Helmut Stellrecht

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Helmut Stellrecht

Helmut Stellrecht (born December 21, 1898 in Wangen im Allgäu , † June 23, 1987 in Boll ) was a German National Socialist politician and propagandist. As a popular science and novelist, he used the pseudonym Hermann Noelle . The actual name also appears in the spelling Hellmuth Stellrecht .

Life

Stellrecht passed the Abitur in 1916 after attending the Realgymnasium in Stuttgart . He studied mechanical engineering at the Technical University in Stuttgart, and after graduating in 1922 , he received his doctorate in 1927. His dissertation entitled “The Resilience of Rolling Bearings” appeared in print in 1928. From 1922 to 1923 he worked at Demag in Duisburg , then until 1931 at Fichtel & Sachs in Schweinfurt . During his studies in 1919 he became a member of the Alemannia Stuttgart fraternity .

From 1917 Stellrecht was a participant in the First World War . After the end of the war he participated seven times in various volunteer corps , including to suppress the Ruhr uprising . Since 1921 he was involved in the nationalist movement and became a co-founder of the university ring of the German kind in Stuttgart. From 1923 he belonged to the Bavarian Defense Association Reichsflagge . In 1931 he joined the NSDAP ( membership number 469.220). He founded the SA reserve in Schweinfurt. In autumn 1931 he became a specialist for the labor service in the Brown House in Munich .

From June 10, 1933, in succession to Hermann Esser , who divorced the Reichstag on May 24 , until 1945 he was a member of the Reichstag (MdR). In October 1933 he named his job title: Ministerialrat and head of organization at the Reichsleitung of the Labor Service in the Reich Ministry of Labor in Berlin. In 1934 he became senior regional leader in the staff of the Reich Youth Leadership , and was thus largely responsible for the “political training” of the Hitler Youth . Stellrecht became a manager at the Rosenberg office . In 1939 he became a brigade leader of the SS .

After the death of Gotthard Urban , head of staff in the Rosenberg office, Werner Koeppen announced to Martin Bormann on September 18, 1941 at the Führer headquarters that Stellrecht would be the successor of Urban. Bormann, "apparently pleased", informed Koeppen that he "wanted to speak to Stellrecht during his next stay in Berlin in about 10 days". In doing so, the right to “be reassigned from the Obergebietsführer to the appropriate political rank” should be made.

In 1945 Stellrecht was an employee of the Dönitz government . In the 1950s he was instrumental in attempts to collect the national right-wing groups. In 1952 he was one of the founders of the Association of National Groups . In 1960 he settled in Boll as a textile merchant. In 1970 he was awarded the poet's stone shield from the Dichterstein Offenhausen association, which was banned in 1999 due to being re- employed by the National Socialists .

Fonts in general

Stellrecht published several writings under his maiden name during the National Socialist period , mainly on education in the National Socialist spirit. These include, among others, The Defense Education of German Youth (1936), Faith and Action (1938) and New Education (1942).

In the Soviet occupation zone , all of Stellrecht's publications from 1931 to 1944 were placed on the list of literature to be segregated.

After the Second World War he published popular scientific writings under his pseudonym “Hermann Noelle”, including on the Lombards and the Celts . Related to this is the novel Go from your field, Kelte (1963). Stellrecht / Noelle returned to topics on which material had been collected during his managerial work in the Rosenberg office. Emil Vollmer Verlag, Wiesbaden, praised Noelle's competence on the blurb of the licensed edition of The Celts , first published in 1974, by stating that he had “dealt with the Celtic issue for years”. The readers were not informed of the background to his engagement with the topic. Even after the Second World War, Stellrecht published under his real name in publishing houses that belong to the right-wing political spectrum, such as Grabert-Verlag . Among other things, he published the book Adolf Hitler, Heil und Unheil in the Grabert Verlag in 1974 . The lost revolution .

Publications

  • Hermann Noelle: The flower fanatic or the secret garden. Biographical novel. Hohenstaufen Verlag, Esslingen 1964.
  • Hermann Noelle: Get out of your field, Kelte . Historical novel, Hohenstaufen Verlag, Bodman 1972, ISBN 3-8056-0603-6 .
  • Hermann Noelle: The Wall of a Thousand Towers . Historical novel, Hohenstaufen Verlag, Bodman 1973, ISBN 3-8056-0609-5 .
  • Hermann Noelle: The Celts and their city of Manching . 2nd edition, Ilmgau Verlag, Pfaffenhofen / Ilm 1974, ISBN 3-7787-2012-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 5: R – S. Winter, Heidelberg 2002, ISBN 3-8253-1256-9 , p. 510.
  2. ^ Protocols to the Reichstag No. 23 (supplement to No. 1). Changes in the alphabetical index of the members of the Reichstag occurred during the eighth electoral term in 1933
  3. Martin Vogt: Autumn 1941 in the "Führer Headquarters". Werner Koeppens reports to his Minister Alfred Rosenberg. Koblenz 2002, ISBN 3-89192-113-6 , p. 19 (documentation).
  4. ^ German administration for popular education in the Soviet zone of occupation. List of literature to be discarded. 1946 , Polunbi, database writing and image 1900–1960.

literature

  • Martin Schumacher (Ed.): MdR, the members of the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic in the time of National Socialism: Political persecution, emigration and expatriation 1933–1945. A biographical documentation. Edited by Katharina Lübbe and Martin Schumacher in conjunction with Wilhelm Heinz Schröder . Droste, Düsseldorf 1991, ISBN 3-7700-5162-9 .
  • Wolfgang Benz, Hermann Graml and Hermann Weiss (eds.): Encyclopedia of National Socialism. 3rd edition, DTV, Munich 1988, ISBN 3-608-91805-1
  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 5: R – S. Winter, Heidelberg 2002, ISBN 3-8253-1256-9 , pp. 509-511.
  • Ernst Klee : The cultural lexicon for the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, ISBN 978-3-10-039326-5 .
  • Erich Stockhorst: 5000 people. Who was what in the 3rd Reich . Arndt, Kiel 2000, ISBN 3-88741-116-1 (unchanged reprint of the first edition from 1967).
  • Udo Mischek with the assistance of Tim Rose: Helmut Stellrecht: Faith and Action . In: Wolfgang Proske (Hrsg.): Perpetrators helpers free riders. Nazi-polluted from Baden-Württemberg , Volume 9: Nazi-polluted from the south of today's Baden-Württemberg . Kugelberg Verlag, Gerstetten 2018, pp. 361–382, ISBN 978-3-945893-10-4 .

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