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Wilhelm Groener

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Wilhelm Groener.
Wilhelm Groener.

Wilhelm Groener (November 22 1867 - May 3 1939) was a German soldier and politician.

Karl Eduard Wilhelm Groener was born in Ludwigsburg, Württemberg, the son of a regimental paymaster. He entered the Württemburg Army in 1884, and attended the War Academy from 1893 until 1897, whereupon he was appointed to the General Staff (1899). For the next seventeen years he was attached to the railway section, becoming head of it in 1912. In November of 1916 he moved into the Prussian War Ministry as deputy war minister and was in charge of war production. In August 1917 Groener took a field command in the Ukraine.

On the resignation of Erich Ludendorff on October 29, 1918, Groener became First Quartermaster General (Deputy Chief of the General Staff) under Field Marshal von Hindenburg. Germany's military situation was worsening under the onslaught of the enemy, and social unrest and rebellion among both the German armed forces and the civilian population threatened to break out into revolution. In November, Groener advised Kaiser Wilhelm II that he had lost the confidence of the armed forces and recommended abdication to the monarch.

With the Kaiser's abdication on November 9, 1918 the Marxist Spartacist League had declared a soviet republic in Berlin. Social Democrat leaders Friedrich Ebert (newly-named Chancellor) and Philipp Scheidemann sought to forestall the Communists' action and — evidently on the spur of the moment — Scheidemann proclaimed the Republic.

Groener, who was second-in-command of the German Army and who had known Ebert from the soldier's days in charge of war production, contacted the socialist leader that evening. The two men concluded the so-called Ebert-Groener pact, which was to remain secret for a number of years. For his part of the pact, Ebert agreed to suppress the Bolshevik-led revolution and maintain the defeated Army's role as one of the pillars of the German state; Groener in turn agreed to throw the weight of the still-considerable Army behind the new government. For this act, Groener earned the enmity of much of the military leadership, much of whom sought the retention of the monarchy.

Groener subsequently oversaw the retreat and demobilisation of the defeated German army after World War I ended with the armistice of November 11, 1918.

After his resignation from the army (September 30 1919), Groener was in and out of retirement during the 1920's. He served as Transportation Minister between 1920 and 1923. He succeeded Otto Geßler as Defence Minister in 1928, a post he held until 1932. In 1931 he also became Interior Minister, and favoured the banning of the Nazi storm troopers (SA). After Franz von Papen replaced Heinrich Brüning as Chancellor, Groener retired from public life.

Groener was married twice: Helene Geyer (1864-1926), with one daughter, and Ruth Naeher-Glück, with whom he had a son. Groener died in Bornstedt bei Potsdam on May 3, 1939.

[edit] Reference

  • Wheeler-Bennett, Sir John The Nemesis of Power: German Army in Politics, 1918-1945 New York: Palgrave Macmillan Publishing Company, 2005.
Military Offices
Preceded by:
Paul von Hindenburg
Chief of the General Staff
1919
Succeeded by:
Hans von Seeckt
Political offices
Preceded by:
Gustav Bauer
Transportation Minister of Germany
1920–1923
Succeeded by:
Rudolf Oeser
Preceded by:
Otto Geßler
Defence Minister of Germany
1928–1932
Succeeded by:
Kurt von Schleicher
Preceded by:
Joseph Wirth
Interior Minister of Germany
1931–1932
Succeeded by:
Wilhelm Freiherr von Gayl
de:Wilhelm Groener

fr:Wilhelm Grœner nl:Wilhelm Groener fi:Wilhelm Groener zh:威廉·格勒納

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