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.H57
SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ALU{
EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
ALUATIONAND DISSEMINATION S
G-2 (COUNTEftINTELLIGENCE SUB-DIVISION)
THE
HITLER JUGE:,
(rHE HITLER YOUTH ORGAN1SA
:EL R40 (} )!i
; t
-
SUPREME t!EAD'JUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
EVAIIJATIClf .IIND DISsmlINATION SEl:lTION
G-2 (COUNTER Ilfl.'ELUGENOE
B-A-8-I-o
mE HImm YOO'Di
(Die RitlerjugeDi)
E.D.S./<V5 . )
0<mlp:Ued 'by 1IIIlS (JD1'iDON Bxa!lCh
Fran lraterial Available at
lrASHING!J.'ON .AJlD UIlIXlN
Page
Foreword
1
PART I
HISTORICAL BACKGRODND AND DEVELOPMENT
1 Die Jugendbewegung 3
2 Beginnings of the HJ. 3
3 Expansion of the HJ. into a State Organisation 4
4 Reichsjugenddienstpflicht (Canpulsory Youth Service) 4.
PART n
OIlGANISATION
5
Main Branches of the Hit1erYouth 5
6 Die Reichs (Reich Youth Directorate)
.
.
,
7
HJ. Gebiete (HJ. Regions)
7
8 HJ.Standort (Garriscn) 8
9
HJ. Benne (Regiments) 8
10 Specialist Un1ts of the Benn 8
11 Organisation below regimental level
9
12 Numbering of Units 9
PART m
CONSORIPrION .AND TRAINING
13 Ccnscription Procedure 10
14 Basic Training 10
15 Vocaticnal Training 11
16 Schools 12
17 Gebietsfnhrerschulen 12
18 Reichsschulen 12
19 Nationalpolitische Erziehungsaustalten 12
20 The Reichsjugend Akad.em1e 12
21 Adolf-Hitler-5chulen 13
PART ts
WAR SERVICE AND JaLITARY TRAINING
22
War Service 14
23
Liaison with the Armed Forces 14
24
Wehrertllohtigungs1ager (Pre-military Training
Camps) 15
25
Sondereinheiten (Special Service Units) 15
26 Nachrichten HJ. (Signals)
16
27 Motor HJ. (Motorised Hitler Youth) 16
28
ifarine HJ. (Na";al Hitler Youth) 17
29
Flieger HJ. (AViation HJ.) .
17
30
HJ. Fe1dschere (First Aid Units) 17
Streif'endienst (Security Detaclmlents and Patrol
31
Servioe)
18
UI\TCL.Au, SSIFIED
PART IV (oontinued) Page
32 MUsikmlge (Band Units) 18
33
Gebirgs-H3. (Mountaineers) 19
PART V
HJ. T.EADE:RSRIP, RANXB AND UNIFOIlMS
34
HJ. Leaders 20
3.5
Rank 20
36 Unifo1'llll!l and Insignia of Rank 21
37
O1:her Insignia and Badges 21
PART VI
HJ. ABROAD
38
HJ. in Oooupied 'l'erritories 23
39
HJ. in Foreign Territories 23
PART VII
OPPOSrI'ION YOUTH :MOVEMENTS
40 Legal Measures regarding Gennan Youth 2,5
41 Unoffioial Youth Organisations outside the HJ. 2,5
42 Repressive Measures 26
ANNEXE A
ORDER C1J!' BATTLE TABLES
KeY' to Tables A 1
Part One: HJ. Gebiete and Befehlsstellen (listed) A 2
Part Two: The HJ. Gebiete (details) A 4
Part Thre.:HJ. Banne, numerioallY' A 9.5
Part Four: HJ. Benne, alphabetioallY' Alll
Part Pive: Schools and CllIDps A 126
Part Six: HJ. Auslandsfilhrer(Representatives Abroad) A 140
ANNEXE B
HJ. Personalities
B ].
. .ANNEXE C
Di8gr...... and Plates C 1
Abbreviations. 'D ].
.ANNElCE E
Requirementg .for H.J. Proricieney Tests E 1
INDEX OF SUBJJiPTS
FOREWORD
A thirteen year old boy manned a machine gun againot
advancing Allied tanks on the Rhineland frontier, while his
mates passed the ammunition.
An execution squad composed of 14-16 year olds shot Polish
civilian hostages.
A monument was erected to a boy still living, commemorating
the fact that he denounced his father "loyally to the Fl1hrer":
( the father was executed for treason).
Herbert Norkus, the Hitler Youth martyr, is the Horst Wessel
of most of Germany's young today.
;';leven years of Nazi indoctrination, at a most susceptible
age, in the Hitler Youth has done its work.
'rhe Hitler Youth is not a Boy Scout or Girl Guide organisa
tion. It is in no to any organisation for
young people known to the Western World.
It is a compulsory Nazi fo:rn:ation, which has consciously
sought to breed hate, treachery and cruelty into the mind and
soul of every German child. It is, in the true sense of the
word, "education for death".
Under no circumstances should 'the Hitler, Youth be taken
lightly or ,be considered a negligible factor from an operetional
or occupation point of view.
Some 12 to 14 million youths are organisea into the four
branches of the Hitler Youth:
The Hitler Youth proper (boys from 14-18)
The Gennan Young Folk (boys 10-14)
Tb<! League of German Girls (girls from 14-18)
The Young Girls (girls from 10-14)
A rough estimate on the, basis or over-all 'figures available
would place between 3,000,000 and 3,500,000 into each branch.
or this number, 30,000 serve as fully-paid, full-time leaders.
Approximately 1, 000 male and 1,000 female Banne (Regime nt s
averaging 6,000 members each) carry on administration and
training.
In addition, in 1943, the Hitler Youth maintained between
7,000 and 8,000 camps and other eetablishments. 1,500,000 boys
(most of them over 14) attended special Hitler Youth training
courses there in one year.
514,000 17 year olds received Hitler Youth training in Preo
Military Training camps, of which some 300 are at present 'lit
operation throughout the Reich.
The emphasis of the following Basic Handbook and appended
Order of Battle tables is On the 14-18 year old male group, the
Hitler Youth propef, the primary potential souroe of disaffection
and the primary source of replacements for the Wehrmacht.
The above figures not only indicate the vast scope of the
Hitler Youth in German life today, but demonstrate the role which
it ple.rs in Cermany' s Actual and potential military strengtll.'
Both the and the WehL1ll8.cht have long since appreciated
this. From mere liaison with the Hitler Youth, their relation
ship with the H.J has passed through the stage of supervision and
has finally resulted in complete domination.
The Hitler Youth has became a Wehrmacht replacement pool,
a manpower resenoir for auxiliary war senices, and a means of
strengthening the increasingly pernicious hold on the German
people of the most ruthless of all Nazi organisations, the SS.
A f<!W courageous young GerrnsDs, risking their lives in order
to salvage their minds, spirits and perhaps their country, have
sought to escape from the tentacles of the Hitler Youth, and some
underground cells composed of such young people are known to exist.
But it m U S ~ Dot be forgotten that every young German has
been schcoled by Nazi teachers, and that this "Junior Army" is
ready to take the field either individually, in small groups, on
a larger, ~ o r e organised scale, or as saboteurs, informers and
even franctireurs in defence of Nazism, its fanatical creed.
PARr I
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND DEVELO:rn::"'T
1. Die .Jugendbewegung (The German Youth Movement)
The growth and success of the HJ organisations cannot
be properly appreciated without some reference to the earlier
history of the Deutsche ,Jugendbewegung (eerman Youth Movement).
Since the end of the last century, the latter gave young
people an opportunity to express themselves and to carry on
various activities in organisations of their own.
Young people of both sexes joined J en emeinschaften
(Youth Communities) and formed groups of Young
Hikers) which had no political programme, but were animated by
youth's determination to express itself unfettered by the.
older generation.
Their activities included hiking, camping and evening
meetings for lectures and discussions; much emphasis was
placed on the rediscovering and singing of old German folk
songs.
The ""leissner Formula", a proclamation made by a "Youth
Rally" in 1913, shaped a general policy of "Inner a
reaction against the complacency and restrictions of German
middle-class life, its prejudices and "bourgeois mind".
After the First World War the youth movement developed at
an accelerated pace and reached its peak in the twenties when
many new groups sprang up, and the Btindische Jugend (League of
Youth) partly took the place of the original Jugendbewegung.
At this point many political parties, among the.. the
NSDAP Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeite artei-National
Socialist \Yorkers' Party began to form their own youth
organisations, and it is estimated that in the la.te nineteen
twenties four million German boys and girls belonged to the
young people's sections of various political and non-political
factions, some 80,000 being members of the original Bftndisch!
Jugend (League of Youth).
The Nazis were regarded as outsiders by virtually all
other youth formations.
2. Beginnings of the HJ
On 8th, 1922, Hitler, io his own newspaper, the
"V6lkische Beobachter", announced .the establishment of the
Jugendbund der NSDAP (Youth League of the Nazi Party), later
known as the Jungstunn Adolf Hitler (Youth Shook Troop Adolf
Hitler)
Other youth groups with National Socialist tendencies
also existed, but were not directly affiliated to Hitler's
Jugendbund. Thus the Nationalsozialistische Arbeiterjugend
(Nazi Workers Youth) operated in the Rhein and rtuhr regions.
In May 1925 the Wandersportverein VOGrfLAND(Hiking Club
VOGTLAND), in PLAUEN, Saxony, merged with the MtlNcHEN ,Jugend
bund, in MtlNICH, Bavaria, under the new narne of Hitler-Jugend,
a term coined by the notorious Julius STREICHER,
then Nazi "Chieftain" of
This new Nazi organisation, culminating in the HIT of
toda;y was under the leadership of Kurt G-RUllER, of the
PLADEN group.
3. of HJ into a State Organisation
Although the HJ had borrowed much of its technique and
some of its symbois....rro the old Jugendbewcgung, from the vcry
first it add.e<l, a 11atiol)alistic and decidedly militaristic
note. In 1925 it became a junior branch of the SA (Stonn
troopers) and directly suboi"'llinate to the SA High Oonmand,
'I.'he mcveatent , in true Nazi fashion was opposed. to school,
'church and haM .and attracted many youngsters.
In 1928 600 boys gathered at the first national HJ ral1;y
at BAD S'i'EBPli. At the Nio!mmERG Party Rally of the following
year 2,500 boys were, pr,l'sent.
In 1929 the NS Schulerbund (NaZi secondary School Boys
League) \7US recognised as an official affiliate of the Hitler
Youth Organisation.
By 1930 the HJ had 900 Ortsgruppen (local groups) in
Gennany 1JJ (Deutsches JUngvolk-Gennan Young Folk) for
boys ased IO-14 and ED'! (fund Deutscher lI.!1del-League of
Cezman Girls) were founded as branches of the HJ.
By 1931 the total membership had expanded to 15,000.
Despite't;b:e fact that the HJ was temporarily banned by
the Republican Government, its ranks continued to swell .mder
the leadership of Baldur von SCHIRACH and by 1932 its munbers
had risen to 250,000. In the same year the HJ was separated
frem the SA, mainly to free it from the ban imposed on the
Stonntroopers.
When Hit1er took over full Governmental power in 1933,
lIla.n.Y more boys and gir1s joined, and all other youth organi
sations were rapidly prohibited and disbanded, their mesubers
being SUbsequently urged to join the HJ.
Considerable opposition was encountered at first fran
the Catholic and Loft WUJg Youth Movements, but these
organisations, too, were partly crushed and partly absorbed
in ruthless fashion.
After the first year of the Nazi regime, the HJ. iro1ud
ing its branches, DJ, JM, and Billl, nunbered two mil.1ion.
One ye= later this figure had actually doubled, and by
the 1st. of December, 1934, when the HJ was declared
Staatsjugend, (Gov-ernnent-sponaored Youth Organisation), the
total amounted. to six mi1lion,ot' which one and a half
million belonged to the HJ proper, the others to its
branches.
4. Reichsjugenddienstpt'lioht (Compul.sOry Youth Service)
The Decree of Deoember I, 1936, provid.inj; for Reichs
jUgenddienstpflicht (Compulsory Youth Service), not onJ.y
1egalised the existence of the HJ, rot aJ.so oompleteJ.y
destroyed all the remaining youth organisatiOns in Gemany.
The decree oontained three major points:
Al1 Cannan youth shall join the HJ.
The mission of the HJ is to train all CernJan Youth
mental1y and moral.1y for national
service in the spil'it of NationaJ. Sooia1ism. Schoed
and home are subordinated to the interests of the
State.
(c) The Reiahsjugendi'tlhrer (Reich Youth Leader) is
entrusted with all phases of the of Cerrnan
youth. and is responsible onl,y to the FtJHR;;;R.
Every child being compelled to serve in the HJ, the
Party gained an enormous influence over the youth of the
country and an assured supply of recruits for its own ranks.
By "voluntary application" the highest age group may
apply for transfer into any NSDAP Gliederungen (formations)
e.g. the SA, S3, or NSKK. Only the select are accepted for
the NSDAP (Nazi Party proper) itself.
An attelllpt to maintain a StaJTJm-HJ (Original nr) as a
superimposed structure, including only members of long atand
ing or those who had proved themselves ardent Nazis, resulted
in much confusion and had to be abandoned.
PAIl'f II
ORGANISATION
(See diagrams, Annexe C )
5. Main branches of the Hitler-Jugend
The is organised into four rnain branches.
(a) Hitler-Jusend for boys aged 14-18
'b) Deutsches Jungvolk (ro or German Young Folk) for
boys aged 10-14 who subsequently transfer to the
HJ proper.
(c) Bund Deutscher MAdel (BaM or League of
Girls) for girls aged 14-18.
(a) Jungml!.del (JM or Young Girls) for girls seed 10
14 who SUbsequently transfer to the BUM proper.
'l'he tetms HJ and BUM are used very loosely, and require
a special note. Strictly speaking In refers to (a) above,
and BDM to (c) above. In practice, however, HJ is .... idely
used to cover both (a) and (b), and BDM to cover both (c)
and (d).
];'urther, the tam 1\1 is used in a third sanse, to
indicate the whole 'Youth Movement.
For convenience all these meanings have been used in
this handbook, as the sense should invariably be clear
from the context.
Organisa.tion of the four branches runs along parallel
lines.
The prograznr;;e of the DJ consists of preparatory training
for the HJ. Although special training in Sondereinheitan
(Specialist Units) is officially lunited to members of the BJ
preper, specialist units such as Flieger-ro (AViation) and
Nachrichten-DJ (Signals) have been reported in the
W.
The task of the BllM and 3M is the eaucation of girls for
"companionship, honour and faith". l'hey are to be made
"conscious of their duty as Genuan gil'ls to become good
housewives and to have as many children as possible".
A snb-section, Glaube und Sch&nheit (Faith and Beauty),
organises women volunteers between the ages of 18 and 21 who
aspire to careers in the girls' and women's organisations of
the Nazi Party and its affiliates, e.g. the NSF (National
Socialist Party Wome nI s Branch) and the NSV (National Social
ist Welfare Organisation).
6. Die Reichs,iugenctftlhrung (Reich Youth Directorate)
The Reichs,iugendffihrung (RJF - Reich.Youth Directorate)
controls the policy as well as the of the
whele Hr.
tt is headed by a Reichs,iugendffihrer (Reich Youth
Leader) assisted by an Ad.jutant and a Stabsfllhrer (Chief of
Staff). The Reichsreferentin (BDM) controls the BJ1Il (Bund
Deutscher Ml!del-LeSfSUe of German Girls) and the 3M (3ung
ml!del - Young Girls), and she is responsible directly to the
ReIChsjugendftlhrer.
The I/JF is divided into five special eXllcutive branches
(ZentralalDt, Auslands-und Volkstumsamt, K1nderlandverschick
lim
S
' Kriee:sbetreuur.sdienst. AR-Schulen) and into Heupt
ter (Departments. The burs!UX of the Hauptlrater are known
as IIllter, and their sections and sub-sections as Hauptabteil
ungen and Abteilungen respectively.
All il.eichsschulen (National Scbools) aJ;'e controlled by
the RJP. ..
For chart and details of the RJP see Anneu C
Used in connection with the ll.l1i', the abbreviation "HAn
indicates lIauptamt (Department): in the
it staods for the Hauptebteilung (Executive Section
See next paragraph. .
7. ID Gabiete lID Regions)
The HJ inside Greeter Gennaq is organised into 43
Gebiete (Regions). With the exception of the Gebiet Sudeten
land and the Gebiet Befeblsstelle BIlhmen und 1AI\hreri, each
such region corresponds to a (district) of the Nazi Party
proper. For oCC1Ipied territolY, see para.". For list of
Gebiete and corresponding Party Gaue, see Annexa A.
Each Gebiet is headed by the Gebiets:rahrer (Regional
Leader), whose deputy is his Stabaleiter (Chief of St&1'f).
-The (Regional HQ is organised into
HauptebteilungenEDCUUve Sections, abbreviated to HA,
and special semi-independent offices. The functions of the
fis: tabtei en in general correspond to those of the Haupt
-
lImter Departments) of the RTF:-
Hl I Personnel
HA . II Pr....militar,y Training and Sports
HA III Ideological 'rraining and Cultural Activities
HA IV Social Services
}fA V BUildings and Homes
HA VI Legal l4atters
HDSjtabteilungen are split up into Abteilungen (Sub
sections
The Gebietsff1hrer may appoint a subordinate to perform
tasks which are nonnal),y the function of a HA or its sub
section. Such speciall,y appointed officials are termed, for
example:
Gebietsbeauftragter (Regional Plenipotentiary) i'l1r KLV
{Kinilerlandverschickung-Evacuation of ChU4ren) or
Ge61etsrous'ikre1'erent (Regional Director of hhlsic) or
Gebi"tsarzt (Regional Director ot Yedicine).
A Gebietsinsp8ktegr may be a general inspector of the HJ
within the region, or he I1J81 be a specialist (e. g. Iilspector
of Flying. Signals or Camps) in charge of specialist units.
Each ('.eMat administeIls and maintains schools and call1ps.
Two or more Gebietsf'8hrerschUlell (Regional Officers' Schools)
provide training for the many executive post, required by the
Organisation. Some Gebieia conduct special schools, such as
music or medical schonls or provide other specialist's
courses.
Although the Armed Forces have actually taken over the
operation of the Wehrerttlchtigungslager (Pre-r.lilitary Train
ing Camps) the Gebietsf'6.hrung concerned still administer.;.
them.
youth hostels, nominally under the Deutsche Jugend
herbergen (nTH or German Youth Hostels, an organisation car
ried over from the llepublic) are actually under ill admini
stration and supervision.
Details of each Gebiet are given in Annexe A, Part Two.
8. HJ Standort (Garrison)
The HJ Standort (Garrison) is the highest local author
ity on all matters concerning German Youth. It is under the
command of the Standortftlhrer(Garrison Commander) and
handles all amninistrative details with regard to
jugenddienstpflicht (Compulsory National Youth Service).
The Standort ",aintains the individual youth's Ju.,eod
star.blatt (Personal Record); this contains all personal
data, information .on activities etc. in the greatest detail.
Extracts of the most essential information a.rekept on
the Karteikarte (Filing Card) hold by the member's unit, and
on the Dienst%arte (Service Card), which also serves as
personal identity card.
Being a local administrati.ve authority, the Standort is
not part of the unit of the tIT, although, as will
be seen in the Order of Battle lists (Annexe A), the Stand
ortf'6.hrer (SOF) is often also the coamander- of a 3ann-:-
9. HJ Banne (llegL'llents)
(Regiment) is the basic of the rU: in a
Gebiet there are fro:;; ten to thirty, or even more Banne,
In 194.3 the Jungbann of the ill, parallel to the Bann
was abolished and the DJ JungstllHne (literally "Youth Tri.bes' )
were placed under the supervision of the E.T Bann,
Generally each NSDAP-Kreis (Party not Governmental
District) contains one KJ Bann, and its Head
quarters are located in the sane town as the corresponding
NSDAP-Kreis HQ. Larger Banne sometimes organise their own
schools and courses and some even operate youth hostels and
homes as we 11 B.S camping sites.
The Bann is led by the Bannf'ilhrer who frequently also
holds the office of St2ndortf'6.hrer (Garrison Commander). He
is assisted hy an Adjutant and a HauptstBlmllf'6.hrer.
