Wilhelm Reinhard (SS officer)


Wilhelm Reinhard was a German long-serving professional military officer in the Royal Prussian Army, the Reichswehr and the Wehrmacht. A member of the Nazi Party, he became a General der Infanterie, an SS-Obergruppenführer and a member of the Reichstag. Between 1934 and 1943, he was the leader of the Kyffhäuserbund, the major veterans' organization in Nazi Germany that was outlawed in 1945 after the end of World War II. He refounded the organization in West Germany and led it until his death.

Early life and military career

Reinhard was born the son of a minor Prussian official, the Forstmeister in Forsthaus Lutau, in the Flatow district of West Prussia. After completing secondary school, he became a cadet at the military academies at Culm and Lichterfelde, and then attended the War School at Metz. In 1888, he entered the Royal Prussian Army with the 78th Infantry Regiment as a Fähnrich and, in 1889, was promoted to Leutnant and became a battalion and regimental adjutant. In January 1901, he was made adjutant of the 38th Infantry Brigade. In 1903, he was promoted to Hauptmann and, in April 1904, became a company commander in the 33rd (East Prussian) Fusilier Regiment in Gumbinnen. From 1907, Reinhard was commander of the 7th Company of the 163rd Infantry in Neumünster. Promoted to Major in April 1911, he was transferred to the 5th Foot Guards Regiment in Spandau as a staff officer. After serving there for almost two years, he was appointed a battalion commander in March 1913.

First World War

At the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Reinhard led his battalion into Belgium on the western front where it participated in the siege and capture of the fortress of Namur. Transferred to the eastern front, he fought in the battles of the Masurian Lakes and Łódź. From January to June 1915, Reinhard commanded the 5th Guards Grenadiers Regiment and was subsequently appointed commander of the 4th Foot Guards Regiment. Reinhard's regiment was transferred back to the western front in the autumn of 1915 and fought in the Third Battle of Artois. In addition to his front line combat command experience, he also served on the Great General Staff. He was promoted to Oberstleutnant in April 1916, and to Oberst in September 1918. During the course of the war, he was awarded the Pour le Mérite with oak leaves, the Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class and the House Order of Hohenzollern.

Post-war ''Freikorps'' and ''Reichswehr'' service

Returning to Berlin after the end of the war in November 1918, Reinhard in December established a Freikorps unit named after him. On 24 December 1918, he assumed the duties of the Commandant of Berlin. Under his leadership, the Spartacist uprising was crushed in January 1919. During the Berlin March Battles two months later, there were renewed armed clashes in which approximately 1,200 people were killed, most of them insurgents. In June 1919, the "Freikorps Reinhard" was incorporated into the provisional Reichswehr and Reinhard was appointed commander of the 15th Infantry Brigade in Berlin. After the Weimar Constitution went into effect in August 1919, members of the military were required to pledge an oath of allegiance to defend the new republic in front of the new Black-Red-Gold Flag. Reinhard refused to take the oath and former chancellor Philipp Scheidemann called for him to be dismissed from the army. The minister of defense Gustav Noske and the chief of the army high command, General Walther Reinhardt, sought to negotiate a compromise that would allow him to remain in the Reichswehr but Reinhard was retired from active military service in December 1919.

Political and SS career in Nazi Germany

During the Weimar Republic, Reinhard worked as a businessman. In October 1927, he joined the Nazi Party. As an early Party member, he later would be awarded the Golden Party Badge. Reinhard also was a member of the Sturmabteilung, the Nazi Party paramilitary organization, where he attained the rank of SA-Standartenführer. He was appointed SA-Oberstlandesführer of the SA Reserve II in December 1933. The SAR-II was made up of SA personnel over the age of 45 and included members of the war veterans groups Der Stahlhelm and Kyffhäuserbund.
When the SAR-II was disbanded, Reinhard left the SA. On 15 September 1935, he transferred from the SA into the SS with the rank of SS-Standartenführer. He was a member of the personal staff of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler from 1938 and was promoted to the rank of SS-Obergruppenführer on 9 November 1941. His role was primarily ceremonial and administrative, reflecting the Nazi regime's strategy of incorporating traditional military figures to lend legitimacy to its structures. He did not hold active command or operational responsibility in the SS.
At the March 1936 parliamentary election, Reinhard was elected as a deputy to the Reichstag from the Nazi Party electoral list and remained a Reichstag deputy until the fall of the Nazi regime in May 1945.

Leadership of the ''Kyffhäuserbund''

Reinhard was active in the Kyffhäuserbund, the largest veterans' organization in Germany at the time. On 27 January 1934, Reich President Paul von Hindenburg appointed Reinhard the Bundesführer of this organization. Under his leadership, the organization aligned more closely with Nazi ideology and was renamed the Nationalsozialistischer Reichskriegerbund Kyffhäuser on 18 March 1938, and Reinhard was given the title of Reichsführer of the NSRKB. Reinhard played a largely symbolic role in promoting veterans' affairs and representing the historical military tradition of the German Empire. Documents and ceremonial certificates from the 1930s bear his signature in this capacity. Reinhard held this position until the NSRKB was dissolved by the Nazi regime in March 1943 in a wartime reorganization.
On 22 March 1938, on the occasion of Reinhard's 50-year anniversary of entering the military, Adolf Hitler awarded him the brevet rank of Generalmajor in the Wehrmacht. A year later, on 18 March 1939, to mark his 70th birthday, Hitler promoted Reinhard to brevet General der Infanterie. He did not hold an active military command in the Second World War but was awarded the War Merit Cross, 1st and 2nd class.

Post-war life

After the war, Reinhard was interned by the Western Allies for several months and, after his release, lived with a nephew in the Opmünden district of Bad Sassendorf. The Kyffhäuserbund had been declared an illegal organization on 10 October 1945 by Law No. 2 of the Allied Control Council. After the establishment of West Germany, Reinhard worked to reestablish the Kyffhäuserbund as a non-political veterans' group. In September 1952, he officially refounded the organization in Dortmund and led it until his death in Dortmund on 18 January 1955 at the age of 85.

Publications

1918/1919: Die Wehen der Republic, Brunnen-Verlag, Berlin