Hinrich Lohse was born into a peasant family in the town of Mühlenbarbek in the Province of Schleswig-Holstein. From 1903 to 1912 he attended the Volksschule in his home town and, for the next year, a trade school in Hamburg. In 1913, he began working at the Blohm & Vossshipyard in Hamburg. During the First World War, he was conscripted into Reserve Infantry Regiment 76 of the Imperial German Army on 23 September 1915. He served in combat on the western front with Reserve Infantry Regiment 94 until he was severely wounded on 9 August 1916. He was awarded the Wound Badge in black, and was discharged from the military with a ten-percent war disability in November. He returned to employment in the shipbuilding industry and later moved into banking. From 1919, Lohse was an associate at the Schleswig-Holstein Farmers' Association and, as of 1920, business manager in Neumünster of the Schleswig-Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy, the regionel agrarian political party.[1]
Nazi Party career in Schleswig-Holstein
In early 1923, Lohse joined the Nazi Party (membership number 7,522) and was appointed the Party's Gauleiter for Schleswig-Holstein on 27 March 1925. As an early Party member, he would later be awarded the Golden Party Badge. During the time that the Party was banned in the wake of Adolf Hitler's failed Beer Hall Putsch of November 1923, Lohse joined the Völkisch-Social Bloc, a Nazi front organization, and was elected under its banner to the city council of Altona. When Hitler refounded the Nazi Party in February 1925, Lohse became the Ortsgruppenleiter (local group leader) of Altona, and formally re-enrolled in the Party on 13 June. He continued to sit on the city council as a Nazi Party member until 1930.[2]
Between 3 September 1928 and 15 April 1929, Lohse also temporarily administered Gau Hamburg before the appointment of Karl Kaufmann as Gauleiter. In August 1929, he attended the party rally in Nuremberg for which he was awarded the Nuremberg Party Day Badge. During this time, he also led into the Nazi Party various nationally-oriented farming associations in northern Germany, such as the Rural People's Movement. On 15 July 1932, he was appointed as Landesinspekteur-North. In this position, he had oversight responsibility for his Gau and three others (Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Lubeck, and Pomerania). This was a short-lived initiative by Strasser to centralize control over the Gaue. However, it was unpopular with all the Gauleiter and was repealed on Strasser's fall from power in December 1932. Lohse then returned to his Gauleiter position in Schleswig-Holstein.[4]
In November 1932, Lohse was elected to the Reichstag for electoral constituency 13 (Schleswig-Holstein) and retained this seat until the fall of the Nazi regime in May 1945.[5] Shortly after the Nazi seizure of power he was appointed as Oberpräsident (high president) of the province of Schleswig-Holstein on 25 March 1933. He thus united under his control the highest Party and governmental offices in the province. On 11 April, he was named as the province's plenipotentiary to the Reichsrat, serving until its abolition by the Nazis on 14 February 1934. On 11 July 1933, Lohse was named to the recently reconstituted Prussian State Council. On 15 November, he was made an honorary SA-Gruppenführer in the Nazi paramilitary, the Sturmabteilung (SA). In 1934, he took over the chairmanship of the Nordische Gesellschaft (Nordic Association). On 1 January 1937, he was promoted to SA-Obergruppenführer. On 16 November 1942, Lohse was appointed the Reich Defense Commissioner for his Gau.[6]
Reichskommissar in the Baltics and Holocaust involvement
Nevertheless, as the leader of the civil administration, he implemented, through a series of special edicts and guiding principles, many of the preparatory acts that facilitated the subsequent police Aktionen (the Nazi euphemism for killing operations). These measures, first put forth in his decree of 27 July 1941, included compiling lists of Jews, mandating that they must wear the yellow badge, confiscating their property and banning them from public transportation, school attendance or employment in the professions. Those considered employable were to be used in forced labor. They were to be gathered together in ghettos and were "to be given only as much food as the rest of the population can do without, but no more than suffices for scanty nourishment of the Ghetto inmates."[10] In particular, he shared responsibility with HSSPF SS-ObergruppenführerHans-Adolf Prützmann for the enslavement and ghettoization of the Jews of Latvia.
On 31 October 1941, Georg Leibbrandt, a high official in the Reich Ministry, wrote to Lohse requesting an explanation for his order forbidding the execution of Jews in Liepāja. Lohse replied on 15 November acknowledging that "the cleansing of the East of Jews is a necessary task", but asking whether there was "a directive to liquidate all Jews in the East … without regard to age and sex and economic interests" affecting the war economy. Leibbrandt's deputy, Otto Bräutigam, responded on 18 December, informing Lohse that "Economic considerations should fundamentally remain unconsidered in the settlement of the [Jewish] problem".[11] Though Lohse raised concerns about the murder of Jews that was taking place, like many civil administrators, he did this out of a concern for the impact on the local war economy.[12] After receiving the reply, he continued to remain in his post for the next three years while the Holocaust-related murders continued. Lohse fled the Reichskommissariat Ostland without authorization on 13 August 1944 in the face of the Red Army advance, and he was immediately removed as Reichskommissar. He was replaced by Erich Koch who assumed the post on 21 September. Lohse returned to Gau Schleswig-Holstein where he continued to exercise absolute power as Gauleiter and Reich Defense Commissioner until the last days of the war in Europe.[13]
Postwar trial and life
On 6 May 1945, Lohse was dismissed as Oberpräsident of Schleswig-Holstein by German President Karl Dönitz and, shortly thereafter, was imprisoned by the British Army. He was tried by the court in Bielefeld between October 1947 and January 1948, and was sentenced to 10 years in prison and confiscation of his property. A request by the Soviet Union for his execution was denied. He was held at the prison in Esterwegen until he was released in March 1951 due to ill health (thrombosis). In July of the same year, a finding by the Kiel denazification committee placed him in Group III (lesser offenders) and authorized him to receive a pension of 25% of an Oberpräsident's salary.[14] However, in March 1952, the pension was revoked by the German government in Bonn under pressure from the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein in protest of his antidemocratic rule in the province.[15] His appeal of this issue was dismissed by the Federal Administrative Court in October 1955. Lohse spent his later years in his hometown of Mühlenbarbek, where he died in February 1964.[16]
Mazower, Mark (2008). Hitler's Empire: How the Nazis Ruled Europe. New York: The Penguin Press. ISBN978-1-594-20188-2.
Miller, Michael D.; Schulz, Andreas (2017). Gauleiter: The Regional Leaders of the Nazi Party and Their Deputies, 1925–1945. Vol. 2 (Georg Joel – Dr. Bernhard Rust). R. James Bender Publishing. ISBN978-1-932-97032-6.
Orlow, Dietrich (1969). The History of the Nazi Party: 1919–1933. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN0-8229-3183-4.