The Bann administration is divided into 6 Hauptstellen
(Executive Offices) the functions of which ilenerally
correspond to the 6 HsuptllJ:1ter (Departments) of the, 3JF and
the 6 parallel Hauptabteilungen (Executive Sections) of the
GebietsfUhrung (rtegional Command HQs).
An average Bann of about 6,000 is sub-divided into 5
StlLrJlle ("Tribes") of the HJ and 5 Jungstll.'1'J;e of the .l.lJ v!ith
a strength of about 600 each, but a large of 9,000
might contain 15
10. Specialist units of the Bann
Each Bann has some special service units, usuaJ.ly:
(Motorised)
Flieger-Stamm (AViation) and
Nachrichten-Stemm (Signals).
These special service SUmme are sub-divided in
accordance with the established pattern of Gefolgschaft
(COlIlpany), Schar (Platoon) and Kamaradschaft (Comradeship)
as outlined below. (para.11)
Among the smaller special service units found in the
average St8llllll are:
Ol>e or two Mueik-Gefol.<tschaf'ten (llueio)
A Sicherunfsdienst (sRD).-Gefo!gsChaf't (security
Detachment for patrolling, and
A Feuerwelu:-.Schar (Firefighting Platoon).
11. Organisation below Regimental level
From the Stamm downwards the unit of organisation is
standardised. A Stamm is divided into 4- Gefolgschaften
(Companies) of 150 each, and the Gefolgschaft is organised
into 3 Scharen(Platoons) of 50 each.
Each Schar is sub-divided inte :} Kamaradsohaf'ten
of 15 each, and the latter split into 2
Rotten (fUes. A diagram giving organisation details will
be found in Annexe C. The number of youths in a community
detennines whether Gefolgschaft or is
organised there.
12. NUlllbering of Units
The numbering system of the Banne was originally
designed to correspond with the regimental numbers of the
Wehrma.cht Ln the same area, The HJ was to 'oarry On the
old tradition" but the rapid expansion of the HJ made
great inconsistencies inevitable,
Besides its number each Bann carries a name; this may be
a special name (e.g. a Party martyr or a geographical tero) or
simply the name of the HQ location, or both.
unit designations are usually given in erabic numerals,
the first indicating the Gefolgschsft, the second indicating
ths Bann, Thus 1/100 stands for first Gefolgscheft of
100. Na.1/100 stands fOr first Nachrichten-Gefolgschaft
(Signals Unit) of Bann 100.
The Stamm is Iii'd'icated by a Roman Numeral. Thus 1/100
stands for the first Stamm of Bann 100. Na.1/100 stands for
the first Nachrichten-Stamm of Bann 100.
The special service units a:re-numbered consecutively in
a separate series for each branch within everY Bann.
PART III
CONSCRIPrION AND TRAINING
13. Conscription Procedure
Conscription proceeds each year as follows: the ten
year old registers in January and receives his Meldeschein
(l1.egistration Card). .
In March he appears at the AUfnahmaawell(Prelimin
ary Rollcall) of his Standort.
Between the 10th and 19th April the Standort conducts
a technischer Aufnahmedienst (Preliminary Technical Course)
culminating in the Pimpfenprobe (Cub's Entrance Examination)
On the 20thApril, the Fdhrer's birthday, a cerer1lonial
Standortappel'(Total Rollcall) is staged, at which all H.T
members, old and new, must appear. 'Phe new Pimpf (cub) of
the ill ami the new Jungm!l.del ("young girl ") of the Jill,
together with the 14 year olds who are being transferred
into the IU and the BIll( respectively, take the oath of
alleGiance:
"Ieh ge lobe meinem Pl1hrer Adolf Hitler rreue, Ieh
verspreche ihm und den Fllhrern, die er mir bestin,nt, jedez
zeit Achtung und Gehorsam entgegen zu bringen" ('!I: promise
to be faithful to my Fnhrer, Adolf Hitler. I promise
obedience and respect to him and to the leaders he shall
appOint over me")
I t is noteworthy that this oath is strikingly similar
to that administered to the Waften SS.
'fhe new boy member is now entiUed to wear the dagger
with the inscription "Blut und 3hre" ("Blood and Honour").
14. Basic
Activities of the IiJ membership are numerous and take
up a good deal of' the German boy's time; exactly how much it
is impo3sible to estimate, even though many regulations have
been issued 011 this subject. It may be said, however, that
most of the time I10t spent at work or school is spent sezv
ing the HJ.
At present it appears that the day-to-day situation
largely regulates the duties required of HJ members, but the
basic peace time prograrene is carried on side-by-siae with
the wru." dltties resulting from Gennany's manpower shortage.
Heltanschauung (ideological training) is at all times
one of the impol'tant phases in a young German's schooling.
At least one evening each week is spent attending lectures
given oy specially trained leaders who use minutely worked
out directives and 3chulungsbriefe (educational pamphlets).
Here the !n boys nemor-Lse many stock phrases of the Nazi
pOlitical
Physical training in the HJ is designed to develop the
young Germans, in lIitler's own woI'ls, into junior supermen:
"hard as steel, tough as leather and swift as greyhounds".
All physical training is C8.XTied out with the help and
supervision of the h1lRBL, the Nationalsozialistischer Reicbs
bund fl1r Leibesftbung (National Socialist League for Physical
Training)
Two of the three weekly meetings are usually devoted to
sane fom of pb,ysical exercise inev:i.tably of military nature
(grenade throwing, small arms practice, etc.). Thus when the
boy arrlvesat a Scmnerla,ger (SUlJIIler camp) or Wehrertllchtig
ungslager (WEI. or Pre-mil!tary Training Camp), he is already
well acquainted with basic military fonnatials and drill.
The training, mental and physical, is penneated by
Nazi ideology and method, and in these oamps, vacat:i.on periods
are utilised by the Nazi Party to strengthen still further
its hold aver the young.
Various contests, such as Musischer Wettbewerb (Music
and Art Oontest) , Reiohsberuf'swettk!!!!!pf (National Vocational
Oontest) and sports meetings on national and regional levels,
are held in order to stimulate a spirit of canpetition and to
pranote higher standsrds of perfonnance.
WiIUlers are usually presented with certificates or
badges, and receive oamnensurate publicity'in llJ publioations,
being hailed almost as junior heroes.
Details of HJ Proficiency Examinations are given in
Annexe E.
15. Vocational Training
The vocational guidanoe programme of the HJ is conducted
in the closest co-operation. with the Deutsohe Arbeitsn-ont
(DAF or Gennsn Labour Front) The Gau,jugendwel ter (Nazi
Party Regional Youth Representative for the DAF) oollaborates
with the respective Gebietst'!lhrung in vocational guidanoe for
the llJ.
(Fann Service) in distinot contrast to the
Land.iahr (obligatory year in agriculture) involves four years
of training in all phases of agrioulture, part of which is
conducted on a Landdienstlehrhof (model training fann): see
Annexe A.
In peaoetime, upon graduation at 18 the boy receives his
Neubauemsohein (Junior Fanner's Certificate). The aim of
this training was to provide a number of young fanners to
colonise the Eastern Territories.
Land Service f'omerly olaimed many HJ boys, but today,
because of shortages elsewhere, they are oalled for such work
only When a fann labour shortage is acute enough to require
them, either locelly, or elsewhere in the Reich or in
ocoupied territories.
For girls this service year remains universally
obligatory.
The Bergdienst (Mining Servioe) of the HJ trains boys of'
18 (also during war-time) f'or leading positions in the mining
industry.
The five year oourse includes one year of Reich Labour
Service (RAD or Reichsarbeitsdienst) and is divided into three
phases. Zach phase is canpJ.eted by an examination, end the
candidate progressively attains the rank of Knappe (Miner),
Hauer (Hewer) and Steiger (]'oreman).
"---Wages for productive work performed during the sohooling
range fran 15 EM to 45 m per month, and an additional 17 EM
are deposited in the boy's Government Savings Acoount to
which he has no personal access.
16. Schools
The HJ has developed an extensive system of schools
designed to train future leaders for its own and other NSDAP
organisations.
These potential leaders are carefully moulded into the
pattern of National Socialism and emerge as conscious Nazis,
applying their philosophy tc all situstions and person
(Cases are on record of elderly citizens being thrown
into concentration camps merely for making contemptuous
references to HJ members.)
Lists of all HJ schools Will be found in Annexe A.
17. Gebietsf'llhrerschulen (Regional Schools for Officers)
Gebietsf'llhrerschulen (Regional Scheols for Officers) are
controlled by the Gebietsftlhrung (Regional Oonmand HQs) and
serve as training centres for those boys who already lead
large groups or who are capable cf doing so.
'I'he boys are given special courses in physical training
and Party doctrines by HJ training personnel and schooled to
fill posts wi thin the structure of the Gebiet.
Instruction is given throughout the year, but primarily
during holidays or summer- months.
18. Reichsschulen (National Schools)
These schools are under the direct superva saon of the
RJF. They are sJilecialist schools attended by HJ members f'rcan
all (;ebiete.
Curricula are based on military, naval, sport, admini
strative end other subjects, but leadership is stressed
equally with proficiency in the special subject.
The Auslands- und Volktumsamt (Bureau for Foreign
A1'i'airs and Gennanism) conduc'ts courses in foreign languages
and awards the HJ-Sprachmi ttlerschein (Interpreter's
Certificate) for proficiency.
NaLional
These establishments, which are abbreviated to NFJJ:.A
or Napola, are types of secondary school and canponents of
the HJ organisation.
An NPEA is usually organised as a HJ-3ternm, and is
directed by a staff of S3 Leaders whose pedagogical and
intellectual qualifications are often outweighed by their
political reliability and previous services to the party.
Since physical training has first place, instruction in
practically all kinds of military "sports", such as skimg,
glider flying, motoring etc. is emphasised. Tuition must be
paid by parents.
Graduates are not particularly enjoined to enter party
or Government service, but are usually attracted to milita:,;-y
careers because of preferential treatment in the attainment
of commissions.
20. 'rhe Reichsjugendakademie (National Youth Academy)
The Reichsjugendakademie (National Youth Academy) in
BRAUNSCHWEIG, a t'crmal, institute of l:iigher learning for
senior HJ leaders, was set up in 1939 when it took over the
enlarged functions of tile Reichs.1ugendfllhrerschule (Natiol'lAl.
Youth Officers School) still in operation in POTSDA1I.
candidates for admission LlUSt have :reached their 17th birth
day ani have completed secondary school or vocational train
ine. The school trains lU leaders WilO wish to make a career
of their callillg.
The ordi.na.ry course lasts two yeArs and. c oneLetie of five
phases embracing pr'act-LcaL experience in Bann administration,
three weeks of manual labour in Getlllan inilllstry and six
morrths abroad.
Successful completion of studies entitles the student to
the Jugendftlhrerpatent (Youth leader Col1ll1lission) and results
in iJIllaediate appof.ntmerrb to a responsible position in the HJ.
Recently disabled War veterns between the ages of 21
and 28 have been admitted in large numbers, am various
shorter courses in Administration, Nazi Ideology, "Cultural
Pres.s and Propage.nda, HeaLbh SerV'ice, SociuJ. Work Or
Farm Service instivJted for them.
21. AdDlf-flitler-Schulen (Adolf Hitler Schools)
(Adolf Hitler Schools) are free
boarding Schools conducted by the NSDAP, so called because
they werc conccive<1, "partly endowed" and allegedly
arehitechturally planned by the Ft.Ihrer hiuself. Each school
is directly under the supervision of the respective NSDJ\P
Gauleiter (Party District Executive). Students are selectea
at the age of twelve f1-o1'\ the ranks of the rJ, and admission
depends on possession 'of all the basie characteristics of a
good lIazi.
These schools comb.i.ne a cur-Lone mixture of 'tough.neaa and
lu:xury. They are on the eecondary school level and place
great emy>hasis on military "sports", character bui.Ldi.ng; and
devotion to the Barty-state.
The teaching starr haa received some or all of its train
ing at the Reiehsjugenilaka<lcr.lie. The student is regarded as
a member of the HJ' throughout his five years of schooling.
Upon gradllo.tion, the stuJents designed for cverrtual, NSll.\P
leadership are a<lmi tted into the Par-ty proper.
Of the 4,000 gracluates emergins fro", the .ill Sehulen each
year. 1,000 arc selected to reassemble seven years of
Party or HJ work, and, with other outstanding young leaders,
to enter one of the Ordensburgen (Castles of the Teutonic
Order). "
Four Or-donabur-gen known us KROSSINS.3E, Vcx;.EISAliG,
SONTrlOFEN and MARIENWE..'llli:R are in existence. There,
according to too chief of the German Labour Front, Robort IEY,
this "Elite" is trained as the future j,;asters of GenllAl\Y
" - great in kno\11ed{:e, blind in obedience, fanatienJ. in
faith".
PART IV
\\'.o\R SERVICE AND AlILITARY 'I'RAINING
22. Wsr Service
War has imposcd many additional responsibilities on the HJ.
and efforts are made to place the boys where manpower shortages
are most pressing. To attract youth into German inJustries and
maintain political hold over them HJ.-Lehrlings
hetme (Apprentices Homes) have been instituted in the large towns,
where in addi tim to an eight-hour day in the factories, the boys
also carry out nearly full HJ luties. Wages are nominal and
saving is ccmpulsory.
The Kriegseinsatz (War Emergency Service) wag created to help
with duties such as firefighting and ARP, ifJ. personnel also
working as conductors, mail clerks, pootmen , street cleaners etc.
'/far salvage ac't t vi ties and collections for war charities are
conducted regularly by the 1[J as well as the Kinderlandver
schickung (KLV. or evacuation of children from bombed areas).
In the Kricgsbetreuungsdienst (KED or Poroec. Welfare Servioe)
the llJ .vri tes letters and "ends parcels to the front, entertains
soldiers in hospi tals or while on leave, and runa canteens for
members of the Army.
The German High Command' s call for vo'Iurrtee r-e has been met by
a considerable response from the 17 year olds of the IlJ.
Voltmteering is made attractive by the granting of "pecial privi
leges, such as short leaves, the wearing of the HJ armlet on the
left upper arm of the army tunic. and the 1esignation of "Kriegs
freiwilliger" (Volunteer), instead of the customary "private".
HJ serving in any capacLty with the Armed Forces are also
entitled to receive regular army for good work.
:"",y HJ b oyn 0" the older age groups have also volunteered
to serve as Armed c'orce Auxiliaries in defence of the home country.
HJ - Luftwaffenhelfer (M Auxiliaries) are sixteen year o'lds
organ.ised to man anti-aircraft defences. serve as spot tern , and
work at AA posts, releasing of the iunned Forces for front
line duty.
Only students of secondary schools may volunteer for training
and assignment as I.uftwaffenhe]fer. They may be transferred to
e:ny distant danger area, but are bi-wmually guaranteed &. two-week
holiday to see their families. HJ uniform i, 8upplemented
by airforce boots, a steel helmet, and other necessary personal
Luftwaffe equipment.
HJ -l,i.arinehelfer (naval Auxiliaries) are members of the
).i.arine-HJ , who have volunteered for routine duties with the Navy
in the coastal areas of Germany.
Panzerschreckabteil'.mgen (,tank delaying sections) of the HJ.
have recently been reported in action against the invading Allied
annoured uni ts.
23. Liaison with the Armed Forces
All branches of the Armed Forces have maintained close
liaison with the HJ having their own representatives in the RJF
(Reich .Youth Directorate). The Arrtry, Airforce, and Navy fix
definita annual quotas for special training in the llJ wi th a
view to future recruiting.
Each Vfehrkreis (military distriot or Corps Commands of the
Wehl'lll8.cht) and each Luftgau (district of the LUftwaffe) has a
Nachwuchsoffizier (Recruiting Officer) who is assisted by a
Verbindungsoft'izier (HJ'--Liaison Officer).
By order of the ArJrry High COJII1lllIld a dfreet relationship
between units of the field army and units of the JLJ was estab
lished in January 1944. A regiment or an independent battalion
"adopts" a H,>.-Bann as (Foster Bann}, The regiment 's
Ersatz Einheit (Replacement Depot), located in the vicinity of the
Bann, actively collaborates in the military training programme of
the BaM.
Members of the adopting army regiment or battalion in the
field are often detached to the Bann to relate their war experien
ces and to act as temporary instro;:;tors.
In this connection it must be mentioned that the Yraffen-SS
exerts a disproportionately high influence upon the HJ.
In response to the inoreased need for trained manpower in the
Armed Forces, the HJ has undertaken to provide basic training for
boys under military age. Although semi-milii<ary activities have
always played an important part among the duties of t.he HJ
f0'7'lEll pre-military training under direct supervision of the Armed
Forces was not introduced ilntil 1942. Its purpose is to
supplement the training which must be compressed into a very short
period ..nen the boys are called up for regular service.
24. WehrertUchtigungslager (Pre-Military Training Camps)
The most effective form of pre-military training takes place
in the WehrertUchtigungslager ( WEL or Training
Camps), of whiCh some 300 are believed to exist in Greater. Germany.
Every 17 year old boy is required to take the three weeks
basic course at a WEL before being drafted to labour service or
prior to being "induced to volunteer" for the Armed Forces,
incluUng the Wai'fen-3S.
The usual VIEL has accormnodation for 300 to 400 boys, who are
organised into SCharen and Kameradschaften.
Instructors are Army officers or more frequently nowadays.
officers of the Waffen-SS and NCO's with canbat experience.
Professional or aemi-professional HJ leaders serve as assistants
and administrators only and a staff of male and female civilillns
maintain routine servioes.
The WEL is a very modern establishment, in no we:y canparable
to anrry barracks. It has dining rooms, lounges, modernly-equipped
kitchens and sick bays, store rooms, lecture halls with special
technical and demonstrating equipment, motor pools and shops,
sports arenas, and firing ranges.
The training plan provides for practical field exercises, and
manoeuvres, the use of small arms, as well as sports and
ideological schooling. Close order drill is kept to a minimum.
The K, -Schein (War Training Certificate) marks the sucoessful
completion of the course.
25. Sandereinheiten (Specialist Units)
Snndereinheiten Seryioe Units) have assumed
incre-;';ed. importance in the accelerated pre-military training
programne of the HJ. By decree of the RJF. 3'J1. of each h" age
group must supplement their basic training in Sandereinheiten,
where they acquire a rudimentary knowledge of the varaous branches
of milttary service.
HJ members of specialist units are organised into separate
Scharan or attend a special WEL., e.g. one for signal, motor or
aviation training.
The various specialist service certificates and badges may
be acquired during a course at the WEL. Tlie most advanced
trainees try to fulfil the requirements for the K.-Ubungsleiter
Schein (War Training Instructor's Certificate).
By the end. of 1943 approximately 514,000 youths had passed
pre-military training camps of the Hitler Youth

