Hugo Jaeger Explained

Hugo Jaeger
Birth Date:18 January 1900
Citizenship:German
Known For:Privately photographing Adolf Hitler and WWII
Employer:Adolf Hitler
Occupation:Photographer
Years Active:1936 - 1945

Hugo Jaeger (18 January 1900 – 1 January 1970) was the former personal photographer of Adolf Hitler. He travelled with Hitler in the years leading up to and throughout World War II and took around 2,000 colour photographs of the German dictator and various events connected with criminal policy of Nazi Germany during the Spanish Civil War[1] and the Second World War for example the invasion of Poland,[2] Polish soldiers as prisoners of war resting after the lost battle against Germans, destruction of Warsaw and persecution of Jews by the German Nazis in Kutno during the Holocaust and infamous Warsaw Ghetto where people were just prisoners in the heart of the modern city during the Holocaust. Jaeger was one of the few photographers who were using color photography techniques at the time, especially Agfacolor invented in 1936.[3]

Early life

Hugo Jaeger was born on 18 January 1900.

Career

Jaeger began photographing Hitler in 1936 and was doing so until the Second World War ended in 1945.[4] Jaeger also specialised in taking color photographs of the Nazi propaganda spectacles, unlike Hitler's other personal photographer Heinrich Hoffmann.[5] As the war was drawing to a close in 1945, Jaeger hid the photographs in a leather suitcase. He then encountered American soldiers prompting fears of potential arrest and prosecution for carrying around so many images of such a wanted man. When the soldiers opened the case however, their attention was distracted by a bottle of cognac they found there, which they opened and shared with Jaeger.

Jaeger buried the photographs inside 12 glass jars outside Munich. The photographer returned to the burial place over several years to ensure they were safe. He dug up all of the photographs ten years later in 1955, and stored them in a bank vault.[3] In 1965, Jaeger sold them to Life magazine.

Death and legacy

Jaeger died on 1 January 1970.

Life.com published the photographs as the 65th anniversary of D-Day beckoned in June 2009.[6] The website published the photographs in four separate galleries online.[6] One photo showed Hitler saluting German troops in Adolf Hitler Platz on 1 September 1938.[4] Another showed the Nazi leader attending a Christmas Party in 1941. Further photos show Hitler at the International Auto Exhibition held in Berlin in 1939 and Hitler on a cruise that same year.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Hugo Jaeger 1939-05 Madrid, Spain https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/hitler-jaeger-file/7AHGhdQsVz3TeA?hl=en
  2. Hugo Jaeger 1939-09 Polish Army POWs and their nurse in Poland. https://fotopolska.eu/20230,foto.html
  3. News: Hitler up close -- and in color . 4 June 2009 . 6 June 2009 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090607103928/http://blogs.usatoday.com/ondeadline/2009/06/hitler-up-close-and-in-color.html . 7 June 2009 .
  4. News: Unseen photographs reveal the private life of Adolf Hitler. 5 June 2009. 6 June 2009. The Daily Telegraph.
  5. News: PICTURES OF WORLD WAR II: Hitler in Color . 31 January 2005 . SPIEGEL ONLINE . 6 June 2009 .
  6. News: Never-before-seen photos of Adolf Hitler taken by personal photographer Hugo Jaeger revealed. 5 June 2009. 27 May 2021. Daily News.
  7. Web site: New pictures of Adolf Hitler are released. 5 June 2009. 6 June 2009. WGN-TV.