Please enable JavaScript. This website does not function properly without JavaScript enabled. HIMMLER'S SIGNATURE

Ulric of England

Categories



Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.

Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.
Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.
Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.
Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.

Felix Steiner | SS General | Signature.

SS General Felix Steiner signature. Full 'SS-Standarte 'Deutschland' headed paper. Document dated 3.11.1938. Typed document. Good signature of Steiner in typical indelible pencil. Full Inspection SS-VT ink recieving box, along with SS-Hauptmat ink receiving box.

Condition report: Two files holes. Clean. Free from fading.

Rarity status (Up to 10 rarest):4/10.

Background to Steiner:  Born 23 May 1896 –  Died 12 May 1966. Steiner rose to the rank of SS-Obergruppenführer in the Waffen-SS during World War II. He commanded several SS divisions and corps. Steiner was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. Together with Paul Hausser, he contributed significantly to the development and transformation of the Waffen-SS into a military force made up of volunteers and conscripts from both occupied and un-occupied lands.

Steiner was chosen by Heinrich Himmler to oversee the creation of and then command the elite SS Division Wiking. In 1943, he was promoted to the command of the III (Germanic) SS Panzer Corps. On 28 January 1945, Steiner was placed in command of the 11th SS Panzer Army, which formed part of a new ad-hoc formation to protect Berlin from the Soviet armies advancing from the Vistula River.

On 21 April, during the Battle for Berlin, Steiner was placed in command of Army Detachment Steiner, while Adolf Hitler ordered Steiner to envelop the 1st Belorussian Front through a pincer movement, advancing from the north of the city. However, as his exhausted unit was outnumbered by ten to one, Steiner made it clear that he did not have the capacity for a counter-attack on 22 April during the daily situation conference in the Führerbunker.

After the capitulation of Germany, Steiner was imprisoned and indicted as part of the Nuremberg Trials. He was cleared of war crimes charges and released in 1948. He was a founding member of HIAG, a lobby group founded in 1951 to campaign for the legal, economic and historical rehabilitation of the Waffen-SS.

Price: SOLD

Click here to return to category.