26. Nachrichten HJ. (Signals)
The Nachrichten-HJ (Signals) prepares boys for duty in the
signal of the Army and Air Force, and recently signal
training has also been given in special service units of the DJ
preparatory to transfer into the Nachrichten-HJ.
Training is conducted under direct supervision of the Armed
and with full utilisation of their establishments and
equipment. It is divided into three phases:
rhc first course lasting six months, gives signal trainine,
including an introduction to cmmnunicat10n procedure and the
operation of simple signal instruments and equipment. After
passing an examination, the HJ boy receives the Nachrichtenschein
A (Signals Certificate A) \Vhich entitles him to wear a distinctive
badae "A" on his left forearm.
The second course condsts of two and a half years of basic
signal training covering all typcs of signal communicetion.
Upon passing hi," f'inal examination in this' course the trainee
receives Nachrichtenschein B (Signals Certificate B) with the
corresponding badge "E" to wear on his sleeve.
The third is a special course adding the final touch to the
general signal training, and culminates in Nachrichtenschein C
and its corresponding badge.
27. Motor UJ. (Motorised Hitler Youth)
The Motor HJ , founded in 1939, is designed to train future
recruit" for the motorised and armoured ilivisions of the llrmy.
This training is under the supervision of the Army, but the N3KK
(National Sociali5t Motor Oorps ). rumt shes instructors, equipment
and facUi ties.
Training during the first two years includes theoretical
instruction, workshop practice, and lectures on traffic regulations.
When the Motor-HJ boy has reached a minimum age of sixteen, he
takes an examination for his driver's licence.
The technical training includes a lmowledge of all motor
vehicles and the ability to perform on-the-spot repairs.
The Motor-HJ Abzeichen (Motor HJ Badge) is awarded for
proficiency, particularly in driving under difficult terrain
conditions (from a tactical point of view).
Sturmboot Einheiten (Assault Boat Units) are a recently
developed br8DCh of the Motor HJ, but only a few such groUps
exist.
28. JIa.rine HJ (NavalHJ)
The Marine-IfJ, (Naval 1fJ) is generally caDposed of boys
living in coastal regions end furnishes replapements for the Navy
and Merchant Navy. Training is under the supervision of naval
perscnnel, and includes practically all phases of naval activities.
Ai'ter a three to four years course, the Merjpe_HJ boy has
learned to man rowr-boats, barges and sailing boats, he has a
knowledge of flag signals and basic naval COIIIIIUIlications and the
employment of the varioUs t;ypes of naval cratt,
The most exhaustive tra:l.ningis offered in the Reichsseesport
scbnlen (Reich Naval Sport Schools listed in Annexe A), end on. the
Segelschulschiff (Sailing Training Vessel) "Horst Wessel".
Seesportabzeichen (Sea SpOrt Badges) A, B .and C are awarded at the
end of each stage of training. The unifo%m worn by the Marine-HJ
differs entirely fram the ordinary IfJ Wliform, and is almost
identioal with the blue uniform worn by the GenllllD Navy, though
the HJ armlet is retained.
!iJ menilers serving with the Merchant Marine IIlI1Y carry out
inland waterwa,y duties with the ReichsblWl llinnenschiffahrt
(National Inland Waterweys Unit) or coastal duties with the Reichs
bsnn Seeschiffahrt (National Sea..ogoing Unit), ..
29. IniegerHJ. (AViation HU't
The Flieger-HJ prepares boys for service in the German Air
Force. Training is cootrolled by the Oberkgmneron dar Luftwaffe
(aa. or Air Poree High COO!fII8
nd),
but instructors establishments
and training e<pipaent are t'urrlillhed. by the lISI!'K (National
Socialist Flying Corps).
Flying training begins in the DJ when the twelve year l)ld
volunteers, oi'gaIlised in the Flieger-Dl {Junior Aviation HJ
learn to build and to fly model planes.
. Ai'ter transf'er to the PliegM'-HJ the cCIlstruction 8I1d
operaticin of gliders and theoreticalinstructian in aviation,
aerial geography 8I1d otber related subjects fonn a
full. training programoe.
Many workshc!Ps of the German State Ballwa;ys, German Postal
Service, Vocational Schools and -industrial COl1Ce:rns are at the
dbposeJ. of the .Flieger-HJ.
There are three Segelfliegerabseicheb. (Glider Badges) A,B
and C, llhich are progressiveJ.,y acquired. To pass the examination
for Segelfliegerabseichen C, the aPPlicant must maintain his glider
,phove starting height for at least five minutes. .
Selected boys msy prepare for the examination for the
fahrerSohein (Glider Pilot's Certificate) and take .further training
as aircraft pilota
. Por further details of HJ aviation training see Basic
Handbook ED3/G/2 the NSFK.
JO. H.1. Feldscbere (First Aid Units)
IiJ--Feldschere train mostly for first-aid work in the HJ,
but also for duty asmedicsl and ambulance personnel in the
Armed Forces.
Training tal<es place under- the supervision of full-time HJ
doctors, in extensive courses given at Feldscherschulen (First
Aid Training Schools). A list of these schools is given in
Annexe A.
Medical lectures, First Aid, Dental care, Casts and Trans
porting the wounded are some of the items an the general training
programme.
After passing an exemtnatd.on, the boy receives a certificate
and. is entitled to wear the Feldscher Ahzeichen (Medical Service
Badge).
31. Streifendienst (Patrol Service)
The Streifendienst (SRD) comprises the elite of the Nazi
Youth. A board of high local HJ and SS leaders considers the
individual applications for service in the SRD, applying the
rigorous standards of the original Allgemeine SS.
In the SRD are combined all the various tasks of a
supplementary SS and p,l'rice force. Members check on the
appearance of the other HJ members as individuals and in
formations; they also control the youths passing through railroad
stations and hostels. Furthermore they correct such offences as
begging, vagrancy and fraudulent collections.
The SRD operates in closest collaboration with police
authorities, including the Gestapo and its members, trained and
supervised by SS, are regarded as eventual SS replacements.
The SRD may indeed be considered a major problem for an
occupying force and a potential source of opposition and sabot'age.
Ib members' are among the most dangerous and unscrupulous types
used as raiding squads and informers. In Poland they made up
execution squads and formed Rollkamnandos (Pursuit Detachments)
serving under lJeath' s Head Officers of the s . ~ .
The Schnellkommando (Emergency Squad) is a sub-unit of the
SRD which is at the disposal of Germany's various police forces
for special duty at danger spots during air raids, eto.
In localities where no regular Feuerwehreinheiten (Fire
fighting Uhits) of the HJ Bann have been organised, branches of
the SlID are employed in this capacity.
The distinctive insignia of the SlID is a black ribbon around
the sleeve with the inscription "Streifendienst"(see plate in
Annexe C). '
32. Musikztlge (Band Platoc:ns)
Musikzllge have always played a great part in the special
activities of the" HJ and Ireetings and festivities of the
organisation are invariably embellished by the performances of
these musical Wlits.
Combinations of band groups range from drum and fife bands
to bugle ,(fanfares) corps arid full size brass bands.
Each Bann has at l e a s ~ one Musikgefolgschaft (.msie Company),
and musical training is given in special HJ Courses at most
musical institutes in Germany. Some music schools have even been
taken over by the HJ for this purpose. (:For list, see Annexe A)
It is believed that bugle code signals have recently been taught
in these schools.
The best m u s ~ c ~ s n " are selected to be members of the HJ
Reiohsmusikzug (National HJ Band) whioh frequentl;y tours Greater
Germany and often broadoasts.
All members of musical units wear "Schwalbennester"
(Epaulettes wi.th fringes) as iistinotive insignia.
Spielsoharen are propaganda troops which present shows and
plays expounding Nazi ideology. Some Banne and each G<lbiet
maintain a Spielschar. Performances of particular interest and
vuue to the organisation are given over the air.
33. Gebirgs-HJ, (Mountaineers)
The C.ebirgs-H.I provides mountain training in preparation
for future service wi. th the mountain troops. This training is
outlined by the Army, and given in close co-operation With the
Deutscher Alpen"erein (DAV or G<lrman Alpine Club).
Vembers of the Gebirgs-HJ are organised in so-called Berg
fabrtengruppen, small groups which undertake independent mountain
expeditions, involVing mountain climbing and skiing. Upon passing
a special course, the Gebirgs;"HJ boy acquires the Ber;:;fahrten
ffihrer Abzeichen (Junio. Mountain Guide Badge).
NC1J'E: The Reite. HJ (Cavalry) was a peace time br-anch of the
HJ specialising as horse-lllounted units. It has not been heard
of since the outbreak of war.
PARi' V
HJ LR,',DERS, Rl\NKS AND UND'ORMS
}4.. HJ Leaders
With the introduction of campulsory youth service in
1936 a considerable need for new leaders arose. Only 8,000
Hauptllmtliche Fllhrer (full-time, professional and salaried
officials) were available for the leadership of millions of
new members.
At first many new leaders were combed out of the old
ranks of the Sta.-rm-HJ" (see para 3). When this source was
depleted, less qualified appointments were made.
In sny case, all llJ officials are chosen by the Command
HQ of the next higher a.ilministrative level in acoordanoe with
the Nazi "Fllhrerprinzip". This has led to much intrigue, the
use of influence,and personal conflicts in connection with
both appointments and pranotions.
'fo stop the gaps left by leaders having entered the
Armed l!'orces, functionaries of other Nazi Party organisations
are being drafted to fill their posts temporarily. Until
Spring 1944 Hauptllmtliche Fllhrer, of which there are at
present about 30,000, received military deferment, but
might volunteer, if they so wished.
l'he following are the ranks of the ill proper, in
ascending order: any attempt to equate them with Wehrmacht
ranks would be misleading, but the diagram of units and unit
co,om&lders in Annexe C gives their relative positions.
Beyond inclusion in the diagrarns and plates of Annexe C
no special trea.tment of the ranks of' the DJ or BUM has
been undertaken in this handbook:
liitlerjunge
Rotteni'Uhrer
Kameradschaftsi'Uhrer
Oberkameradschaftsi'Uhrer
Schari'Uhrer
Oberscharf'1lhrer
Gefolgschaf'tsi'Uhrer
Obergefolgschaftsf'1lhrer
Hauptgefolgschaftsf'1lhrer
Stammi'llhrer
Oberst8lllllfllhrer
Bannf'1lhrer
Oberbannf'1lhrer
Hauptbannflllirer
Gebietsf'1lhrer
Obergebietsi'Uhrer
Stabsi'Uhrer
Reichsjugendff.\hrer
Leaders anointed for the duration of the war only, add
a "K-" (Kriegs-) in front of their respective ranks
(e.g. K-Gefolgschaftsi'Uhrer).
As the fourteen year old is tr&1sf'erred fran the DJ
into the HJ, he becanes a Hitlerjunge.
If he possesses the necessa.ry qualifications, he
at'ter six months service, be appointed
It takes about one year to attain each of the next
higher ranks, e. e. Kameradso11af'ts:f'l1hrer and Schar:f!lhrer.
The Gefolgschaf'ts:f'l1hrer is usuaJ.ly 18 years of age, and
Bann:f'l1hrer and higher ranking officials are generally old
members With considerable party influenoe.
A1though there is rio offioial age limit, HJ leaders
ordinarily transfer to other NSDAP fomations after they have
reached the age of 35.
The addition of "Ober--" or "Haupt-" to the ordinary rank
indioates recognition of length of service only and does not
necessarily oonnote a higher funotional status.
Fran the rank of Bann:f'l1hrer upward, HJ leaders are
employed on a fully paid basis. Lower ranks, by the display
of speoial zeal may in oertain oases also receive
remunerations Scharft\hrer - 120 RM per month; Ge:f'olgschat'ts
f'llhrer - 200 RM per month
36. Unifonns and Insignia of Rank
In simmer- the ll3 wear the following:
Brown shirt
Black cotton shorts
Brown shoes
Grey stockings
Black neckerchief with leather knot.
In Winter the unifonu consists of:
Brown shirt
Dark blue ski-trousers
Brown balaclava (often with Hoheitsabzeichen)
Brown boots
Peaked dress cap (with coloured piping)
Greenish brown overcoat (with which the dirk and
scabbard with HJ motto "Blut und Ehre" is worn)
In Annexe C plates give illustrations of HJ and BIM
unifoImlland insignia of rank. It should be noted that the
ranks of Oberrottenf'llhrer(HJ), Jungbannf'lllirer and Oberhorden
:f'l1hrer(DJ) shown there, are nOW obsolete.
The insignia of the Reichs.iugend:f'l1hrer do not appear in
Annexe ;- his epaulette oarries the same oluster of Leaves
as that of the Gebietsft\hrer, su=ounded by a laurel wreath.
The numerals appearing on the silver buttons of the
epaulettes in the lower ranks indioate the unit conoerned
(Arabio for Gefolgsohaf't, Roman for Bann).
J;;paulettes also be found which differ slightly :from
