Hans Maier autobiography
Extent and Medium
folders
3
Creator(s)
- Hans Maier
Biographical History
Hans Maier (1889-1937) was born in Frankfurt and became a prominent figure in social reform and welfare in Weimar Germany. He married Anna Margarete Grätz in 1914, and the couple had three children: Hanna (1915-2003), Heinrich (Henry, 1918-2005), and Margarete (1921-1997). Maier served as assistant secretary for welfare services within the Department of the Interior and later Department of Labor and Welfare in Saxony from 1923 to 1933. He committed suicide a few months after his wife’s death in 1937, and his brother, Max Maier, became his children’s legal guardian.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives received this collection from Margaret West, the granddaughter of Hans Maier, on March 31, 1998.
Scope and Content
The Hans Maier autobiography is a photocopy of a typed and annotated translation of Maier’s original autobiography, which he wrote in German and mailed to his children just before his suicide in December 1937. Maier describes growing up in Frankfurt, his university education in law and economics, his marriage, the beginnings of his career in social work, his membership in the German Democratic Party and the German Social Democratic Party, the political turmoil in Germany following World War I, his work leading welfare services in Saxony, the economic depression, the rise of the Nazi party, Hitler’s appointment as chancellor, his own dismissal from office, and his wife’s illness and death.
System of Arrangement
The Hans Maier autobiography is arranged as a single series: I. Hans Maier autobiography, approximately 1992
Conditions Governing Reproduction
Copyright Holder: Margaret West
Subjects
- Germany--History--1933-1945--Personal narratives.
- Germany--History--1918-1933--Personal narratives.
- Public welfare--Germany.
- Jews--Germany--History--1933-1945.
- Suicide victims--Germany.
- World War (1914-1918)
- Dresden (Germany)
- Frankfurt am Main (Germany)
Genre
- Personal narratives.
- Document