Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2024

First exams 2026

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The Nazi Party, 1924-28 (Edexcel GCSE History)

Revision Note

Natasha Smith

Expertise

History Content Creator

Why Did the Nazi Party Lose Support Between 1924 & 1928? - Summary

Historians call the support for the Nazi Party in 1924-28 ‘The Lean Years’. This means that the German people considered the NSDAP a small, extremist group after the Munich Putsch.

There is a clear link between the ‘Golden Years’ of the Weimar Republic and ‘The Lean Years’ of the Nazi Party. For extremist parties to succeed, the country’s economy or political leadership needs to be failing. The public is more likely to look for alternative solutions offered by extremism if moderate government is ineffective. The recovery of the Weimar Republic through Stresemann’s policies limited the need for the NSDAP’s policies. This resulted in a decline in support for Hitler’s party.

Although the Nazi Party lost support, Hitler used 1924-28 as a period to restructure the party. Hitler had learnt much from the Munich Putsch. He wanted to ensure the NSDAP was ready to benefit if Germany experienced political or economic turmoil again. Without ‘The Lean Years’, the Nazi Party would not have been able to benefit from the subsequent impacts of the Wall Street Crash on Germany from 1930.

Reorganising the Nazi Party, 1924-28

Why was it the right time to reorganise the Nazi Party?

  • Hitler left prison after serving nine months of his five-year sentence

    • Judges were much more lenient on right-wing offenders

  • The government lifted the ban on the NSDAP in February 1925

    • Hitler relaunched the party on 27th February 1925

  • The failure of the Munich Putsch made Hitler rethink the organisation of the party

    • To make the Nazi Party electable, its systems needed to be a lot clearer

The Nazi Party headquarters

  • Hitler changed how he ran the headquarters for the NSDAP in Munich

Organisation of the NSDAP

A flow diagram detailing the Nazi Party structure with Hitler at the top overseeing the headquarters, financed by Franz Schwarz, and organized by Philipp Bouhler.
A flow diagram showing the restructuring of the NSDAP in the Lean Years

A National Nazi Party

  • Hitler divided Germany into 35 regions (called gaue)

    • These corresponded to the constituencies created by the Weimar government

  • Each gau (single region) had a local Nazi Party leader called a gauleiter

    • Gauleiters were not often appointed

    • Hitler left it to the Nazi members in the gaue to fight over who became the gauleiter

      • Hitler strongly believed in the survival of the fittest mentality. Whoever wanted the position more would win it by any means necessary

    • Strasser became a powerful gauleiter in North Germany

    • Goebbels established his power in the Rhineland

  • To fund a national party, Hitler persuaded business owners who shared his nationalist vision for Germany to contribute:

    • Big corporations such as Thyssen, Krupp and Bosch funded the Nazi Party

    • The business owners believed Hitler’s influence over the workers would limit the power of trade unions

      • Business owners feared trade unions because they could make unreasonable demands for increased pay and benefits. Trade unions had strong links to communism. If communism became powerful, business owners would lose their ability to make lots of profit

The Bamberg Conference, 1926

  • Hitler began to realise that the Nazi Party was splitting into ‘nationalist’ and ‘socialist’ sides

    • In North Germany, where Strasser and Goebbels were gauleiters, they were winning the support of the workers by emphasising the socialist aspects of the NSDAP. They verbally attacked the local businessmen

    • In South Germany, where Hitler was based, Nazi leaders emphasised the nationalist aspects of the NSDAP. They campaigned for a strong state and anti-semitism

  • In 1926, Hitler called a party conference in Bamberg, Bavaria

    • Due to the conference’s location in the south, the majority of attendees were southern gauleiters

  • Key outcomes of the Bamberg Conference were:

    • Hitler called the ‘socialist’ side of the NSDAP “communists” who were the enemy of the Nazi Party

      • Hitler’s statement weakened the socialist aspects of the NSDAP, bringing the party’s policies in line with Hitler’s beliefs in Mein Kampf

    • Hitler persuaded Goebbels to switch to the ‘nationalist’ side of the Party

      • Strasser believed Goebbels had betrayed him. After this, Strasser lost Hitler’s trust. In 1934, a cull of the Nazi leadership structure resulted in Strasser’s murder 

      • Hitler promoted Goebbels to gauleiter of Berlin

  • The Bamberg Conference allowed Hitler to:

    • Reorganise the party

    • Develop new policies

  • Hitler placed more emphasis on nationalist aspects such as:

    • Reminding Germans of the ‘dolchstoss’ committed by the Weimar government in 1919. He campaigned for revenge on the ‘November Criminals’ for ending the First World War and signing the Treaty of Versailles

    • Accusing the Jewish people of being ‘enemies of Germany’. He argued that the Jewish people were responsible for all of Germany’s issues

    • Promoting the return to traditional values

What was the SS?

  • By 1925, Hitler was losing trust in the SA

    • The SA had 400,000 members

    • Ernst Röhm had increased his control over the SA during Hitler’s time in prison

    • The SA were hard to control

      • Many middle and upper classes considered the SA to be violent thugs

      • If Hitler wanted to make the NSDAP electable, he had to change the image of the party

  • Hitler took two steps to improve his paramilitary forces:

  1. Hitler sent Ernst Röhm abroad. He returned to the Nazi Party in 1930

  2. Hitler created a new private army called the Schutzstaffel (‘Protection Squad’), or SS

Features of the SS

  • The SS was a much smaller group than the SA

  • They wore black uniforms from 1932

    • Many members of society found them intimidating

    • They conducted themselves better and less violently than the SA

  • Hitler selected and trusted members of the SS. They would become Hitler’s personal bodyguards

  • Hitler’s chauffeur and bodyguard, Julius Schreck, initially commanded the SS

    • Heinrich Himmler, one of Hitler’s most trusted party members, became head of the SS

  • Under Himmler, by 1930, there were 3,000 SS members

Why was there Limited Support for the Nazi Party?

  • By 1929, the NSDAP had 100,000 members

  • Despite this success, historians call this period ‘The Lean Years’ 

    • In the May 1928 election, the Nazi Party only won 12 seats (roughly 3% of the overall votes). They were the 7th biggest party in the Reichstag

Reasons why the Nazi Party had limited support by 1928

A concept map explaining limited support for the Nazi Party. Reasons include Paul von Hindenburg’s presidency, moderate parties' rise, Stresemann's policies, and political pacts.
A concept map showing the reasons why the Nazis had limited support in the Lean Years

Worked Example

Give two things you can infer from Source A about the Nazi Party’s approach to elections in ‘The Lean Years’ of 1924-28

4 marks

Source A: A Nazi propaganda poster created in 1928. It is a portrait of a German soldier with the caption “National Socialist, or the victims [German soldiers killed in the First World War] were in vain”

lean-years-propaganda-poster

Image courtesy of the Library of Congress, USA

Answers:

i) What I can infer:

I can infer that Hitler wanted to remind people of Weimar’s failure in the First World War (1)

Details in the source that tell me this:

The caption “or the victims [German soldiers killed in the First World War] were in vain” (1)

ii) What I can infer:

I can also infer that the Nazis did not have much election support in 1928 (1)

Details in the source that tell me this:

The use of the First World War soldier in an attempt to connect with more German people (1)

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Natasha Smith

Author: Natasha Smith

After graduating with a degree in history, Natasha gained her PGCE at Keele University. With more than 10 years of teaching experience, Natasha taught history at both GCSE and A Level. Natasha's specialism is modern world history. As an educator, Natasha channels this passion into her work, aiming to instil in students the same love for history that has fuelled her own curiosity.