those shown in.Annexe C. Sometimes letters or abbreviations
replace the unit number and indicate HJ branohes or schools.
37. other Insignia and Badges
Plates in Annexe C also illustrate various insignia
denoting specialist employment, unit, etc.
The examples given do not fonn a ocmprehensive list;
the following emblems, not illustrated, may be of interest:
~ ' l i e g e r (Aviator) : propellor, with wings, on a
blue parallelogram
Feldscher (First Aid) : white cross on a red circle
Arzt (Doctor) : gold caduceus (rod and serpent)
on an oval blue background
ringed with gold.
NOT.,: In Annexe 0 the ann patches showing the Untergau and
Obergau of the BIM are noV{ obsolete, as the Obergau
has been abolished and the Untergau changed to BDM
~ .
,
PAllT VI
THE HJ ABroAD
}8. HJ in Occupied Territories
The F.J in occupied territories is regionally administered
by Befeh1sstellen (Tllrritorial <;;cmnand HQs).
Befeh1sstelle BOHMEN UNO MARREN is the only cOlIllll2I1d which
enjoys the status of a Gebiet.
Each Befehlsstelle is headed by a Chef (Chief) with staff.
This staff is similar to that of a GebietSf'llhrung, and is
organised into offices accoIliing to the requirements in the
territory in ques tion.
}9. HJ in Foreign Territories
In conmon with other NSDAP fonnations, the HJ has also
played a role in the Nazi attempt to sponsor its own
organisations in foreign courrtrd.es , as well as to spread its
philosophy there. The approach to the young people of other
countries has been outwardly conducted under the guise of
promoting understanding between the youth of the world;
actually the usual Nazi tactics of intiltration and coercion
are employed.
Principle agencies carrying on this work aree -
The Auslands-und Volkstumsamt of the RJF (see para 6).
The Ndttelstelle fllr Volksdeutsche JugendaI'beit (Centre
for Germanic Youth Work) of the Nazi party.
The Volksbund ffir das Deutschtuln :iJn Ausland (VDA or
Popular League for Germanism Abroad).
Their main efforts are directed at Ge=s or people of
"Gennanic origin" living abroad. The fonner are coerced, the
latter 1roOed.
MaIlJ publications and directives are published purely
for such foreign censUll1Ption and special HJ representatives
are sent to neutral and Axis capitals.
The HJ representatives in countries beyond the borders
of Greater Gennany, are listed in alphabetical o111er in
accordance with the country to which they are "accredited",
in Part Six of Annexe A.
The Auslands-und Volkstumsamt is the executive agency
for the organisation of youth in foreign countries.
Individual HJ members are responsible to it, and where Banne
or other units can be foIllled, they also come under its --
.1urisdiction.
Ge=n-speaking young people from other countries are
invited to the Reich, at no expense to themselves, in order
to receive training in leadership atHJ institutes.
::pecial stress in all these matters is placed on the
so-called tlGennanic" youth, including not only Norwegians,
Danes, Dutch and Flemi.ngs, but also Walloons, Finns and
LaMans.
A more ambitious project, the ''League of European Youth"
was launched by the Nazis in September 1942 at Vienna. There,
the Party managed to rally the youth organisations of fourteen
nations (and satellites) around the princip;Les of' "unequivocal
adherence to the reconstruction of the New J>il.rOpe
fl
and the
promotion of internal struggles against "Jewish-Plutocratic
Bolshevist ideas".
Nations participating were: Gennany, Italy, Rumania,
Bulgaria, Croatia, Slovakia, Spain, Nozway, Hungary, Holland,
BelgiUlll, "Walloonia" (Belgium), Denmark and Finland. A
permanent secretariat was fonned and a monthly periodical
"Junges Europa" (Young People) was founded.
Other international activities of the HJ were the
establishment of:
A World Youth Hostel at Altena near Hagen!IVestfalen in
1934- (under the auspices of the International Working Committee
for Youth Hostels).
A Gennanic House opened in Braunschweig.
WEL (See Annexe A, Part Five) for Gennanic Youth at
Stegskopf and Seeboden, which co-operate with the Volksdeutsche
Waffen BB.
The Germanische Landdienst,jugend (Germanic Land Service
Youth) for agricultural work in the Eastern territories.
PARr VII
OPPOSrl'ION YOUTH MOVEMElfrS
4f). Legal. Measures regarding Gezman Youth
The Polizeiverordnung zum Schutze der Deutschen Jugend
(Police Decree for the Protection of Gennan Youth) issued in
November 194-3 by HIJ'frUER, in his capacity as Chief of the
Gennan Police, indicates that Hitler's campad.gn to win the
youth of' Germany, despite its thoroughness, has met with some
resistance.
The decree prohibits youths between the ages of 16 and
1a fran frequenting places of entertainment af'ter 9 0' clock
in the evening, unless acccmpanied by D. 'parent or guardian.
People under 16 are canpletely barred from such locales
after 9 o'clock, and no one under 18 is permitted to smoke,
dance or drink in public under any circumstances.
Those who join the VI ehzmacht and S3 are exempt, fran
these regulations: this is believed to have encouraged
recruitment.
The real. purpose of this edict, aside from any pretended
moral. or so-cal.led disciplinary reasons, may have bcen to
discourage unsupervised gatherings of young people, where
opposition to the regime might be planned or covertly
displayed.
4-1. UnOfficial youth organisations outside the HJ
Reports on hand clearly indioate the existenoe and
growing strength of underground and unofficial. organisatiOns
operating outside the HJ.
Sane of them are secret remnants of the old ttBtlndische
Jugend
tt
or the confessional youth movements; others are
probably Left Wing in origin. Some have reoently been
created as 5IJla1l groups functioning within a town, city or
city district; others may have national. or regional.
connections.
It is not al.ways clear whether these groups exist as
convinced anti-Nazi cells or are merely a reaction to the
restrictions, discipline and military orientation of the 1IJ.
Many have simply developed out of the desire of young people
to' enjoy their sports, hikes and cultural. activities unshaok
led by party supervision and coercion. .
A group in llustria, called "I'a.ener Praterschlllrfe"
plans its activities in local. dance halls and its activities
have been reported in the Viennese press.
Some meet secretly at their leader's heme, sane assemble
~ d e r the guidances of a parish priest or minister, some are
led by older people, While a tew maintain liaison with adult
underground movements. Members often wear secret insignia
inside their coat lapels.
So-cal.led "Edelweisspiraten" (EP or Edelweissbenden)
in the Rhineland, the Ruhr, Westphalia and Southern Germany
have attacked i'solated HJ boys, provoked them in street
fights, assaulted SS and SA personnel and even performed acts
of sabotage, such as starting fires in fuel dwnps.
42. Repressive Measures
Nazi police forces, and in particular HJ SRD
detachments are constantly on the alert for these
groups.
It Ls: reported that on apprehension for the first
time, these boys are liable, in case of lesser demeanours
to be taken into custody aver a weekend (ttJugendarrest
tt)
Further offences restzlt in sentences to Zwangsanstalten
Institutes). .
Two former concentration camps, at RAVNSBRtlCK and
MORJNGEN, have been transformed into Jugendachutzlager der
Sipo (Security Police Camps for the Protective Custody of
Youths), and are said to come up to the standard of the
nonnal adult concentration camps, for brutal treatment of
the inmates.
ANNEXE A
(Order of Battle Tables)
~
PART ONE: List of HJ GEBIETE.
1. Part One lists the HJ Gebiete and Befehlsstellen in
numerical order, giving the NSDAP Gau with which eachGebiet
is practicall,y identical.
PART TWO: THE HJ GEBIETE.
2. Part Two gives details at each Gebiet, in numerical
order, the first page in case giving HQ, personalities and
schools, and following pages giving the identified l3amle
of the Gebiet.
3. "GEBIETSFllHRUNG": (Regional Directorate)
Gives HQ location, and identified stai'f persllmalities, using
German terms and abbreviations.
4. "IDENTIFIED BA:Nm:": In ad.dition to Banne (and an;y
of their identified subunits), towns in which NSDAP Kreise
have their HQ, are listed for reference, as it is a general
principle that HJ Banns are located in such towns.
PART THREE: HJ BANNE, LIS:J3ID NUMERICALLY.
,5. Part Three provides a munerical index of the Banne
with Gebiet to which each belongs. with s p e ( \ ~ Banne names
will be found at the end of the list.
PART FOUR: HJ BANNE, LIS:J3ID .A.LHW3ETICALLY.
6. Part Four gives the same information as Part Three,
except that Banne identified by location o,nl,y will also be
found here, while Banns identified by llUJli)er o,nl,y are not
included.
PART FIVE: sr SCHOOLS AND CAMES.
7. liT Schools are here listed according to tY,pe, and
subdivided in most cases according to the Gebiet in which
they are located.
"
PART SIX: liT AllSLA!IDSF1JERER.
8. Part Six lists liT representatives abroad, according
to countries; rank: and functions are given.
NOTE: for German towns, names of bureaux etc. reference should
be made to the text. Official abbreviations are given in
Annexe D.
Al
ANNEXE A
PART ONE
HJ.GEBIETE AND BEFEHLSSTEILEN
With oorresponding NSDAP. Ge.u
Location of
HJ. Gebiet NSDAP. Gau Headquarters
No: N8llle: No: Name:
1 Ostpreussen (for 25 Ostpreussen KBnigsberg/Pr.
merly Ostland)
2
3
Mark Brandenburg
Berlin
16
-'
Mark Brandenburg
Berlin
Frankfurt/O.
Berlin C.2
4
Niederschlesien 21 Niedersohlesien Breslau I
5
Paronern 26 Ponunern Stettin II
6 Nordmark
29 Schleswig-Holstein Kie:
7 Nordsee
37
Weser-JJms Oldenburg; O.
8 Niedersaohsen
33
Slid-Hannover- Hannover
Braunsohweig
9
Westfalen-Nord
38
Westfalen-Nord MUnster/West!'.
10 Ruhr-Niederrhein 6 Essen Mlllheinv'Ruhr
11 KBln-Aaohen 11 ICBln-Aachen ICBln
12 Moselland (formerly 18 Mose1land Koblenz (Rhein)
Westmark)
1.3
. Hessen-Nassau 10 Hessen-Nassau '/iiesbaden
14
Kurhessen 13 Kurhessen Kassel
15
16
Yittelland
Sachsen
8
27
Halle-Merseburg
Saohsen
Halle/S.
Dresden A.24
17 Thtl.ringen
34
Thllringen Weimar
18
19
Franken
Hoch1and
7
19
Franken
Mllnehen-Oberbayern
NUmberg
Mllnchen
20 Wflrttemberg 42 Wllrttemberg- Stuttgart W.
Hohenzollern
21
22
Baden
Bayreuth (formerly
1
2
Baden
Bayreuth
Strassburg
Bayreuth
Bayrisohe Ostmark)
23
24
25
Mittelelbe
1leok1enburg
Westmark (formerly
14
17
40
Magdeburg-Anhalt
Meoklenburg
Wes:bnark
Magdeburg
Sohwerin
Neustadt/a.d.
Saarpfalz) Weinstrasse
26
27
28
Hamburg
Wien
Niederdonau
9
41
20
Hamburg
Wien
Niederdonau
Hamburg I
Wien VIII/65
Wien XIII/89
29 Oberdonau 22 Oberdonau Linz (Donau)
30
Steiermark
31
Steiermark G-raz
31
32
Kllrnten
Salzburg (formerly
11
28
Kllrnten
Salzburg
Klagenfurt
Salzburg
33
34
Ostmark)
Tirol-Vorarlberg
OOsseldorf
35
5
Tirol-Vorarlberg
OOsseldorf
Innsbruck
DU sse ldorf-
Eller
35
Sudetenland 32 Sudetenland Reiohenberg
Oberro-Senthal
36 Sohwaben 30 Sohwaben Augsburg
37
38
Danzig-Westpreussen
Warthe1and
4
36
Danzig-Westpreussen
Wartheland
Danzig
Posen
.J.2
Location of
BJ. Gebiet NSDAP. Gal:>. Headquarters
39 Mainfranken 15 Ma1nf"ra:nken wtlrzburg
40 Oberschlesien 23 Oberschlesien Kattowitz
41 Ost-Hannover 24 Ost-Hannover IItlneburg
42 Westfalen-Snd 42 Wes tf'alen-Snd Bochum
Gebiet Eefehlsst.
Prag XIX
I3&hmen 110 Wlhren
Befehlsst. Belgien
Brussels
Eefehlsst. G<lneralgouvernement Krakau (Craoaw)
Befehlsst. Niederlande Den Haag
Befehlsst. Osten
Befehlsst. Ostland Riga
:Ii Only the Eefehlsstelle (Territorial C ~ d HQ) BBhmen und
Wlhren (Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia) has the legal
status of a Gebiet such as those numbered from 1 to 42.
ANNEXE A
PART TWO
THE HJ. GEBIETE JIi
Territorial Administrations in Numerical Order
GEBIET 1. OSTPREUSSEN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 25, OSTPREUSSEN)
GEBIETSFUHRllNG
HQ: K8n.igsberg/Pr., Jllgerhof 17/18
Phone: 34 541
K.-GebietsfUhrer: H. Bat' Oskar DOBAT
HA.III. (Musik): Stat. OOHOLZ (K)
en the Statf: Bat. FRIEDRICH
OTHER PEllSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Bat. Alfons BALTRUSCH
Herbert BOECK; (Fllhrer of a
K.}'. BRAND, (Fllhrer of a Bann
SCHOOLS AND CAM?S
Name of School
~ :
Location: or Camp: COIlIlllllldant:
Gebietsfllhrer Boschirnmen, Post Rcmotten
schule I Jqck-Land
GebietsfUhrer MOldenten Z&pel
schule n
WEL. II Rosensee
Landjahr1ager Karnitten
Adolf-Hitler-Schule Ti1sit
Reichsschiess u. Boyden
Ge1l1ndeschu1e
Including the BEF11lLSSTELLEN
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: CODIlWlder: Sub-Units:
1 Kllnigsberg Baf, STRAHL Flg, Get',l
3
Preussisoh
Holland
4-
!Barten) Rastenburg
18
. Tannenberg) Osterode
33
Nadrauen) Gumbinnen
41 Mamel) Tilsit Stat, :OOma:
43
K8nigsberg
44
(Rominten) Goldap
45
Insterburg
147 Lyck
150 Allenstein
151 (Galinden) Gef,in Wtzen
,
270 Ragnit
278 Orte1sburg
290 (Prege1) Weh1au
291 (Natangen) Preussiseh
Eylau
292 Angerburg

