Josef Wagner (Gauleiter)


Josef Wagner was from 1931 the Nazi Gauleiter of the Gau of Westphalia-South, and as of December 1934 also of the Gau of Silesia. In 1942 he was expelled from the Nazi Party, imprisoned by the Gestapo, and likely executed around the time of end of the war in Europe.

Early life and First World War

Josef Wagner was born in Algrange, Alsace-Lorraine, to miner Nikolaus Wagner. Beginning in the summer of 1913 he went to the teachers' seminary in Wittlich, and as of June 1917 he was a soldier at the Western Front during the First World War. There he ended up as a prisoner of war of the French, but managed to escape in 1918. In 1919 he returned to Germany by way of Switzerland. He ended his training as a Volksschule teacher and first worked as a finance official in Fulda, and by 1921 at the Bochumer Verein.

Joining the Nazis

Wagner joined the Nazi Party quite early on, in 1922, and founded the NSDAP local in Bochum. In 1927, he was a Volksschule teacher at the Volksschule Horst-Emscher – and by 1928 at the Gelsenkirchen branch – from which he was fired for political reasons. On 1 October 1928, he was appointed Gauleiter of the Gau of Westphalia, and after the Gau was split in two on 1 January 1931, he was given the office of Gauleiter of Gau Westphalia-South, whose seat was in Bochum. From May 1928 to 1930, Wagner was among the NSDAP's first twelve members of the Reichstag in Berlin.

Career – 1933 to 1941

After the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933, Wagner was appointed to the Prussian State Council on 1 September. Then on 6 December 1934, after the removal of Helmuth Brückner, Wagner was also appointed as Gauleiter of Gau Silesia with its capital at Breslau. Retaining his Gauleiter position in Westphalia-South, he was one of only a very few Gauleiters to simultaneously head two Gaue. In addition, he was appointed Oberpräsident of the Prussian provinces of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia. He thus united under his control the highest party and governmental offices in the two provinces. After the two provinces were united into the Province of Silesia on 1 April 1938, Wagner became its Oberpräsident until the province was split again on 27 January 1941. On 29 October 1936, Wagner was appointed Reichskommissar for Pricing, a high position in Hermann Göring's Four Year Plan. From the outbreak of the Second World War on 1 September 1939 he was also Reich Defence Commissioner for Silesia.

Dismissal and death

Wagner, now at the peak of his career, had made powerful enemies, including Heinrich Himmler and Martin Bormann. In addition, his Deputy Gauleiter in Silesia, Fritz Bracht, was intriguing against him. On 9 January 1941, Wagner was removed as Gauleiter of Gau Silesia and it was divided into two separate Gaue on 27 January. Bracht succeeded him in Gau Upper Silesia and Karl Hanke in Gau Lower Silesia. Wagner was also removed as Oberpräsident, with Bracht and Hanke succeeding him in this capacity in the two new provinces of Upper and Lower Silesia.
Subsequently, on 9 November 1941, Wagner was also dismissed as Gauleiter of Gau Westphalia-South directly by Adolf Hitler. This outcome was due to a letter Wagner's wife had sent to their daughter, which had come to official attention. The Wagners were Catholics, and she disapproved of, and forbade, her daughter's planned marriage to a non-Catholic SS man on religious grounds. Wagner's successor as Gauleiter in Westphalia-South was Paul Giesler. Wagner was brought up on charges before the Party's High Court, and expelled from the Party on 12 October 1942.
Wagner moved back to Bochum and lived there. Later when suspected of involvement in the attempt on Hitler's life at the Wolf's Lair on 20 July 1944, he was arrested by the Gestapo after its failure. His name had appeared in a document prepared by the conspirators. It referred to "upright and capable" individuals who should be approached to be "convinced of the necessity of such a step and to support it. e.g. Gauleiter Wagner." The circumstances of his death in late April 1945 are unclear. Most likely, he was put to death by the Gestapo in Berlin.

Selected works