcome
bombing losses. In spite of these losses, German production of
tanks more than doubled in 1943, production of planes
increased by 80 percent, and production time for
Kriegsmarine's
submarines was reduced from one year to two months. Production
would continue to increase until the second half of 1944, by which
time enough equipment to supply 270 army divisions was being
produced—although the Wehrmacht had only 150 divisions in
the field.
In January 1944, Speer fell ill with complications from an
inflamed knee, and was away from the office for three months.
During his absence, his political rivals mainly Göring, and
Martin Bormann, attempted to have some of his powers
permanently transferred to them, while SS chief
Heinrich Himmler tried to have him physically isolated by
placing him under SS and
Gestapo surveillance through his personal physician
Karl Gebhardt whose "care" had made it worse. His wife and
friends had him ultimately placed under the care of his friend
Karl Brandt.
In April, they succeeded in having him deprived of responsibility
for construction, and Speer promptly sent Hitler a bitter letter,
concluding with an offer of his resignation. Judging Speer
indispensable to the war effort, Field Marshal
Erhard Milch persuaded Hitler to try to get his minister to
reconsider. Hitler sent Milch to Speer with a message not
addressing the dispute but instead stating that he still regarded
Speer as highly as ever. According to Milch, upon hearing the
message, Speer burst out, "The
Führer can kiss my ass!"
After a lengthy argument, Milch persuaded Speer to withdraw his
offer of resignation, on the condition his powers were restored.
On April 23, 1944, Speer went to see Hitler who agreed that
"everything [will] stay as it was, [Speer will] remain the head of
all German construction".
According to Speer, while he was successful in this debate, Hitler
had also won, "because he wanted and needed me back in his corner,
and he got me".
Fall of the Reich
Speer's name was included on the list of members of a
post-Hitler government drawn up by the conspirators behind the
July 1944 assassination plot to kill Hitler. However, the list
had a question mark and the annotation "to be won over" by his
name, which likely saved him from the extensive purges that
followed the scheme's failure.
By February 1945, Speer, who had long concluded that the war
was lost, was working to supply areas about to be occupied with
food and materials to get them through the hard times ahead.
On March 19, 1945, Hitler issued his
Nero Decree, ordering a
scorched earth policy in both Germany and the occupied
territories.
Hitler's order, by its terms, deprived Speer of any power to
interfere with the decree, and Speer went to confront Hitler,
telling him the war was lost.
Hitler gave Speer 24 hours to reconsider his position, and when
the two met the following day, Speer answered, "I stand
unconditionally behind you."
However, he demanded the exclusive power to implement the Nero
Decree, and Hitler signed an order to that effect. Using this
order, Speer worked to persuade generals and Gauleiters to
evade the Nero Decree and avoid needless sacrifice of personnel
and destruction of industry that would be needed after the war.
Speer managed to reach a relatively safe area near
Hamburg as the Nazi regime finally collapsed, but decided on a
final, risky visit to Berlin to see Hitler one more time.
Speer stated at Nuremberg, "I felt that it was my duty not to run
away like a coward, but to stand up to him again."
Speer visited the
Führerbunker on April 22. Hitler seemed calm and somewhat
distracted, and the two had a long, disjointed conversation in
which the dictator defended his actions and informed Speer of his
intent to commit suicide and have his body burned. In the
published edition of Inside the Third Reich, Speer relates
that he confessed to Hitler that he had defied the Nero Decree,
but then assured Hitler of his personal loyalty, bringing tears to
the dictator's eyes.
However, Speer biographer Gitta Sereny notes, "Psychologically, it
is possible that this is the way he remembered the occasion,
because it was how he would have liked to behave, and the way he
would have liked Hitler to react. But the fact is that none of it
happened; our witness to this is Speer himself."
Sereny goes on to note that Speer's original draft of his memoirs
lacks the confession and Hitler's tearful reaction, and contains
an explicit denial that any confession or emotional exchange took
place, as had been alleged in a French magazine article.
The following morning, Speer left the Führerbunker, with
Hitler curtly bidding him farewell. Speer toured the damaged
Chancellery one last time before leaving Berlin to return to
Hamburg.
On April 29, the day before his suicide, Hitler prepared his
final political testament. That document excluded Speer from
the Cabinet and specified that Speer was to be replaced by his
subordinate,
Karl-Otto Saur.
Nuremberg trial
After Hitler's death, Speer offered his services to the
so-called
Flensburg Government, headed by Hitler's successor,
Karl Dönitz, and took a significant role in that short-lived
regime. On May 15, the Americans arrived and asked Speer if he
would be willing to provide information on the effects of the air
war. Speer agreed, and over the next several days, provided
information on a broad range of subjects. It was not until May 23,
weeks after the surrender of German troops, that the Allies
arrested the members of the Flensburg Government and brought Nazi
Germany to a formal end.