293

Hei1sberg
296 Haf.,fgau Braunsberg
367 Neidenburg
471
Merne1 Bat, ENGLER
473
Heydekrug
679 Zichenau
681 lfJaCkeim
782 Labiau Gef.in Goldberg
793
(Friedland) Bartenstein
796 Pl&hnen
876 Deutsch Eylau
SchrBttersburg
Seats of NSDAP-Kreise. at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Angerapp Ostenburg
Ebenrode Osterode
Gerdauen Praschnitz
Heiligenbell R6ssel
Heinrichsifalde Scharfenwiese
Johannisburg Schlossberg
Mielau Sudauen
Mohrungen Treuburg
GEBIET 2, J.lARK BRANDENBURG
(Corresponding to NSIlAP-Gau 16, MARK BRANDENBURG)
"
GEBIE'l'SFUHRUNG
HQ: Frankfurt/a" Rei.nmBnnstrasse 3
Phone: 32 21
Gebietsfl1hrer: Gebf, Fritz KNOOP
StellY, Gebietsf'tlhrer: a,Baf', SCHULZ
HA, III: 0, Stat', Ernst GRtlDER
Gebietsinspekteur: Franz FINK
SCHOOlll AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or C8Il!P : COIIIIlaIldant :
Gebietsfl1hrerschule I Cottbus Gerhard Liebsch 0, Stat'.
BERGLAR
WEL. I Am Odersee
Landdienstlehrhof
Adolf-Hitler-8chule Frankfurt/Oder
NPEA. Neuzelle/b.
Guben
NPEA, Potsdam
Reichsjugendftlhrer Potsdam
"chule
Reichsseesportschule I Prieros/Mark
Reichsschule f, Schloss
Weltanschauliche Molchow/b.
Schulung NeW"Uppin
Reichsschule f',
Soz;ale Jugendarbeit
Karnmer/b.
Golzow
Reichssegelflugschule Trebbin
IDENTIFIED "'NNE
No. & Name:
8
12
20
24
35
46
47
48
52
64
140
141
195
196
197
275
368
369
370
372
373
374
7P
72)
(Jlltetbog-
Luckenwalde)
ppin
Brandenburg-
r )
Zaueh-Belzig)
(Galau-Luckau)
Location:
Drossen
Guben
Jlltetbog
Neuruppin
Brandenburg
Zllllichau
Senftenberg
(Soldin-Landsberg) Landsberg/W.
(Osthave1land)
fBarnim)
Westprignitz)

Ostprignitz)
(Westhavelland)
.Seats of NSIlAP-Kreise
possibly exist

Ltlbben
Meseritz
Cottbus
Prenzlau
Ktl.strin
Frankfurt/O.
Falk:ensee"
Ebers_1de
Wittenberge
Sorau
BeeskO'll'
Stork""
Finsterwa1de
Templin
Bernau
Pritzwalk
Potsdam
Crossen
Rathenow
COIlIlIallder:
O.Geff. K!lLLER
Geff. MANTE
Geff. Heinz
POHLE
O.Star. FRICKE
(K)
Geff. MELITZ
Identified
Sub-Units:
Gef.27,
Babelsberg
Get. in
KBnigsberg
/Nm.
H.Get't', GUTSCHE
Gef.1 (Bee
skow-Mitte)
H.Gett. Karl
K!k:K
Bat' S'1'ROMPS
O.Bat'.
O. REICHERT
O.Stat', SCHULZ
(K)
at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
Spremberg
Te1tow
GEBIET 3, BERLIN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 3, BE:RLIN)
GEBIETSFlffiRUNG
HQ: Berlin C 2, Alexanderp1atz 4
Phone: 51 5201
Gebietstlihrer, Gebf, IWlANN
Stabs1eiter: H,Baf, Heinz RAETZ
!lA. II, Wehrertilch Baf, Q<lEISER
tigung:
Abt. Rechtst'ragen: Stat'. PLtlMKE
Geb. Insp. d, Flieger-HJ.: Helmut NeRENBERG
Geb, Beauftr. f, Umsied- Bar, KRnlME:R
lung in Ostpreussen:
OTifER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
o.asr, Benne E:rrINGER
Baf. Willi von FELD
H, Baf. Gottlieb HIRSJH
Baf, WICKE
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School
Location, or Camp:
Gebietstahrerschu1e Birkenweroer Herbert NORKUS
Gebietsmusikschule Ost-Berlin
WEI.. I Glfmen
WEL,
Dreetz/a,
Schll.ferberg
II SonBnerlager Klein Karis
NPEA. Berlin-Spandau
Reichsfunkschule Berlin
Charlottenburg
lTehrgang fllr Jugend
Berlin
u, Volksmusik1eiter
Charlattenburg
Corrmandant ~
H Probably converted to WEL.
IDENTIFIED BANNE
No. & Name:
6
21
37
61
129
155 (Gerhard Liebich)
198
199
(Georg Peiser)
20C
201 (Herbert Norkus)
Location: Commander:
Wedding
Reinickendorf
Horst-Wesse1
Stadt.
Prenz1auer Berg
Wilmersdorf-
Zehhltdorf
Neuk!Hln- Staf.
"reptow FROMME:YER
'. iahtenberg-
KBpeniak Be.f. CALwm (K)
Kreuzberg-
Yitte
Char1ottenburg
Spandau Bar. BREY (K)
Pankow-
Weissensee
Steglitz- O.Staf. SCHMIDT
Tempelhof
140abi t- Baf. KUSCHEL
SchBneberg
Identified
Sub-Units:
Flg.Gef.4
Gef.19
Gef.20
GEBIE'J' 4, NIEDERS-.."HLESIEN
(Corresponding to 21, NIEDERSCHLESIEN)
GEBTh'7sF'JIlHUNG
HQ: Breslau I, Ohlauer Stadtgraben 17/18
Phone: 52 241
Gebietsfllh:er: Oebf', Herbert IlTIlSCH
"
!lA. I, Verwal tlmg: i3af. Hans RADIM:I'1lSKI
!lA. III: o.ser. lWlN
C'rebietsarzt: ilr, GUMMEL
Stabsleiter: O.Baf. Hans BANIDH
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assiwnent Unknown)
Baf, Werner HAlJPl'
SCHOOLS AIID CAMPS
Name of School

Location: or C8!l!p: COIJIlI8l1dant:
GebietsfUhrerschule I Oderbeltsch,
Xr.Guhrau
Georg Preiser
GebietsfUhrerschule II liassitz
Gebietsfcldscherschule Hirschberg
m:L. VII Bartnig,
Kr ,Militsch
'.'GL. Kunzendorf
H VormilitKrisches
Schiaunbildungr.lager
Gross Iser Siegfried
GOSS'ERT
Adolf-iii t Ier--Schnfe 'Kartha
Naumburg
ML.. Wahhtadt
Reich:;:-;portnchule Tlraunau/ilober,
K!'.Lllwenberg
S t.e inau/Ode r
Probably conver-ted to
lIEN'l'IFIED BANNE
Identified
No. & NaJre: Location: Commander: SUb-Units:
7 Liegnitz
10 Sohweidnitz
11 Breslau-Stadt Bat. SEIFERT FIg. Gef.2
Baf. PROBST, SOF.
19 G5rlitz O. Stat. MALORNY
38 Glatz
50 WOOlau
58
154 (Riesengebirge)
Glogau
Hirschberg
157
280
Brieg
Bunzlau Ger.n,
347
Niesky
Siegersdort'
(Kohlfurt)
.348 Frankenstein
349 Breslau-Lend Gef.27,
Hermanns
dort'
Gef. in
Neumarkt
Gef.l,
Brockau
350 Grflnberg
351 Landeshut
352 Oels
375
Waldenburg Baf', MllLLER
376 Trebnitz
378 Sagan in Sprottau
379 Reichenbach!
Eule
803 LaUban
807 Ohlau Baf. NAGEL
810 Jauer
Striega",
Seats of NSDAP-Y"..reise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Fraustadt LUben
Freystadt Militsch
Goldberg Nwnslau
Guhrau Neumarkt
HabeLschwerdt Rothenburg
Hoyerswerda
Ulwenberg
Strehlen
GEBIET 5. P01lMER)f
(Corresponding to NSDA?-Gau 26. POMMEElN)
GEBIETSFtlHRUNG
Stettin, 11 Falkenwaldflr Str. 69
Phone: 33 220
Gebietsfllhrer: H.Bar. Gerd WEGNER
Stabsleiter: o.see. STEFFENHAGEN
1:lA. II. Wehrertlich 0, Bar. SCHV/ARZ
tigung:
Gaujugendwalter: o.see, WEHNERT
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or C!lll!P: GOIllllWldant:
Gebietsf'llhrerschule I Binow-Buchheide /
b.Stettin Hans Mallon
Gebietsfllhrerschule II Machlin
WEI,. I Gcddentow, Kr.
Lauenburg
TIEL. II Westfalenhof Stat. MARIN
WEI,.
Gross-Born!
Neustettin
>f Socamerlager Lubmin
Adolf-Hitler-Schule Kr3ssinsee
KBslin
NPEA. Putbus
rieichsseesport Ziegenort/Kr. Admiral
schule III Uckermflnde v: Trotha
H Probably converted to WEL.
IDENTIFIED llANNE
Identified
No. & N&Jl1e: Location: COIII!Wlder: Sub-Units:
2 Gross-8tettin o.ssr. W:::HT llotorstamn
Bal'. 1lURSWIFJi: I
(Sop. )
9
Stargaro O.Baf. STRUNCK
14 ,'latow
34
(Al t-Vorponmern) Ank.Iam
42 (Hans Mallon) Stralsund :I, neff. Cll.AMI'P. Get' i.-'1
RUgen
1,9 Stol!,
54
Kolberg
149 Deu tech Krane
175
(Friedeberg- S't.anm I,
Arnswalde) ;\rnswalde
176 Lauenburg
193 Neustettin
zOlt- Greifenbere
294 Greifs_ld a,Staf, ROSS
J)EU'l'SCJER
295 Klislin
353
Greifenhagen
371
'3chneidemUhl
462 Blltow
683 Naugard
685 Belgard
686
687
689 Schlochau Geff. PLATH (K)
690 Jarmen
Dramburg STORCH (K)
Seats of NSDAP-Kreise at which carrespending HJ-Banne ma.y
possibly exist
Pyritz Schlochau
Regenwalde Uckernrllnde
R=e1sburg
Schlawe UsedOOl-Wollin
GEBlET 6, NORIlMAHK
(Corresponding to NSIlAP-Gau 29,
"
G113IETSFUHRUNG
HQ: Kiel, Augustenburgcr Platz 4
Phone: 92 20
Gebietsf/lhrer: Gebf, Hubert MEIFORTH
K. -S'tebaleiter: O.Ba!'. Hans COLLING
lUl., III: Baf. KIEU:ANN
Geb. Bcauftr./KLV.: Baf. KIELMANN
Gebietsmusikreferent: Baf', Friedrich h"ENKEL
On the Staff: H.Geff. HEIDE
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of SChool
Location: or Camp: COIl1I1l8ndant:
Gebietsf/lhrerschule I Malente- Otto Blecker OHM
Gremsmlllilen
Gebietsffthrerschule II Gudenborg Baf. BRINK
WEL, IT Leck-8chm!lr H, Geff. Dr.
horn SCHUMANN
NPEA. Pl!1n/Holstein
Reichsjugendffthrer lIittelburg/b,
innenschule Eutin
Sonmer-Lagez- (Motor H,J.) Fissau-Eutin
IDENTIFIED 1lIINNE
Identified
No, &: Name: Location: Comnander: Sub-Units:
84
Schleswig
85 (Norderdi th- Heide Staf, KCCK
marschen)
86
Stadt
162 Lllbeck
163 Rendsburg
184 Kiel
185 (Stormarn) Bad Olde"loe
187 LUbeck-Land Erwin MOLLER " (K) Gef, in Kel
linghusen
202
418 ,>teinburg
419 Newnllnster H. Geff. Erich
STORM (K)
463
j,lBlln
498 - (3Mtondem) NiebtUl
499
Pinneberg
818 Eckernf8rde
819 (Sllderdith- Brunsbllttel Baf. ClillISTIAHSEN
marschen)
820 Flensburg-Land 0, Stat', WITTE
822 Segeberg H. Geff, Erich
STORM (K)
Eutin SClr.'lBITZEH. (K)
Seats of r..'SDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Eiders-tedt
Oldenburg/Holst,
Husum
Lauenburg P11ln
GEHIET 7, NORffiEE
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 37, \'lESER-EMS)
GEBIETSF1lHRUNG
HI,!: Oldenburg i, 0, Damm 1
Phone: 6031
Gebf. LOBEL
Stalls1eiter: Baf, Rudi DllBE
HA, IT. Bauerntum und Geff, HEliKEL
Landdienst:
HA, Ltr, Baf, Cerd ARNDT
Geubeauftragter f,d. H,Bar, Carl JUNG
lCriegsberufswettkampf,
Geupropaganda1ei ter: Baf , Dr, GROLLE
ClrHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Alfred BRtteKNER (Ffthrer of a Bann)
Baf, FELDERMANlf (in Renslage)
Erwin GELLERSEN (FUhrer of a Bann)
Baf, SCHACHTEBIDK (in Oldenburg)
O,Baf'. Dr, Herbert WARNING '
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Nanl of School
Location: or Camp: Camnandant:
Cebietsftlhrerschu1e I Aumllhle/b, Hoftman
Yfildeshausen
GebietsfUhrerschule II Bad Zwischenahn
NPEA. Haselfume
IDENTH'D;D BAI'rnE
Identified
1,0. & Name: Location: Conrnander: Sub-Unit",.:
59
Vlilhelmshaven Staf. GIESE
75
Bremen Baf. SEGELKEN Stamm I - XVIIt
loIarine-Stauun
I - IV
Flg. -:-Stsrom I - III
~ ' l g . G e f . 4
Motor-Stamm
I - IV
Na.Get.
1 - 4
78 OsnabrUck-Stadt
91
Oldenburg Bat. srnOH Marine Gef. 1
Flg.Gef. 1
148 (F.msland) Meppen
191 Aurich
225 Vechta
251 Emden-Norden
286 OsnabrUck-Land
381 Leer/Ostfrie51. Staf. iVilli
GElS
382 Oldenburg-Land O.Baf.
PANNENBORG
500 Bentheim
600 Lingen
691 Nordenham Gef. in Einswarden
825 \ hIllfnerland) Bad Zwischenahn
Seats of NSOAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ.-Banne may
possibly exist
Aschendorf Norden
Bersenbrtlck Varel
Cloppenburg
Melle Wittmund
GEBIET 8, NIEllERSAOHSEN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Ge.u 33, SllD-F..ANNOVER-BRAUNSCHWEIG)
GEBIETSFllHRUNG
HQ: Hannover, Arnswalder Str, 7/8
Phone: 52 631
K.-Gebietsfflhrer: H.Bef', Hans SIERK
HA.. III: Staf'. Joachim GRt\BIm
Stelly. Gausports- Bef', W!HIKllNN
fi1hrer:
OTHER PERS01W.IT:IFS (Assignment UnknOlll'l)
Karl BROCKSCHMIDT (Fl1hrer ~ a Berm)
Bef', Dr, Hans DANNmANN
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School
Location: or Camp: CalII1BDdant:
Gebietsf6hrerschule Dehmke/Hameln Peter Friess
WEL, II H!lmelheide ss U.Stut.
GIG.Al3
KLV Moroschau
Landdienstlehrhof Eddigehausen/
G!lttingen
UHL
Akademie
fllhrung
~ ' . Jugend- Braunschweig Gebf. Kurt
PETTER
Musikschule Braunschweig
Musikschule Bl1cke Berg
IDENTIFIED BANNJ<j
Identified
No. &Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
73
Sulingen
74 Hannover :Marine Gef.
79
Hildesheim
82 Gllttingen
92
BraLl11schweig.., Bsf. ZACHAU Marine-EinheH
Stadt z.See
Gef.44, Broit
zen
164 Hameln Bsf. JAKOBS
250 Gos1ar
255
Helmstedt
256 Northeim Bsf. TRITSCHLER Flg. -Gef. 2
257 A1fe1d oer, in Seesen
273 (Kalenburg) Hannover-Land Stat'. GRABER Get'. in
Barringhausen
276 Neustadt Get'.in
Wunstorf'
445
Roya, Gef.6,
Grat'schat't Brinkwn
Get' in Bsssum
446 Nienburg
447 Wolfenbll.ttel
448 Peine
449
450 Duderstadt
451
452 Blankenburg.! 0. Bat'. PLANKE Einheit z.See
Harz
453
456 Bockenem
468
596
Hannoversch
MlInden
597
Braunschweig-
Lend
598
599
Osterode!Harz
791 Gleidingen
945
S"lzgitter
Seats ot' NSDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ.-Benne may
possibly exist
Einbeck Holzminden
Gandersheim Northeim
Grat'schaft Diepholz Zellerfeld
GOEBM 9, WESTFALEN-NORD
(Corresponding to NSlW'-Ge.u )8, WESTFALEN..;NORD)
HQ:- MBnster, Diepenbrockstrasse 30
Phone: 40 051
..
Gebietsfllhrer: Gebf. Walter lCROOHER
Stellv, Gebiets O,Ba.f, MEISE
1'lIhrer:
Gebietsbeauftrag Star, HAUSEN
ter 1'. KIN.:
Betriebsjugend Baf, EWald (jIEllELER
walter:
C/l'llER PERSONALIT:mS (AssignmP.nt Unknown)
Baf. Fritz ALTHOFF
Heinz BRllcllER (Fllhrer of a Bann)
Baf, Hermann FRICKE
o.see, Hhnoo.
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School

