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1923 Beer Hall Putsch Begins... Adolph HItler...
1923 Beer Hall Putsch Begins... Adolph HItler...
Item # 717524
November 10, 1923
PRESCOTT JOURNAL MINER, Arizona, November 10, 1923
* Beer Hall Putsch (1st report)
* Early Adolph Hitler coup attempt
* General Erich Ludendorff
* Weimar Repubic overthrow ?
The front page has a nice banner headline: "LUDENDORFF, HITLER IGNOBLE CAPTIVES; BEER BUBBLE BURSTS" with subhead. (see images) Nice for display.
Complete with 6 pages, light toning at the margins, nice condition.
AI notes: The 1923 Beer Hall Putsch was a failed coup attempt by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party to overthrow the Weimar Republic by seizing control of Munich and then marching on Berlin. On November 8, Hitler and his followers stormed a beer hall where Bavarian leaders were meeting, declaring a revolution and trying to gain support. The next day, their march was stopped by police, leading to a brief gunfight that left several dead and many arrested, including Hitler. Although the putsch failed, Hitler’s subsequent trial gave him a national platform to promote his ideas, and his lenient prison sentence allowed him time to write Mein Kampf, making the event a crucial turning point that helped the Nazis gain prominence through legal political means.
* Beer Hall Putsch (1st report)
* Early Adolph Hitler coup attempt
* General Erich Ludendorff
* Weimar Repubic overthrow ?
The front page has a nice banner headline: "LUDENDORFF, HITLER IGNOBLE CAPTIVES; BEER BUBBLE BURSTS" with subhead. (see images) Nice for display.
Complete with 6 pages, light toning at the margins, nice condition.
AI notes: The 1923 Beer Hall Putsch was a failed coup attempt by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party to overthrow the Weimar Republic by seizing control of Munich and then marching on Berlin. On November 8, Hitler and his followers stormed a beer hall where Bavarian leaders were meeting, declaring a revolution and trying to gain support. The next day, their march was stopped by police, leading to a brief gunfight that left several dead and many arrested, including Hitler. Although the putsch failed, Hitler’s subsequent trial gave him a national platform to promote his ideas, and his lenient prison sentence allowed him time to write Mein Kampf, making the event a crucial turning point that helped the Nazis gain prominence through legal political means.
Category: The 20th Century