Speer was taken to several internment centers for Nazi
officials and interrogated. In September 1945, Speer was told that
he would be tried for
war crimes, and several days later, he was taken to Nuremberg
and incarcerated there.
Speer was
indicted on all four possible counts: first, participating in
a common plan or
conspiracy for the accomplishment of
crime against peace, second, planning, initiating and waging
wars of aggression and other crimes against peace, third, war
crimes, and lastly,
crimes against humanity.
U.S. Supreme Court
Justice
Robert Jackson, the chief U.S. prosecutor at Nuremberg,
alleged, "Speer joined in planning and executing the program to
dragoon
prisoners of war and
foreign workers into German war industries, which waxed in
output while the workers waned in starvation."
Speer's attorney, Dr. Hans Flächsner, presented Speer as an artist
thrust into political life, who had always remained a
non-ideologue and who had been promised by Hitler that he could
return to architecture after the war.
During his testimony, Speer accepted responsibility for the Nazi
regime's actions:
In political life, there is a responsibility for a man's own
sector. For that he is of course fully responsible. But beyond
that there is a collective responsibility when he has been one
of the leaders. Who else is to be held responsible for the
course of events, if not the closest associates around the Chief
of State?
An observer at the trial, journalist and author
William L. Shirer, wrote that, compared to his
codefendants, Speer “made the most straightforward impression
of all and ... during the long trial spoke honestly and with no
attempt to shirk his responsibility and his guilt”.
Speer also testified that he had planned to kill Hitler in early
1945 by dropping a canister of poison gas into the bunker's air
intake.
He said his efforts were frustrated by a high wall that had been
built around the air intake.
Speer stated his motive was despair at realizing that Hitler
intended to take the German people down with him.
Speer's supposed assassination plan subsequently met with some
skepticism, with Speer's architectural rival
Hermann Giesler sneering, "the second most powerful man in the
state did not have a ladder."
Speer was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against
humanity, though he was acquitted on the other two counts. On
October 1, 1946, he was sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment.
While three of the eight judges (two Soviet and
one American) initially advocated the death penalty for Speer,
the other judges did not, and a compromise sentence was reached
"after two days' discussion and some rather bitter horse-trading".
The court's judgment stated that:
... in the closing stages of the war [Speer] was one of the
few men who had the courage to tell Hitler that the war was lost
and to take steps to prevent the senseless destruction of
production facilities, both in occupied territories and in
Germany. He carried out his opposition to Hitler's scorched
earth program ... by deliberately sabotaging it at considerable
personal risk.
Twelve of the defendants were sentenced to death (including
Bormann, in absentia) and three acquitted; only seven of the
defendants were sentenced to imprisonment.
They remained in the cells at Nuremberg as the Allies debated
where, and under what conditions, they should be incarcerated.
Imprisonment
On July 18, 1947, Speer and his six fellow prisoners, all
former high officials of the Nazi regime, were flown from
Nuremberg to Berlin under heavy guard.
The prisoners were taken to Spandau Prison in the British Sector
of what would become
West Berlin, where they would be designated by number, with
Speer given Number Five.
Initially, the prisoners were kept in solitary confinement for all
but half an hour a day, and were not permitted to address each
other or their guards.
As time passed, the strict regimen was relaxed, especially during
the three months in four that the three Western powers were in
control; the
four occupying powers took overall control on a monthly
rotation.
Speer considered himself an outcast among his fellow prisoners for
his acceptance of responsibility at Nuremberg.
Speer made a deliberate effort to make as productive a use of
his time as possible. He wrote, "I am obsessed with the idea of
using this time of confinement for writing a book of major
importance ... That could mean transforming prison cell into
scholar's den."
The prisoners were forbidden to write memoirs, and mail was
severely limited and censored. However, due to an offer from a
sympathetic orderly, Speer was able to have his writings, which
eventually amounted to 20,000 sheets, sent to Wolters. By 1954,
Speer had completed his memoirs, which became the basis of
Inside the Third Reich, and which Wolters arranged to have
transcribed onto 1,100 typewritten pages.
He was also able to send letters and financial instructions, and
to obtain writing paper and letters from the outside.
His many letters to his children, all secretly transmitted,
eventually formed the basis for Spandau: The Secret Diaries.
With the draft memoir complete and clandestinely transmitted,
Speer sought a new project. He found one while taking his daily
exercise, walking in circles around the prison yard. Measuring the
path's distance carefully, Speer set out to walk the distance from
Berlin to Heidelberg. He then expanded his idea into a worldwide
journey, visualizing the places he was "traveling" through while
walking the path around the prison yard. Speer ordered guidebooks
and other materials about the nations through which he imagined he
was passing, so as to envision as accurate a picture as possible.