Location: or Camp: COllIllaIldant:
Schloss
Schwansbell/
b, Lllnen
Walter Wagnitz
Gebietsfllhrerschule Haldem
WEL, I Hal tern/Westf.
WEL. IV J.lariawald
Geft, FREITAG
WEL. Augustdorr/b.
Sennele-ger
WEL. AugustdOl'1'/b,
Sennelager
Reichssport- (jladbeck
sohule IV
IDENTIFIED BJOOIE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Commsnder: Sub-Units:
13
Mllnster 0, Ba1', SAUERLAND Fig, -Gef, 3
15 Minden
55 (Lippe) Detmo1d
135
Hagen Gef ,19, Hagen
Eckesey
145
Burgsteinfurt
i58 Bielefeld 0, Baf', WE3SE:LlJANN
168 Coesfeld Gef ,33, Nord
Hlwen
183 Herford
228 Gelsenkirchen- Baf': BOOKMANN
Buer
252 Reckling Baf',Gtl:NTHER
hausen StafL WINKEL
STRorER
260 Beckum-
Warendorf'
261 Bocholt
262 (Bottrop- Bottrop Stat, EOOEIlS in Cloppen-
Gladbeck) burg
263 Rheine
281 Paderbom Gef,8,
Delbrl1ck
385 Hllxter
Seats of NSDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne ma,y
possibly exist
:OOCkeburg Rinteln
Llfubecke Tecklenburg
L1.W.inghausen . Wiedenbrllck
GEBIET 10, RUHR-NIEDERRllEIN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 6, ESSEN)
"
GEBIETSFUHRUNG
HQ: MlUheim/Ruhr, Herbert-Rewards-Platz 1
Phone: 44 161
K. -Gebietsf'Uhrer: H.Bat, Hermann PETRI
Gebietsbeauf'trag- H,Gett. SICKERMANN
ter s, KIN.:
Gebietsarzt: Dr. RAKEBRAND
Abtellung Ostein lla.f. Dr. SCllY/ARTZ
satz und Land
dienst:
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Bat, Heinz HENNlNC;IOFEN
Ba.f', Dr. Heinz LANGE
H. Bat, Dr. Eugen vllGLER
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of' School
~ :
Location: or Camp: pamnandant:
Gebietsf'tlhrer
schule I
Burg Alpen Herbert HOIIard.e
Gebietsf'tlhrer
schule II
Lintford
Gebietsfeldsoher
sohule
MtI1heim
NPEA. Heythusen
(Holland)
Nachritchtenschule Orsoy
WEL. III Harzbeck/u.
Geldern
Stat' , CAFILZ
No, & N8IIle:
57
60
159
173
235
236
237
238
239
469
470
Location:
Rees
Oberhausen
Mlilhe1nVRuhr
Essen
Duisburg-Slld
Duisburg-Nord
Moers
Kleve
Essen-Nord
Dins1aken
Ge1dern
Camnander:
0, Stat'. ARNTZEN
o.ser, v/:rnmrANN
Baf, B1h'E
o.se, LEGG-DIE
Bar. IW1TSCIIEN
Bar. PllTHE
Staf. EBENER
H. Geff. TIEDER
MANN
Bar, WOLFF
H.Geff. Jt'JcicEL,
stelly.
Identified
Sub-Units:
:Mot.Gef.10
in H8IIlborn
G-EBIET 11, KBLN-AACHEN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 12, KBLN-AACHEN)
GEBI>l:rSF!lHRllNG
HQ: KMn, Claudiusstrasse 1
Phone: 40 751
K. -Gebietsf'llhrer: H. Baf'. JECKSTAIYl'-BORCHERT
HA. Leiter: Stat'. Willi BRAUN
Stellv. O.Bat'. Gerhard JOPPISCH
Gebietsarzt:
arHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Bat'. Freddy FREI:M!lLJ:.ER
O.Bat'. WALLRAllE
SCHOOLS AND CAla'S
Name of' School

Location: or O!!!!!p: COI1Illlllndant:
Gebietsfflhrer MMrath/b. Paul Thewellis
schule I Klnn
Gebietsf'llhrer MehlenV'b. Baldur von
schule II G-odesb erg Schirac::h
WEL. I Schleiden/
Eif'el
WEL. II Zweif'al1
(Stolberg)
WEL. Germeter
WEL. Kohlscheid
WEL. Marlsbeuden
WEL. Sllggerath
Jugendmusikschule Siegburg
A.H.-Schule K6nigswinter
A.H.-8chule
(Gemtlnd)
A.H.-8cllule WalbrBl
NPEA. Bensberg/b.
K!\ln
NPEA.
(Holland)
Reichsausbildungs
lager IT
IIlENTIFlED :B.ArOO:
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Canmaniler: Sub-Units:
16 Kllln (rechts- Ger,5,
rhein. ) HBhenberg
25 Aachen-Stsdt Baf. Georg
WERLE
53
(Hansestsdt KBln Mot.Gef.1
KBln)
65 K!lln-Lend
.Ba1n
.160
161 Dtlren
217 KBln-sil.d
240 (Sieg) Siegburg Baf. Kurt
BECKMANN
241
( Oberbergisch) Gummersbach
242 JUlich Gef,12,
Ederen
272 Euskirchen .
314
Bergisch
G1adba.ch
386
Aachen-lend
387
Bergheim
388 Schleiden
389
Geilenkirchen
464 Erkelenz Flg. cer,
673
Eupen H.Gerf.
ENGEL (K)
674 1lalmedy
8L.0 Monschau
GEBIET 12, MOSELLAND
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Kreis J,IOSELLAND)
GEBIETSFlhmUNG
HQ: Koblenz, Alte Mose1burg
Phone: 55 08
Gebietsfllhrer: Gebf', Rolf KARBACH
Stabslei ter: Baf', SAF'rIG
HA. IV, Bauerntum
und Landdienst: Bar. Rolf BroKER
Abt. Press u,
Propaganda: Star. W. GATTO/{
Geb. Beauftragter
f. JUgend-'
organisation in
Luxemburg: O.Bar. Karl FElDEN
OTHER PERSOlIALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
o.ae. Heinz BClE'P
SCHOOlS AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or Camp:
~ d a n t :
Gebietsftlbrer Niederle.hn Erich Niejahr
schule I stein
Gebietsftlhrer NiederhAusen
sobule II
A.H.-Schule Koblenz
A.H. -SchUle Platten
NPEA. Colmer Berg
(Luxemburg)
A26
IIlENTIFIED BANN.E
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
28 Koblenz Gef.3,
Va11endar
29 Bitburg/Eifel in Prllm
68 Andernach
69
Trier
243 (Wied) Neuwied
244 (Lieser) Wittlich
245 (Mi ttelmosel) Traben-
Trarbach
246 (Hochwald) Idar-
Baf, ZIEGLER Gef.37
Oberstein
247 (Idarwald) Baumholder
248 (Hunsrl!ck) SiIlJlleTIl
258 Saarburg
354
Bad Kreuznacn Gef,16,
Stromberg
355
Remagen
391
Henneskei1 o.cser. LEINEN (K)
765
Bernkaste1 Walter URBAN (K)
Luxemburg Baf. Fritz HALl.:
Seats of at Which corresponding HJ-Banne !!l!lY
possibly exist
.Ahrweiler Kochem
Betzdorf/Sieg St. Goar
GEBIET 13, HES:lEN-NASSAU
(Corresponding to NSDAP-r-au 10, HESSE:N-NASSAU)
HQ: Wiesbaden, Herbert-Norkusstrasse 39
Phone: 20 541
K,-Gebietsf'llhrer: H,Baf, ERNST
Stabsleiter: 0.Ba:f, Heinz KREll'I'Z
HA, II, Wehrertll.oh
tigtmg: Baf, MICHEL
HA, IV, Bauerntum
und Landdienst: Baf, Rolf' BECKER
Gebietsinspekteur
der Flieger-HJ, : Rolf BOUVIER
Gebietsarzt: Dr, Joergen XHMIDT-VOIGT
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
o.ser, Dr, GAllHL
Ernst GRIESS (Fllhrer of a ~ )
SCHOOLS .AND CA1lPS
~ :
Location:
NllIlle of' School
or CIlIllp: Commandant:
Gebietst'llhrer
schule I
Eltville/a.Rh. Christian
Grassmann
Gebietstl1her- K6nigshofen/
schule II Ts,
WEL, Breitscheid/
IVes terwald
WEL, II Hundstadt/Ts,
O,Baf,
BOHLING&1
WEL, Stegskopf/
Westerwald
II SOIIllllerlager Geilnau
K, -Baf', STAHL
NPEA, ili-811ienstein/
a.d, Lahn
Reichsausbildungs- Stegskopf/
lager IV \7esterwald
1!usikschule rTankfurt/a, M.
:it J:'robably ccnver'ted into WEL.
IDENTIFIED BAJOO;
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Camnander: Sub-fuits:
80 \'!iesbaden
81 Franld\lrt/
a. Hain
87 ( Oberwester- Westerburg Get'.8, Erbach
wa1d)
88 Wetzlar
98 Hanan
115
(Peter }'ries) Uannstadt Get'.2l
116 Ciessen
117 Mainz Baf", Hans
ENIlLINC
118 WOnDS
166 (\.'aunus) Bad Hamburg St af , BfulCING
186 Frankfurt/
a. Main
249 l:lensheiro
253
(Lahntal) Liroburg
254 (Wetterau) Bad Nauheim
287 Offenbach
288 St. Goa.rs- Stat'. BE::IO.:R in Schwalbach
hausen
303 Herborn
304
(Vogclsberg) Lauterbach
392 Schltichtern
771
(lJnterwester-
_ld)
772
Seats of IISDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
exist
Alzey Gelnhausen
Bingen Gross-Gerau
Rtidingen
I.rbach NeUburg
GEBIET 14. KURHESSEN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 13, KURHESSEN)
HQ: Kassel, Kaiserstr. 52
Phone: 35 075
Gebietst'tlhrer: H. Bar. SCHl.am
OTHER PERSONALITllS (Assignment Unknown)
Rudolf' GABERT (FIlhrer of a ~ )
SCHOOLS J'JID CAlIlPS
Name of School
Location: or Camp: Commandarrte
WEL. II HCJDberg O. Gef'f'. KUNTH
WEL. III Ziegenhain/
Bez. Kassel
VIEL. IV Pos t R8hrshai.n/
U. Treysa
WEL. V Post R8hrshain/
U. l'reysa
Seats of at which correspondinB HJ-Banne may
possiblY exist
?rankenberg Witzenhausen
Wolfhagen
Rotenburg Ziegenhain
GEBIST 15, MITl'ELLAND
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Ga,u 8, liALLE-MERSEBURC)
GEBlE'I'sF!lHRUNG
HQ: Halle/Saale, Burgstrasse 46
Phone: 27 061
Gebietsfilhrer: O. Gebf. Richard RECIGl'lVERTH
HA.. Leiter: Baf. MATTER
OTHER PERSON1ILITlES (Assignment Unknown)
n.ssr. Johannes lrllLr.ER
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS

Name of School
!m.:
Locaticm.: or Camp: Canmandant:
GebietsfUhrerschule Gut Grimritz/ Werner Gerhard
b. Halle
WEL, I
WEL. II Reuden/b.
Zeitz
Landdinestlehrhof I Abstdorf
!,pEA. NaumburgiSaale
NPEA. Schulpforta!
b. Naumburg
GEBIb'I' 16 I SACHSEN
(Correspooding to NSD.AP-Gau 27, SACHSEN)

J:. -Gebietsf/lhrer;
HA. IV, Bauerrrtum
und Landdienst:

f. Ost-Sachsen:
'l'vpe :
Gebietsfllhrer
schule I
Gebietsftlhrer
schule II
Geb1etsfUhrer
schule III
Gebietsfeldscher
schule
WEL. II
;VEL. III
WEL. VI
'rEL XII
','rEL.
WEL.
'II'EL.
WEL.
II K. -Samnerla.ger
"Buchu
Landdienstlehrhof
Dresden A 24, Bismarckplatz 7
Phone; U 451
H.llaf. Wilhelm GUA.'lE
Bar , KOHL
O.Baf.
S:;HOOLS AND CAMPS
NBI:1e of School
Location, or Camp: Commandant:
:'rethen/b. Hans Quei tzsch
G-rirrr:1a
Glauchau
b. Dresden
Leipzig
Straschitz
Schloss llaine
walde/b.Zitta.u
Al tenberp,
Aschbere
Dah'Lem/Kr-,
Oschatz
Neukirch/Kr.
Chemnitz
Schibach/Kr
Oelsnitz
Oahlener Heide
Heidehof/b.
Moritzburg
Proba.bly converted into 1ncL.
GEBIEl' 17, TH!IR:rNGEN'
(Corresponding to l'lSDAP-Gau 34, THllRrNGEN)
" GEBIErSFUHR!!NG
HQ: Wei:tnar, Lottenstrasse 17
Phone: 63 36
Gebietsftlhrer: a,Gebf. Theo
SCHOOLS 1\ND CAMPS
Name of Sohool

Location: or Camp: Conmandant:
Gebietsftlhrerschule Allstedt/a.d. Rufolf Schr8der
He1JDe
WEt. II Ohrdruf a.see, SIEGEL
'1&"'1., Bad Berka
VIEL. IV Ranis SS O.Scba!.
Al'EL
WBL. Vacha
A.H,-Schule Blankenh!l.in
A.H.-Schule Weimar
NPEA. Illfeld/Harz
Reichsschiessschule Obennassfeld
Musikschule Sondershausen
Husikschule Weimar
Lehrgang rtlr Weimar, Schloss
Jugend u, Belvedere

