Sepp Dietrich(1892-1966)
Born in 1892 in Bavaria, Joseph "Sepp" Dietrich came of age during
Imperial Germany's height of power in the early 20th century. After
leaving primary school, he became an apprentice butcher. In 1911 he
joined a Bavarian artillery regiment, but left the army some months
later when he was invalided out due to injuries received in a fall from
a horse. In 1914, at the start of the First World War, he again joined
the army and, in 1916, was promoted to Vizefeldwebel (Sergeant) and
assigned as an NCO in one of the German army's first panzer (tank)
units. He became one of the army's most decorated tank commanders and
one of its first tank aces. When the war ended in 1918, Dietrich was
discharged from the army and returned to Bavaria, where he joined the
Munich police department. In 1923 he became a member of the radical
right-wing veterans organization called Stahlhelm and, in that
capacity, was first introduced to the Nazi party. That same year he
joined the Nazi Strumabteilung (SA Storm Troopers) and served as an SA
trooper in the Nazis' Munich headquarters. In 1925 Dietrich resigned
from the SA and the Nazi party, after Adolf Hitler was arrested during the
abortive attempt to seize control of the Bavarian government known as
the "Beer Hall Putsch". For the next three years Dietrich was basically
unemployed, with occasional odd jobs in Munich. In 1928, after the Nazi
party had regrouped and again was gaining power in Germany, Dietrich
returned and was assigned to a special unit of the SA Storm Troopers
called the Schutzstaffel (SS). He joined the SS on August 1, 1928, and
was appointed as an SS-Führer (Officer) at the party's National
Headquarters in Munich. In his new position he was charged with forming
a personal bodyguard unit for Hitler, which was named the "Stosstrupp
Adolf Hitler" (Shock Troops of Adolf Hitler). At this stage in Nazi
history the SS was still a very small unit and Dietrich commanded less
than 20 troopers. By September 1929, though, the SS was under the
command of Heinrich Himmler, who greatly expanded and modernized the
organization. On September 19th, Dietrich was promoted to the newly
created rank of SS-Standartenführer (Colonel) and placed in command of
all SS units in Bavaria, in addition to his duties as commander of
Hitler's Munich bodyguard (now known as the Stabswache, "Staff Guard",
and now numbering over 200). A year later, in July 1930, Dietrich was
promoted to SS-Oberführer (Brigadier General) and appointed Leader of
the SS Group South, in charge of all SS formations throughout lower
Germany. In 1931 Himmler again expanded and reorganized the SS, and
Dietrich was assigned to the leadership staff of SS-Abschnitt (Brigade)
IV North. In December of that year he was promoted to SS-Gruppenführer
(Lieutenant General) and, by this time, had also been elected to the
German Reichstag (parliament) as the representative for Lower Bavaria.
On October 1, 1932, Dietrich was promoted to Commander of the entire SS
Group North, a position which he held until the Nazis came to power in
1933. On January 30, 1933, after Hitler had become Chancellor of
Germany, Dietrich was recalled to his original position as Hitler's
bodyguard commander, and ordered to form a special unit that would come
to Berlin to serve as the new Chancellory Guard. The result was the
creation of the SS-Stabswache Berlin which, in the summer of 1933, was
renamed the SS-Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler (Life Guards of Adolf
Hitler). In October 1933, while serving as the full-time commander of
the Leibstandarte, Dietrich received a further appointment as the
Allgemeine-SS (General-SS) commander of SS-Group East, encompassing the
cities and states surrounding Berlin. In the meantime Dietrich was
lobbying with Hitler to have the Liebstandarte recognized as a regular
military unit and to do away with the SA Storm Troopers, who still
exercised control over the SS. In June 1934 Dietrich's entreaties paid
off, as the SS was ordered to move against the SA and Dietrich
personally commanded several SS execution squads which killed over 16
senior SA officers. In an action known as the "Night of the Long
Knives", much of the senior SA leadership was murdered and the SS
removed from SA control, the Liebstandarte was recognized as a regular
branch of the German military and Dietrich received a promotion to
SS-Obergruppenführer (General). At the same time his Allgemeine-SS
command was expanded and he became the Commander of SS-Oberabschnitt
East (Division East). For the next five years Dietrich's SS career was
at a standstill; however, opportunity presented itself with the
beginning of World War II in 1939. The SS-Liebstandarte was equipped as
a military brigade of the German army, and distinguished itself in
several major battles in Poland. During the French campaign of 1940 the
Liebstandarte had been expanded to division strength and, following the
fall of Paris and the surrender of France, Dietrich was awarded the
Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves. By the end of 1940, with the creation
of the Waffen-SS as a regular unit of the German military, Dietrich was
promoted to the rank of General der Waffen-SS. In 1941 Germany invaded
the Soviet Union and Dietrich again led the Leibstandarte into battle.
He was awarded Swords to his Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves, and in
July 1943 was selected to command the 1st SS Panzer Corps. After being
awarded the Diamonds to his Knight's Cross, Dietrich was promoted to
the rank of SS-Oberstgruppenführer und Generaloberst der Waffen-SS
(Colonel General). Dietrich was one of only four persons in the SS to
hold this rank, with date of rank listed as April 26, 1942. In 1944
Dietrich was assigned to command the 6th SS Panzer Army and was a major
figure in the Battle of Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge. However,
in 1945, with Germany crumbling and the war drawing to a close,
Dietrich surrendered to the Allies rather than committing suicide, as
many of his senior Nazi colleagues had done, and ordered the men under
his command to also surrender. In the summer of 1945, after Germany had
surrendered, Dietrich was put on trial by an Allied court for war
crimes and crimes against humanity. Convicted in 1946 for his part in
the Malmedy massacre of 1944, in which dozens of American soldiers
captured in the Battle of the Bulge were taken to a field, herded into
a group and machine-gunned to death by SS troops under Dietrich's
command, he was sentenced to life in prison, but in 1947 the West
German government, despite strenuous objections from the Allies,
reduced his sentence to 25 years. In 1955 he was pardoned by the West
German government but sent back to prison in 1957, after being
convicted of manslaughter in the 1934 Night of the Long Knives
killings. He served 18 months of a five-year term, being released in
February of 1959. In the last years of his life Dietrich became a major
advocate for the recognition of Waffen-SS soldiers as regular military
veterans, in contrast to those SS members who had participated in the
Holocaust and other war crimes, such as the Gestapo, SD and Death's
Head Units (Totenkopf). Dietrich's efforts led to the recognition of
the World War II Iron Cross as a continued military decoration of
Germany, complete with pension rights, and Dietrich also was successful
in petitioning the West German government to grant disability and
welfare claims to Waffen-SS veterans. Sepp Dietrich died April 21, 1966
in Ludwigsburg, West Germany. He was buried with military honors in a
funeral attended by over 1000 veterans of the Waffen-SS and the German
military.