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The Golden Party Badge (German: Goldenes Parteiabzeichen) was an award authorised by Adolf Hitler in a decree in October 1933. It was a special award given to all Nazi Party members who had, as of 9 November 1933, registered numbers from 1 to 100,000 and had unbroken Party membership. [2]
Golden Party Badge. The first 100,000 members who had joined and had uninterrupted service in the Nazi Party were given the right to wear the Golden Party Badge ( Goldenes Parteiabzeichen ), shown above. Those badges had the recipient's membership number on the back (Adolf Hitler had badge #7).
Awards and decorations of Nazi Germany were military, political, and civilian decorations that were bestowed between 1923 and 1945, first by the Nazi Party and later the state of Nazi Germany . The first awards began in the 1920s, before the Nazis had come to national power in Germany, with the political decorations worn on Party uniforms ...
Golden Party Badge: Nickname "Gestapo Müller" Military service; Allegiance: German Empire Nazi Germany: Service: German Imperial Army 1917–18 Munich Police 1919–33 Gestapo 1933–45: Years of service: 1917–18 (military) 1933–45 : Rank: SS-Gruppenführer: Battles/wars: First World War: Military awards: Knights Cross of the War Merit ...
January 1944: Dönitz accepts the Golden Party Badge and becomes a member of the Nazi Party. April 1944: Backe becomes Reich Minister of Food and Agriculture. April 1945: Göring and Lammers are forced to resign from the cabinet. End of cabinet. The last meeting of Hitler's cabinet took place on 5 February 1938.
Nazi Party political career. Herzog formally joined the Nazi Party on 21 June 1926 (membership number 38,960). As an early Party adherent, he would later be awarded the Golden Party Badge. From 1926, he was the Ortsgruppenleiter of the Party's local branch in Varel in the Free State of Oldenburg.
Gau badge; Order of the German Eagle; German Equestrian Badge; German National Prize for Art and Science; German Olympic Decoration; German Order (distinction) German Sports Badge; Golden Party Badge
The Golden Hitler Youth Badge with Oakleaves (German: Das Goldenes Hitler-Jugend Ehrenzeichen mit Eichenlaub) was instituted in 1935 to recognise exceptional services to the Hitler Youth. Only about 250 were awarded.
The top NSDAP awards are listed in this order: 1. Coburg Badge; 2. Nuremberg (Nürnberg) Party Badge of 1929; 3. SA Treffen at Brunswick 1931; 4. Golden Party Badge; 5. The Blood Order; followed by the Gau badges and the Golden HJ Badge.
This image shows (or resembles) a symbol that was used by the National Socialist (NSDAP/Nazi) government of Germany or an organization closely associated to it, or another party which has been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.