IDENTIFIED BIINNE
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
32 Schmalkalden
71 Erfurt
FIg. Gef.IV
94 Jena O.Baf. KIlRBER
95
Gotha
96 Gre1z
153 Gera Gef'26, We ida-
Nord
FIg. Gef'. 1
218 Saa.lf'eld
219 Sonneberg
220 Anlstadt
221 Mllhlhauaen H.Geff'. MCSIG (K)
222 (Eichsfeld) Heiligenstadt
223 Nordhausen
358
I ~ i n i n g e n
359
Weimar
360 Eisenach
361 Altenburg
Seats of NSD.Al'-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Hildburghausen Schleiz
Langensalza Sondershalisen
GEBIEr 18, FRANKEN
(Corresponding to NSIlAP-Gau 7, FRANKEN)
GEBIETSmUNG
HQ: Ntlrnberg, Westtorgraben 17
Phone: 6, 055
Gebietsfllhrer: Gebf. Dr, Alfred RASCHKE
HA, IV, Bauerntum
und Landdienst: O,Baf. Fritz LOOS
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unk:nmm)
H.Baf. Paul KIRCHHOFF
H,Baf. SCHMIDT
AND CAME'S
Name of School
Location: or Camp: COiIIll8Ildant:
Cado1zburg Josef GrlIn
IDENTH'IED llANNE
No. & Name: Location: COlDIJlBllder:
Identified
Sub-Units:
Nllrnberg o.sse. BAUER Na.Gef.4
308 Rothenburg,l
o.d.T.
Baf. LOIDL
319
Ansbe.ch
321 Nllrnberg r",f. 22, Buch
Mot.Get.l,
RBthenbach
324 FUrth EIlER (K)
333
Weissenburg
774 Erlangen
Seats of NSDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Dinkelsbflhl Neustadt
Eichstll.tt
Lauf/a.d.Pregnitz Schwabach
GEBIET 19, HOOHLAND
(Corresponding to NSDAl'-Gau 19, M!lNcHEN-OBERBAYERN)
GEBIETSFlJHRUNG
HQ: Mllnchen, Georgens trasse
7
Phone: 34811
Gebietsf'llhrer: Gehr, Thorn s1'IlcKL
HA, III,
WeItanschauliche
Schulung: Baf, Heinz M!lLLm
HA, IV, BauerntuIn
und Landdienst: H,Bar, ERRLICHER
Gebietsinspekteur: Baf, Wilhelm FREITAG
Gebietsinspekteur
SRD. : Bar. Klaus STRAUB
Gebietsarzt: star, Dr. FRESER
On the Staff:
Bar. ULRICH
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Looaticm: or Camp: Command ant:
Gebietsftlhrersohule Weyarn/b, Josef Neumeier
lliesbach
VfEL. 1'reuchtlingen
WEL.
WEL.
WEL,
WEL,
ReLchaeegeIf'Lug Schwangau
achule
A,H.-Schule OhLemsee
NPF.A, Neubeuern/Inn
IDENTIPIED RANNE
No. & Name:
tiL"
310
~ D o n a u )
313
Isar)
325
326
327 (Inntal)
328
336
337
454
593
594
595
850
854
855
856
879
Location: Commander:
Mllnchen EaKL, SOF.
Ingolstadt
Freising
Landberg/Lech O.Star. 1YEBER
Gannisch-
Partenkirehen
Mllilldorf
Rosenheim
H Bad Reichen- Baf. Karl MER,
hall
Bad T81z
Aichach
Wasserburg
Traunstein
Miesbach
Starnberg
Pfaffenhofen
Fllrstenfe1d
bruck
Ebersberg
Erdins:!:
Baf. STEIN
O.Staf. WEBER
Identified
Sub-Uni ts:
Na.Schar 4,
Schllnau
Ger.in Siegs
dorf
Seats of NSDAP-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Alt8tting SchrobenhaU3cn
Dachau
Schongau Weilheim
GEBIET 20, wURTTEHBERG
(Corresponding to NSJ)AP..{;-au 42,
GEBIETSFllHRUNG
IlQ: Stuttgart w, Ernst-Weinstein-Strasse 40
Phcne: 65 656
GebietsfUhrer: Gebt, Erich SUNDERMANN
Stabsleiter: Bat, FREIER
II, V:ehrer
tilchtigung: o.aee, !:!EYL
Gebietsinspekteur
d, Jlfarine HJ.: J1lN.LE
Gebietsarzt: o.see. Dr. BAUER
K.-HA.Ltr. : o.nsr. Rudi NEUN
Abt.Ltr. im Stab: Bat, Georg UNGER, Bat, Eugen PFUDERER
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
O,Bat. Werner KfuTGEN (may be in Gebiet 36)
Bat. STRENG (in Tuttlingen)
SCHOOLS AIm CAMPS
Name of School
Location: or Camp: COlIlIl8.l1dant :

GebietstUhrerschule Stuttgart Wilhelm Neth
Solitude
WEL. II Altensteig,
b. Nagold
WEL. Hechingen
\VEL. Machental
Ausbildungslager Oberstauten
der Gebietsftlhrung
NPEA. Backnang
NPEA. Rottweil
SS-Stubat.
HOFFMANN
Dr.
Reichsausbildungs
lager III
Eningen
No,
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
180
364
365
366
401
402
403
425
426
427
428
429
431
432
433
435
436
437
438
439
440
442
443
& Name: Location:
(Unterland)
Gross-
Stuttgart
U1m
Heilbronn
rOhenloe) Crailsheim
Hohenstaufen !alen
Ravensburg
Mittlere Alb TUbingen
Freudenstadt
(Zollern) Ebingen
Ludwigsb
11rg
(Rems) Waiblingen
Esslingen
Neth) Biberach
Schwarzwald) Calw
(Heuberg)
(Oberer
Necker)
Strohgl1v )
Strombel'g)
(Achalm)
(Romberg)
(Schwtlbiscl.
Wald)
(Ohrngau)

Cowburg)
Bl'1blingen
Tuttlingen
Rottweil
Horb
Leonb"rg
Vai hingen/li:nz
Reutlingen
Friedrichs
hafen
Wangen/Allgll.u
Saulgau
Mtlnsingen
Ntlrtingen
Gllppingen
Heidenheim
Schwllbisch
Gmftnd
Backnang
Oehringen
Identified
Cormnander: Sub-Units:
Bat, Gustav
DISTEL
0, Bat, M!hn.BAUER
Gef,38,
Meinsheim
Gef,17,
Heilbraun
B/X:k:ingen
Bat, Ll'IllENTHAL
Bat, WILLIER
Gef,in
Belingen
Bat, BAM:ES
Bat, ELLWANGER
O.Geff, :rF},'LAND (K)
O.Bat, Geprg
HAUFF
Gef, 6, Scheer
Ba1', FAILEN
(K)
Bad Mergentheim
Ehmingen
Schwllbisch Hall
Sigmaringen MAIiieFER (K)
I
71, BAD".If
(Corresponding to N3DAP-Gau 1, BADEN)

HQ: Strassburg, Reinmarschstrasse 1
(formerly in Kar-Isz-uhe , Rllppurer Strasse 29)
Phone: 27 524
Gebietsfllhrer: O.Gebf, I'riedhe1m KEMPER
Gebietsinspekteur: HvBaf , Norbert FlliUllC
Gebietsarzt: Dr, FlliUllC
OTHER PEPSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Karl BAYER (FUhrer of a Bann)
Baf, BtlHL
o.ser. Karl ESCHLE
Baf, HEIDEMANN
Baf, Znr!ERMANN (in Bruchsal)
'/.;}lOOIS AND CM,1PS
Name of School

Location: or Camp: COl!llllMldant:
Gebietsfiihrer- Ettlingen Fri tz Kr&ber
schule I
Gebietsfllhrer- Ollweiler
schule II
Gebietsftlhrer- Rastatt
schule
Gebietsf/lhrer- Neckargemllnd
schul..
WEL, II Hauenstein!
Pfalz
VrEL. III llerrenalb/
Bar. BURGDORFF
Schwarzw.
VfJ<::L. UNLOFFEN
Jf Jo'flhrersommerlager OberehnheinV
Strassburg
NPEA. AcheI'll
NPEA. Reichenau
Reichssport . Freiburw
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No. & Name: Location: COllllllSnder: Sub-Units:
40
Danaueschingen Baf", KAST
109 (Fr. Kr8ber) Kar'Lsz'uha-Land Baf', FREY
110 Heidelberg c.see. LENZ
111 Baden-Baden
112 Wertheim
11.3
Freiburg
114 Konstanz Staf. HERBST.scr.
142 L8rrach
169 Lahr Baf. GANZ
170 Offenburg
171 Mannheim Bar. CLEIC Gef.21
O.Staf. BARTH
172 Pforzheim Gef.l,
Pforzheim-
Dillweissen
stadt
404
1Iosbach
405 V l a l d ~ h u t
406 Bruchsal Baf. IGETZ
407 Villingen
408 (Seegau) ll'berlingen
725
Buchen
726 Kehl Sepp KO",G (K) Stamm I,
(fcrmerly in Stmdheim
Strassburg) Neumllhl
Korle
Odelshofen
StBJm1! rv,v,
Freistett
Marine-Get'
727
Sinsheim
728 Sll.ckingen
729
Stockach
7.30 Bilhl
7.31
Enrnendingen
732
Mtlllheim
733
Yfolfach
7.34
Neustadt
735
Weissenburg
7)6 llagenau
737
Zaber.n
738
Strassburg-
Stadt
Molsheim Baf. Karl RADEL
7.39
740
Strassburg-
Land
741
Sch1ettstadt
742
Rappoltsweiler
743
Kolmar
744
Gebweiler Stat'. HAIEll
745
Tann
O.Staf. BRUTSCHI
746
Mllh1hausen o.ssr, WEBER
747
Altkirch Bat. DEHOUST
Lautenburg
Gf1JIET 22, BAYREUTH
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 2, BAl1lEUTH)
GEBINl'SFllHRUNG
RQ: Bayreuth, 2
Phone: 33 41
K, -Gebietsfllhrer: H,Bs:!'. OVERBECK
Stabsleiter: BEER
HA. Dr, Bauemtum
und Landdienst: H.Geff, MElLINGER

SRD, and 53
Verbindungsfllhrer: Willi .ADAM

f, KLV.: Baf, SCWf'LER
Gebietsbeauftrap:ter
t,d, Feuerwehr
dienst: Bat. HEINDL
Gebietsreferent t.
Kommunalarbeit: H.Geff. GElLING
Gebietsrechts
referent: Dr. s'rilBING
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment UnknOlll1)
Baf'; KOLB (in Dingo1fing)
R,Baf, Ferdl 1d.lr.r.ER
SCHOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School

Location: or Camp:
WEL, II Guttenthau/b.
Kemnath
WEL. III Erasbach/b,
Neumark
Landdienstlehrhot Neumark Hofmeister
Landdienstausles- Bayreuth
lager
A.H,-Schule Heaee Tber-g
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
.305 Bamberg Baf. BRfrcKNER
306 Weiden
Baf. BAYER
307 Boiyreuth
Baf. HAUSLADEN
311 Hegensburg Bar, 1ItlLLER
316 Passau Bar. THCWIS
329 (}'ichtel- Hof
g e b i r ~ e )
330 (Koburg Coburg LEISTNER, Hans,
SOF.
332 Landshut Fritz THUMM (K)
339 Neumarkt
340 Gham Baf. LIST
341 Deggendorf Baf. HlmIDL
342 Eggenfelden Bat', Hans BECK
345 .furiberg BACHMANN (K)
346 Straubing Baf. DIETEL
589 Aussergefild
694 Kelheim
697
Wunsiedel
858 Forchheim
861 Kulmbach Baf. HEEBNER
862 KTonach a.Schar. K5NIG (K)
864 Vilshofen Baf. THOMAS
867 Mainburg DAIBERL (K)
868 Zwiegel
Oberriechtach- Baf. MlisCH
Waldmllnchen
(Voi tsberg) Simbach/Inn NIEDEIU'rfAYER, SOF ..
Seats of I,WAF-Kreise at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Beilngries Parsberg
Bogen Rading
Dingolfing Rottenburg-Laaber
Ebermannstadt Schwandorf
Griesbach Strakcnitz
Hauzenberg Tirschreuth
Lichtenfels Vohenstrauss
.Mllnchberg Waldkirchen
GEBIET 23. MITTELELBE
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 14, MAGDEBURG-ANHALT)
HQ: Magdeburg, Werner-Fritze-Strasse 25
Phone: 44 881
K. -Gebietsfilhrer: H.Bar. BARTSCH
HA. II, Wehrertl1ch
tigung: Star. HEISE (K)
Gebietsbeauftragter
f. lCLV.: Baf. LEVE
On the Staff:
Bar. Erich HILtlrscH
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
H. Bar. SCHREIBBR
a.Bat. TICHY (in Magdeburg)
Bat. Gtlnther ZWANZIG (in :Magdeburg)
SCHooIS AND CA)(pS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or Camp: COIIIIllU1dant:
Gebietsfilhrer
schuJ.e I
Thale
WEI.. Bernburg
WEL. Huysburg
WEL. Thale
GebietsmusikschuJ.e Dardesheim
lCLV. -Lager
F1ugge11lnde d.
Flieger-HJ.
im Harz
Frohser Berge
a.Bar.
SYMANSKI
NPEA. ilal1enstedt ilnhalt
NPEA. 1C5then
Reiohsausbildungs- b. Dessau
lager I
IDENTIFIED BANliE
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
26 Magdeburg Bat'. MEIER
27 Gardelegen o.ssr.
Siewertz
66 Burg/b.
Magdeburg
93 (Anhalt-Dessau)Dessau Bat' GRUPE
165 Halberstadt Stamm in
Wemigeroile
Get'. in
Veckenstedt
209 ScMnebeck Stat'. MXRTENS (K) Get'. in
Salze1men
409
(Norderb6rde) Haldensleben Bat'. LUlJ'I!IG
410 (Altmark-Ost) Stendal
411 K8then o.cerr,
412
467
749
Osterburg
750 Zerbst
751 Mamerslebert
752
Wanz1eben H. Get'f. STANGE
753
Genthin
754
Stassfurt Baf. IlUCHHEDl
755
Bemburg WENTZLA.U (K)
Calbe
Oschersleben
Quedlinburg
Salzwedel
Wolmirstedt
GEBIET 24, MECKLENBURG
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 17. MECKLENBURG)
GEBIETSFllHRUNG
HQ: Horst Wessel Strasse 1
. (Arsenal)
Phone: 29 83
Gebietsf'llhrer: H,Baf. Walter UNGER
. Stabsleiter: Bar, Dr, H!l:BNER
HA, II, Gebiets
sportlehrer: Dr, KLCBl"
Landesjugendarnt
(Kriegsberufs
wettkampf'): O,Ba1', Willi KJJX1I(
Geb. und
Hochschulbeauf
tragter: O,&.t', KOESTER
Gaujugendgruppen
fllhrer: HINZ
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Baf, LEl:IMil1'lli
Bat", RICKMANN (in Rostock)
Bat', Dr, VOSS
SCHOOL.') AND CAMPS
Name of Sohool

