Wehrwirtschaftsführer
A Wehrwirtschaftsführer was, during the time of Nazi Germany, an executive of a company or of a large factory. Wehrwirtschaftsführer were appointed, starting in 1935, by the being a part of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, that was pushing the build-up of arms for the Wehrmacht. Appointments aimed to bind the Wehrwirtschaftsführer to the Wehrmacht and to give them a quasi-military status.
After 1938, the appointed the Wehrwirtschaftsführer. From 1940 on, this title was given more and more also to leading employees in companies not belonging to the armament branch, also to demonstrate that those companies were contributing to the wartime economy.
Especially before 1940, appointments did not indicate the political attitude of the person receiving the title. The designation also gave no indication that a given company was important for armaments.
If a manager was appointed Wehrwirtschaftsführer, their company could more easily degrade employment conditions for the workers and employees.
Appointees
- Gustav Böhme, owner of Dr. Ing. Böhme & Co., Metallwarenfabrik, Minden-Lübbeckerstrasse
- , chief executive officer and general director of the coal mining company
- Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Borgward
- William Borm
- Carl Bosch
- Max Brose
- Richard Bruhn
- Heinrich Bütefisch
- Claude Dornier
- Gerhard Fieseler
- Friedrich Flick
- Fritz Gajewski
- Edmund Geilenberg
- Berthold Geipel, founder of Erfurter Maschinenfabrik '''
- Alfred Freiherr von Harder
- Ernst Heinkel
- Jost Henkel
- Paul Henrichs
- Arthur Hess
- Heinrich Hörlein
- Max Ilgner
- Hans Kohnert
- , Zeiss (company), Jena
- Fritz Kranefuss
- Carl Krauch
- Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach
- Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach
- Heinz Küppenbender
- Carl Lautenschläger
- Friedrich Linde, of Linde plc
- Wilhelm Meinberg
- Wilhelm Emil Messerschmitt
- Fritz Nallinger
- Heinrich Nordhoff
- Paul Pleiger
- Ernst Poensgen
- Ferdinand Porsche
- Günther Quandt
- Philipp Fürchtegott Reemtsma
- Friedrich Reinhart
- Hermann Röchling
- Alexander Rodenstock
- Willy Sachs
- Hermann Schmitz
- Christian Schneider
- Georg Schnitzler
- Hermann von Siemens
- Otto Steinbrinck
- Gerd Stieler von Heydekampf
- Kurt Tank
- Alfred Teves
- Ernst Hellmut Vits
- Hans Walz
- Gerhard Alois Westrick
- Ludger Westrick
- Carl Wurster
- Wilhelm Zangen
Wehrwirtschaftsführer after the war
After the end of the war, most military leaders were punished by the Allies, but were soon reinstated in key posts of reconstruction under Cold War conditions. Symptomatic of this was the return to power of Friedrich Flick, the greatest business leader of the Third Reich and the most prominent leader of the military economy. After seven years of captivity, he again became the greatest entrepreneur of the Federal Republic, awarded the Grand Cross of Merit with shoulder strap and star.Literature
- Paul Erker: Industrieeliten in der NS-Zeit: Anpassungsbereitschaft und Eigeninteresse von Unternehmen in der Rüstungs- und Kriegswirtschaft, 1936 - 1945. Passau: Wissenschaftsverlag Rothe, 1993, 120 p.
- Kurt Pritzkoleit: . Düsseldorf: Karl Rauch Verlag, S. 430, pp. 95 -123.