Adolf Hitler Throughout The 1930s And 1940s

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Adolf Hitler
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Adolf Hitler took the lives of over six million Jews. After Hitler recovered from the battle of Ypres, he had a passion for politics. Hitler had ideas of inequality among races, nations, and individuals. Adolf Hitler had a challenging childhood and was a highly powerful dictator.
Adolf Hitler was born on April 20, 1889, in Braunau Am Inn, Austria. His boyhood experience eventually led him to a career in politics. His father, Alois Hitler, was a customs officer whom Hitler disliked. He was close to his mother and when she died in 1907, he was devastated after her death. He found a love for art and he wanted to go to an art school, but his father hated the idea of him being an Artist. Hitler then ran away and moved to Munich, Germany in 1913. In February 1914, World War I broke out. Hitler saw this as an excellent time to join the German Military. Adolf completed 8 weeks of basic training and then deployed to Belgium in October 1914. He was wounded in the battle of Ypres. After he recovered, he realized he was tired of Civilian life, so he started to pursue politics. …show more content…

In 192, he became the leader of the party. Hitler had many ideas as the leader, including inequality among races, nations, and individuals. Hitler was forbidden to make speeches because of his opinions of the Jews. In 1930, Hitler allied with Alfred Hugenberg, a Nationalist, because of the Political Instability in 1930. During the Great Depression in 1930, the Nazis were the second-largest political party in 1930. Hitler first took control of Austria, Belgium, and Czechoslovakia in under a year. He then went on a rampage taking countries like France, Denmark, Netherlands, and many more countries in Europe. Hitler eventually committed suicide in a bunker when it was clear that Germany would lose the