Location: or Camp: Camnandant:
WEL. I 11aren
WEL, II Waren
Landdienstlehrhof Neokeln
A,H,-Schule Heiligendamm
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Cemmander: Sub-Units:
89 Schwerin- H, Gef!, SCHlh.wffl
Stadt
90 Rostock-Stadt Bar, WANGERIN
97 Neubranden- Bar, GANZEL
burg
298 Ludwigs1ust
299 Gtlstrow Star, WILHELM
413 Wismar
414 (1!llritz) Waren
415 Parchim
416 Ma1chin
756 Schwerin-Land
757
Rostock-Land Bar, BARTEL
758 Hagenow Gef,in
Boizenburg
Gef, in
Ltlbtheen
Marine Schar.
Jessenitz
Feuerw,Schar,
Jessenitz
759
Sch6nberg Baf, LEONHARDT
GEBIET 25, W E ~
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 40. \'f.EST1!ARK)
GEBIETSFltHRUNG
HQ: Neustadt/Leinstr., "l1inzingerstrasse 41
Phone: 29 56, 31 21
K.-GebietsfUhrer: O.Baf. Wilhelm KELLER
. HA. r:v, Sozial
abteilung: Baf. SIMANSKY
HA. V: Baf. as
Gebietsinspekteur
SRD.: FEIGF
Gebietsbeauf
tragter KLV. : Baf', K!lHN
OTHER PF.JlSONALITIES (J\ssignment Unknown)
Reinhold BURKERT (Ftlhrer of a Bann)
SCHOOlS .AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or Camp: Commandant:
GebietsfUhrer He,ssheiJn Baf. Klaus
sohule I WE'!
Gebietsf!1hrer Bitsch
schule II
Gebietsfilllrer Burg Liohten
sohule berg/b.Kusel
Gebietsf6hrer Kaisersle.utem
sohule
HJ.-Feue'rwehrschule Sulzbach
des Gaues Westmark
A.H.-Schule Frankenthal
A.H.-Schule Landstuhl
NPF..A. Me.rnheim Vleierhof
NPEA. Rufach
NPF'..A. St. Wendel
Reichsansbildungs- Hetz
lager II
()\;"achrichten tIJ.)
Name of School
IE Segelf'lug
SCIIIlIlerlager
1E Segelflug
Sommerlager
JI Segelflug
Sommerlager
IE Segelflug
Sommerlager
Jl Segelflug
Sommerlager
JI Segelflug
Sommerlager
Jl Segelflug
Sanmerlager
II Segelflug
Sommerlager
Location: or Camp: Commandant:
Gemlersheim/
Pfalz
FrBhnerhof
Nied.erbronn
Ochsenfeld
Rodern
St. AvoId
Schalkendort'
Schallodenbach
" Probably converted to WEL.
IDENTIFIED B.IINNE
Identified
No. & Name: Location: OOJmlJW1der: Sub-Unit:,:
.30 Saarlautern
70 Saarbrllcken
146 (Saar-Mitte) Vlllklingen
174 (Saar-Ost) Neunkirchen Get. 27,
Miesau/Pt'alz
.317
Ludwigshsi'en O,Staf', BIDKER
318 (Ostpfalz) Landau H,Ge1'f , KAISER
322 (Westpfalz) Zweibrllcken
323 (Nordpfalz) Kaisers1autern Bat. BAUER
343
(Donnersberg) Frankentha1 Bat.
WITTMAN1'I Get, in Bad
Dfuokheim
344
St. Ingbert
Get, in
Breitenbach
702 Homburg/Saar Gef'.21, Q.ries
703 Pinuasens
704
Kusel
705
Roo)cenhausen
706 Kirchheim- Bat. RODER Get. 8, Damen
bo1and.en fe1,.
707 Neustadt/
a.d.W.
708 Speyer
709 saargemtlnd
712 Metz-Stadt Ba.f, LANGKITSCH
713 Aletz-Land
Seat of NSDAl'-Kreis at which corresponding HJ,-Bann may
possibly exist
II St. Wendel
GEBIET 26, HAlaBURG
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 9, HAMBURG)
GE3IETSFliHriUNG
HQ: Hamburg 1, Nagelsvreg 10
Phone: 24 1281
K.-GebietsfUhrer: o.sse. Franz PAUL
K.-Stabsleiter: H.Geff. EGGERS
HA. IV, l3auerntum
und Landdienst: Bat", TRAMS
Gebietsbeauftragter
KIN. : 0, Staf. BAHRS
On the Staff': O.Baf. llOHLER
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
O.Baf'. Hans PRIEN
Baf , Dr. JUNGSCliAFFER
Bat', Hans-Hermann LANGBEIN
K. -Baf. SCHOTT
SCHOOlS AlID CAIIlE'S
~ :
Location:
Name
or Camp,
of School
Commandant:
Gebietsffthrerschule Dibberserv'b.
Harburg
GebietsfUhrerschule Tuttau
Musikschule Get' f. Heint'ich
SCHUMANN
IDENTIFIED BllNNE
No. & Name:
> Location:
COIlDIl8llder:
Iden;ified
Sub-Units:
31 Hamburg-AItana O.Baf. KUIlLMA.Nli
76 Hamburg-West Baf. HERIlE
STEFFEN, SOF.
188 Hamburg-Nord
282 Hamburg-Ost H. Geff. HE:YDORN
283 Hamburg-Slid Staf. PEITZ
417 Hamburg-
Harburg
Dr. Gdnther JUNG
420 Hamburg-
Wandsbeck
421 Hamburg-Mitte l3ar. Horst
CABELL (K)
422 Hemburg-
Bergedorf
Staf. LANG
424 Hamburg-Hafen
GI:BIrT 27,
(Corresponding to NSDAP-C,au 41, WITN)
HQ: Wien 8
Pho
/65 .Albertgasse 35
ne: B42 530
K,-Gebietsftlhrer: R,Baf. Hans
Stabsleiter: O,Eaf.
HA. II,
beauftragter f.
vormilit, Aus
bilclung: Bar. WEINZIERL
HA, II. Sport
abteilung: H,Geft, KOHLE
HA. III: Stat, NADLER
GebietsinspektR'lr,
d, Bat, SEBANZ
Gebietsinspekteur
d. Motor-H,T.: HILZ
Gebietsinspekteur
d, Nachr, -HJ. : Bat, HEm
Gebietsbeauftragter
KIN. : Baf. EINFAr1Yl'
Kreisjugendwalter
\hen: O. ';-eff. MtlLLEH
On the Staff: H.Baf. Harald n5scHI':R; a.Baf. Kurt ffi':PE
CYl'HER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unknown)
Bat. HARREH
SCHOOLS .AND CAMPS
Name of School
Location: or Camp: Commandcn t :

----
Gebietsffihrcrschulc Plankenberg
WEL. II Gross HoHen
stein
WEL, III lli t.zmannshory'b,
Zwettl
VIEL. Raab/a.d. Thaya
Name of School
~ :
Location: or Camp: Oommande.nt :
ft Reichsstreifen
dienst Lehrgang
(SRD. )
Schlibrunn SS-Kraftfahr
schule
1r.P4...:A. Breitensee/
b. Ylien
NPEA. Wien Theresianum SS-8tubaf.
Otto SCHMlm'
NPEA. Wien (Bauern
haasgasse)
Jf Probably converted into \'IEL.
IDENTIFIED BAl'IJ'lE
No. & Name: Location: Conmander :
Identified
Sub -linits :
491
O,Staf,
501 Vlien, Bez , I
502 Wien-Ost,
Bez , II
Bar, SEl3ARZ
503
Wien-SUd,
Bez. III
504
Wien, Bez, r-T
505
Vlien-MBdling ,
Bez , V
506
Wien-Sch8nb
r
llnn .
Be a, VI
507
Wien-Vlest,
Bez, VII
Staf. PRANTZ
508 Wien,
Bez , VIII
509
Wien, Bez , IX Geff. SJJ..BRJ:;CH1'Efl
GEBIET 28, NlEDERDONAU
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 20, NIEDERDONAU)
GEBIETSPl!HRUNG
HQ: Wien XIII/89, Vinzenz-Hess-Gasse 29
Phone: A50 514
Gehietsf'6hrer: H,Baf, KRACKER-SEMLER
Stabslei ter: Baf. von PAULBERG
HA. IV, Sozial
abteilung: Baf. :Roll WEBER
Sonderbeauftragter: Baf, Victor HAHN
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unlmown)
Baf. GRAHN
Baf. HAGEN
SCHOOLS AlID CAMl'S
Name of School
Location: or Camp: COIIIIIa11dant:
Gebietsfillu'er Schloss
schule I Si tzenberg/
Kr, Tulln
NPEA. Hubertendorf
NPEA. Traiskirchen
Turnitz
lteichsseesport Neusied1/a.
schule IV See
" Lagerschule
Thurnersbach
It Probably converted into VIEL.
IDElI'J'I:"IED BANNE
Identified
No. & N8IIle: Location: COllIIle.llder: Sub-Units:
"
497
Neubistritz
510 Tulln
511 Baden/b. Wien
512 Bruck/a.d. a.cerr. THUNER
Leitha
513
Wiener-
Neustadt
514
Eisenstadt
515
Oberpullendorf
516 St. P8lten .8801'; GRETNER
517
Scheibbs
518 Amstetten, Baf. \'lEIDMAM>
Schloss
Ed1ach
519
Melle
520
Zwettl Bar. GRJPPEL
521
Waidhofen
522 Krems
52;
Korneuburg
524
Laala. d.
Gef. in Histe1
Thaya
bach
525
GIlnsemdorl'
526 Neunkirchen
527
Lilienfeld
528 GroUnd
529 Hom
530
Hollebrunn
585
Nikolsburg Gef.25,
M8dlau,
586
Znaim
GEBlEr 29! OBERDONAU
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 22, OBERDONAU)
HQ: Linz, Landstrasse 36
Phone: 23 944
K, -Gebietsfllhrer: . R.Baf, FASOLD
OTID.:R PERSOHALI'I'IES (Assignment Unknown)
Fri tz ETZEL (F!1hre r of a Bam)
s::HOOLS AND CAMPS
Name of School
~ :
Location: or CaI1W: Conmandan't e
\'\'EL. I Vorchtorf
WEL. II Kammer Staf.
ScMrfling ZEITLANG
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
5.31
Linz-Stadt a.Staf. HELL1UlYF
532 Linz- n.oerr. RIESS
Mtlh1vierte1
West
5.3.3
Hohrbe.ch
534
}'reistadt/
Oberdonau
5.35
Perg
5.36
Steyr Star. MEIDl
537
Kirchdorfj
Krems
538 Gmunden
542
Schll.rdinll
54.3
We1s
587 KapH tz
588 Bar. KRAUSE
Hied/i. Baf. EDLINGER
Innkreis
V8ck1abruck Baf", Alois BlIDIN
Vorchtorf Bat, DAHLE
Seats of at which corresponding HJ-Banne may
possibly exist
Braunau/Inn Krummau
Grieskirchen
,30, STEIERMARK
(Corresponding to NSDJ\P-Gau ,31, STEIERMARK)
GEBIETSFlhmUNG
RQ: Graz, Kroisbachgasse 6
Phone: 83 050
K, -Gebietsftlhrer: H. Baf, Eduard DANZINGER
Stabs1eiter: R.Baf. SKERllISCH
Gebietsinsp. d.
Motor-HJ.: Baf, KOWATSCR
Gebietsbeauftragter
](LV, : o.asr, LEINllNWh"'BER
SCHOOL:> AND CAMPS
Name of School

Location: or Camp: COIIJJllUldant :
GebietsfUhrerschu1e Retzhof
WEL, I Has1au/b.
Birkfe1d
WEL. II St. Ruprecht/
a.d.R.
WEL. III Kr. 0111i
WEI"
Sommeregg
II Schilager lachtalhaus
II Ftlhrerlager Pragerhof/
Untersteier
mark
II .Ausbildungs1e.ger WBrther See
(lvTarine-HJ. )
II Ausbi1dungs1ager W8rther See
II Ausbildungslager WBrther See
Landdienstlager Laubegg
Landdienstlager
PredinS
Landdienstrager S8ding

Musikhochschule Schloss
Eggenburg
Name of Sehoul
Location: or Camp: Commandant:
Seckau
NPEA. Vorau
JI Probably converted into WEL.
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
545
Graz-St"dt Bar, VlELDEGG. (K) Gef.14
!.fot, Gef .1
546
Fe1dbaph
54?
Ha.rtberg
548 Bruck/s,d, Mur Get .11
M o t . G e t . ~
549 Leoben
550
Liezen Gef .10
551
Judenburg
552 Deutsch- Gef'.6,
Landsberg Stsinz
5 5 ~
Leibnitz Baf. SCHUMER
554
Graz-Land Bar. JltG:ER
555
Mureck Gef'.9
556
Ft1rstenfe1d.
55? Oberwart
558 Sulz
559
Gef.12
560 Get.?
566 . weiz/b. Graz Gef'.1.3
949
Krsinburg Bar. P.llNEIl.
Seats of' NSDAP_Kreise at which corresponding HJ, Banne !!!!,y
possibly exist
Murau
Mllrzsusch1ag Voitsberg
31, KJ!.RNTEN
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 11, KJIRNTEN)

HQ: Klagenfurt, :Bahnhofstrasse 35
Phone: 14 12
Gebictsfllhrer: H,Baf. REGGER
Stabslei tel': Baf. 1furtin RAUTER
HA. II, WehrertUch
tigung: Bat. M<XJI/AR
Gebietsbeauftragter
xi, : Bat'.
Landes jugendwart: Ba1". Oskar HUBER
Kreisjugendwalter: Bat. DOLINA
Abteilungsleiter: Werner FAlf.rUR
Reichsredner: o.ssr. Dr. Karl UPPER
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assigrunent Unknawn)
Bar. Rudolf EGGER
SCHOOLS AND CAm'S

Location:
Name or School
or Camp: Canmandant:
Gabietsf6hrerschule Velden/a.
Wllrther See
WEL. del'
germanisohen
Jugend
Seeboclen/a.
Mi11see
Seeblich Bat', KIEINERT
WEL. Nlltsch,/i.
Gailtal
Stat.
KIRSCHNER
WEL. Steinfeld/i.
Drautal
WEL. Gries
NPEA. Millstadt/
Spa.nheim
NPEA. St.PauJ/Lavant
NPEA. St. Veit
Reiohssportschule V St. Ruprecht/b.
Vi11ach
IDENTIFIED BANNE
Identified
No, & Name': LocatiCl'l: Commander: Sub-Units:
561 Klagent'urt Baf, PUKELSHEll!
563 V8lkermarkt Bar, MtlIll:R
565
Spitta1/a, d,
Drau
568 W'olt'sberg Baf, OGRIS
590
Hermagor
Lienz Bat', 3}HREIER
St,Veit/
a,d, Glau
Vil1ach H. Geff. PONTASCH
GEBIET 32, SALZBURG
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 28, SALZBUItG)
GEBIETSFllHRUNG
HQ: Salzburg, Imbergstrasse 22
Phone: 51 75
K. -GebietstUhrer: o.see, Adolf NEUTATZ
Stabslelter: O.Baf, Hans
Gebietsarzt: Dr. FEIClITLfGER
OTHER PERSONALITIES (Assignment Unlmown)
Baf", Walter LEITNER (in Lofer)
Baf. Georg (in
Baf. S'l'BTER
SCH00L5 AND CAMPS
Name of School
Locatic,,, or Camp: Commandant:
GebietsfUhrerschule GrBdig "Wilhelm Gust1off"
IDENTIFIED BANNE
No. & Name:
578
579
580
581
582
583
Location:
Sa.lzburg-8tadt
Hallein
Bisohofshofen
Tamsweg
Zell/a. See
Sa.lzburg-Land
Lend
Identified
Canmander: Sub-Units:
Bat. FELLENBERG Gef. in
Seekirohen
Bat. (;RUBELNIGG
GEBIE7 33, TIROL-VORARLBERG
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 35, TLl.OL-VORARLBERG)
HQ:

liA. II, 11ehrer
ttlchtigung:
Gebietsinsp. d.
Mote r-HJ.:
',IT,!" T
WEL, II
.. Lager
If Lager
GF.BTETSF!lIrRuml:
Tnnsbruck, l,luseUlllstrasse 21
Phone: 4 66
R,Baf, Otto WEBER
Baf, SPCr.rL
O,Bai', Hans
SCHOOlS
Location:
Mauruch/a.
Achenaee
Iluchau/a.
Achensee
Melkalm
Schwendt/b.
KBssen
OESTERLE
AND CAMPS
Name of School
or Camp: Oommandant :
Probably converted into WEL.
IDENTIF'IED BANNE
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Commander: Sub-Units:
569 Innsbruck- a.Staf'. ZET'l'L
Stadt
570 Landeck Baf. LARCHER
571
Schwaz
572 Kufstein H. Geff'. INSAM
573
Dornbirn Geff. WClHNER
574 B1uden:IJ
575
Reutte
576 Imst Bat'. ZA.1ERAZ
577
Kitzbilhe1
584
Innsbruck-Land
591 Bregenz
GERm 34, D1lssELooRF
(Corresponding to NSDAP-Gau 5, ullSSELDORF)
HQ: DUsseldorf-Eller, Heim der Hi tIerjugend
Phone : 15 466
Postal address: DlIsseldorf 10,
Postschliessfach ("c/o G,P.O,")
SCHOOLS .AND CAMPS
Location:
Gebietsfll.hrerschule Xanten
WEL. I Gemtlnd
WEL, III
Name of School
or Camp: Commandant:
IDENTIFIED WINE .
Identified
No. & Name: Location: Oormnander: Sub-Units:
17
(l1uppertal Wuppertal Bat. STASCH
Barmen)
39
Wsseldorf
56 Krefeld
229 Neuss
230 (Nied.erberg) Dll.aseldorf
J.lettmann
231 Remscheid
232 Solingen
233 Mllnchen-
Gladbach
267 Wuppertal-
Elberfeld

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