Meticulously calculating every meter traveled, and mapping
distances to the real-world geography, he began in northern
Germany, passed through Asia by a southern route before entering
Siberia, then crossed the
Bering Strait and continued southwards, finally ending his
sentence 35 kilometers south of
Guadalajara, Mexico.
Speer devoted much of his time and energy to reading. Though
the prisoners brought some books with them in their personal
property, Spandau Prison had no library so books were sent from
Spandau's municipal library.
From 1952 the prisoners were also able to order books from the
Berlin central library in
Wilmersdorf.
Speer was a voracious reader and he completed well over 500 books
in the first three years at Spandau alone.
He read classic novels, travelogues, books on
ancient Egypt, and biographies of such figures as
Lucas Cranach,
Friedrich Preller, and
Genghis Khan.
Speer took to the prison garden for enjoyment and work, at first
to do something constructive while afflicted with writer's block.
He was allowed to build an ambitious garden, transforming what he
initially described as a "wilderness"
into what the American commander at Spandau described as "Speer's
Garden of Eden".
Speer's supporters maintained a continual call for his release.
Among those who pledged support for Speer's sentence to be
commuted were
Charles de Gaulle,
U.S. diplomat
George Ball,
former U.S. High Commissioner
John J. McCloy,
and former Nuremberg prosecutor
Hartley Shawcross.
Willy Brandt was a strong advocate of Speer's, supporting his
release,
sending flowers to
his daughter on the day of his release,
and putting an end to the de-Nazification proceedings against
Speer,
which could have caused his property to be confiscated.
A reduced sentence required the consent of all four of the
occupying powers, and the Soviets adamantly opposed any such
proposal.
Speer served his full sentence, and was released on the stroke of
midnight as October 1, 1966 began.
Release and
later life
Speer's release from prison was a worldwide media event, as
reporters and photographers crowded both the street outside
Spandau and the lobby of the Berlin hotel where Speer spent his
first hours of freedom in over 20 years.
However, Speer said little, reserving most comments for a major
interview published in
Der Spiegel in November 1966, in which he again took
personal responsibility for crimes of the Nazi regime.
Abandoning plans to return to architecture (two proposed partners
died shortly before his release),
he revised his Spandau writings into two
autobiographical books, and later researched and published a
third work, about Himmler and the SS. His books, most notably
Inside the Third Reich (in German, Erinnerungen, or
Reminiscences)
and Spandau: The Secret Diaries, provide a unique and
personal look into the personalities of the Nazi era, and have
become much valued by historians. Speer was aided in shaping the
works by
Joachim Fest and
Wolf Jobst Siedler from the publishing house Ullstein.
Following the publication of his bestselling books, he donated
a considerable amount of money to Jewish charities. According to
Siedler, these donations were as high as 80% of his royalties.
Speer kept the donations anonymous, both for fear of rejection,
and for fear of being called a hypocrite.
As early as 1953, when Wolters strongly objected to Speer
referring to Hitler in the memoirs draft as a criminal, Speer had
predicted that were the writings to be published, he would lose a
"good many friends".
This came to pass, as following the publication of Inside the
Third Reich, close friends, such as Wolters and sculptor
Arno Breker, distanced themselves from him.
Hans Baur, Hitler's personal pilot, suggested, "Speer must
have taken leave of his senses."
Wolters wondered that Speer did not now "walk through life in a
hair shirt, distributing his fortune among the victims of National
Socialism, forswear all the vanities and pleasures of life and
live on locusts and wild honey".
Speer made himself widely available to historians and other
enquirers.
He did an extensive, in-depth interview for the June 1971 issue of
Playboy magazine, in which he stated, "If I didn't see it,
then it was because I didn't want to see it."
In October 1973, Speer made his first trip to Britain, flying to
London under an assumed name
to be interviewed on the BBC
Midweek programme by
Ludovic Kennedy. Upon arrival, he was detained for almost 8
hours at
Heathrow Airport when British immigration authorities
discovered his true identity. The
Home Secretary,
Robert Carr, allowed Speer into the country for 48 hours.
While in London eight years later to participate in the BBC
Newsnight programme, Speer suffered a
stroke and died on September 1, 1981.
Even to the end of his life, Speer continued to question his
actions under Hitler. In his final book, Infiltration, he
asks, "What would have happened if Hitler had asked me to make
decisions that required the utmost hardness? ... How far would I
have gone? ... If I had occupied a different position, to what
extent would I have ordered atrocities if Hitler had told me to do
so?"
Speer leaves the questions unanswered.
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