Johann Baptist Fuchs Explained

Johann Baptist Fuchs
Office:Chief of Liaison, Supreme SA Leadership (OSAF),
Office of the Deputy Führer
Term Start:1 May 1935
Term End:1 May 1937
Office2:Führer, Bavarian SA-Feldjägerkorps
Term Start2:27 February 1934
Term End2:1 April 1935
Office3:OSAF Special Plenipotentiary for Bavaria
Term Start3:29 August 1933
Term End3:14 November 1934
Office4:OSAF Special Commissioner,
Bavarian Auxiliary Security Police
Term Start4:1 May 1933
Term End4:29 August 1933
Office5:Chief, OSAF Quartermaster Staff
Term Start5:24 February 1931
Term End5:15 March 1933
Birth Date:8 June 1877
Birth Place:Regensburg, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire
Death Place:Munich, Nazi Germany
Party:Nazi Party
Nickname:Hans
Awards:Blood Order
Alma Mater:Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Profession:Military officer; Police official
Branch:Royal Bavarian Army
Freikorps
Serviceyears:1899–1919
Rank:Major
Battles:World War I
Mawards:Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class
Bavarian Military Merit Order, 4th class with crown and swords

Johann Baptist Fuchs (8 June 1877 – 18 November 1938) was a German professional military officer who served in the Royal Bavarian Army during the First World War, and also was a member of the post-war Freikorps. He became a senior state police official in Bavaria and participated in Adolf Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch. He joined the Nazi Party and its paramilitary unit, the Sturmabteilung (SA), holding several high-level staff positions and rising to the rank of SA-Obergruppenführer.

Early life and military service

Fuchs was born in Regensburg, the son of a railway conductor. He attended Volksschule and a humanistic Gymnasium, graduating with his Abitur. In 1897, he entered the Royal Bavarian Army as a Fahnenjunker (military cadet) with the 17th Field Artillery Regiment, headquartered in Germersheim. He attended the war school in Munich and, in March 1899, was commissioned as a Leutnant. From 1906, he served as a battalion adjutant, and he was promoted to Oberleutnant in March 1910.

Shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, Fuchs was promoted to Hauptmann in September 1914, and served successively as adjutant to III Army Corps, Landwehr Infantry Brigade 13 and Reserve Infantry Brigade 17. In November 1917, he was given command of a battalion in Reserve Infantry Regiment 23. In February 1918, he became a general staff officer candidate, and then served as a general staff officer with several Bavarian infantry and field artillery units until falling ill with heart disease in May. During his war service, Fuchs was decorated with the Iron Cross, 1st and 2nd class and the Bavarian Military Merit Order, 4th class with crown and swords.

After the end of the war, Fuchs remained in the military as the chief of staff of the Freikorps Bamberg and a battalion commander with the Wehrregiment München (Munich Defense Regiment), a unit formed to occupy and pacify Munich after the suppression of the Bavarian Soviet Republic in May 1919. He remained with that unit from July through the end of September 1919, and was discharged from military service with the rank of Major.

Bavarian police official

At the beginning of October 1919, Fuchs joined the Bavarian Landespolizei (State Police), where he was employed as chief of staff at police headquarters in Munich until February 1923. He then became a Referent (advisor) for Abschnittkommando (section commands) II and III in Munich. In mid-November 1923, he moved to the state police headquarters in Ansbach and left the police service there at the end of October 1925 with the rank of Major der Polizei due to unfitness for duty. He then studied law and political science for four semesters at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich between 1923 and 1925. From 1925 to 1931, he worked as an independent businessman in the insurance industry.

Career in the Sturmabteilung (SA)

Fuchs took part in Adolf Hitler's failed Beer Hall Putsch in November 1923, for which he would later be awarded the Blood Order. He joined the Nazi Party on 1 February 1931 (membership number 411,570) at the Ortsgruppe Braunhaus (local group Brown House). At the same time, he was accepted into the Sturmabteilung (SA) with the rank of SA-Gruppenführer and became a full-time SA-Führer on the staff of the Supreme SA Leadership (OSAF). On 24 February 1931, he was appointed the chief of the OSAF quartermaster staff where he served until mid-March 1933. In addition, he briefly succeeded Karl von Eberstein as the acting Führer of SA-Gruppe Hochland, commanding the SA troops in Upper Bavaria and Swabia from 20 February to 14 March 1933.[1]

From mid-March 1933 to the end of December 1933, Fuchs was employed in the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior as the Sonderkommissar (Special Commissioner) of the Auxiliary Security Police. He rejoined the Bavarian Landespolizei at the beginning of April 1933 and immediately was advanced to the rank of Oberst der Polizei. He was assigned, from the beginning of May to the end of August 1933, as the OSAF Sonderkommissar for the Bavarian Auxiliary Security Police. He again retired from police service on 1 September 1933, and was advanced to the post of OSAF Sonderbevollmächtigter (Special Plenipotentiary) for the government of the State of Bavaria until 14 November 1934. During this assignment, he was promoted to the rank of SA-Obergruppenführer on 9 November 1933.[2]

On 27 February 1934, Fuchs was placed in charge of a specialized SA component in Bavaria known as the SA-Feldjägerkorps. This unit was involved in the repression of the Nazis' political enemies until it was dissolved on 1 April 1935. On 1 May 1935, Fuchs became the OSAF Chief of Liaison to the Representative for Settlement Matters on the staff of Deputy Führer Rudolf Hess. Finally in May 1937, he was assigned as a staff member of the SA-Leadership Corps, where he remained until his death in Munich in November 1938.

SA and police ranks

SA ranks

SA ranks
DateRank
1 October 1922Major der Polizei
24 February 1931SA-Gruppenführer
9 November 1933SA-Obergruppenführer
1 April 1933Oberstleutnant der Polizei
1 April 1933Oberst der Polizei

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://verwaltungshandbuch.bavarikon.de/VWH/XI._NSDAP_und_ihre_Gliederungen_1933_bis_1945 XI. NSDAP und ihre Gliederungen 1933 bis 1945, 2. Sturmabteilungen der NSDAP (SA)
  2. Lilla, Joachim: Fuchs, Johann Baptist, in Staatsminister, leitende Verwaltungsbeamte und (NS-) Funktionsträger in Bayern 1918 bis 1945