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Johanna Wolf Born June 1, 1900(1900-06-01) Munich, Bavaria, Germany Died June 5, 1985(1985-06-05) (aged 85) Munich, Bavaria, Germany Nationality German Occupation Secretary Employer Adolf Hitler Known for A private secretary of Adolf Hitler's before and during the Second World War Johanna Wolf (1 June 1900 - 5 June 1985) was Adolf Hitler's chief secretary. Contents 1 Career 2 Capture 3 Loyalty to Hitler 4 Führerbunker 5 References Career Wolf was born in Munich and joined Hitler's personal secretariat in 1929 as a typist, at which time she also became a member of the Nazi Party. When Hitler became Chancellor in January 1933 she became a senior secretary in his Private Chancellery. Wolf, Hitler’s senior secretary, was one of his oldest and longest tenured secretaries. While he addressed his other secretaries formally as “Frau” or “Fräulein”, he called her “Wölfin” meaning She-Wolf because of his obsession with wolves.[1] She and Hitler had a very close relationship, and she was often thought of as the best possible source for people to go about Hitler. As a dedicated Nazi she was a trusted member of Hitler's entourage, and remained with him when he withdrew to the Führerbunker in central Berlin as the Red Army approached. On 22 April 1945, however, Hitler, having decided to stay and die in Berlin, sent Wolf and Christa Schroeder to his house at Berchtesgaden in Bavaria. They were given the task of burning his personal papers before they could be seized by the Allies. Capture Wolf was taken prisoner on 23 May in Bad Tölz when the Americans occupied Berchtesgaden. Together with Schroeder, she remained a prisoner until 14 January 1948. Wolf moved to Kaufbeuren afterwards and died in Munich in 1985. Loyalty to Hitler Although Wolf served under Hitler for many years, unlike other secretaries such as Traudl Junge, she refused to consent to any interviews or reveal any information, even when, during the 1970s, she was offered a large amount of money to write her memoirs. Whenever asked to do so, she stated that she was a "private" secretary and believed it was her duty to never reveal anything about Hitler. When Wolf was taken prisoner, Leni Riefenstahl, a German filmmaker, eventually got her to disclose some information about Hitler. Wolf revealed that people close to Hitler were not able to escape his magnetism until his death, even though he was quite emaciated. She was so loyal to Hitler that she wanted to die with him, and she also claims that Hitler was not aware of all the terrible things that were happening in Germany during his reign, but fanatics exerted more and more influence on him and they made orders Hitler knew nothing about.[2] Führerbunker The Führerbunker was located beneath Hitler's New Reich Chancellery in Berlin, Germany. Adolf Hitler and his staff took up residence in the bunker in January 1945 and until the last week of the war it became the epicentre of the Nazi regime. It was here during the last week of April 1945 that Hitler married Eva Braun shortly before they committed suicide. Wolf told Leni Riefenstahl she really wanted to stay with Hitler at Führerbunker, but she departed because Hitler urged her to leave the Reich Chancellery for the sake of her 80 year old mother and he forced her and others to leave on the last flight out of Berlin. v · d · eFinal occupants of the Führerbunker by date of departure 21 April Robert Ley 22 April Karl Gebhardt · Julius Schaub · Christa Schroeder · Johanna Wolf 23 April Theodor Morell · Albert Speer · Joachim von Ribbentrop 24 April Walter Frentz 28 April Robert Ritter von Greim · Hanna Reitsch · Walter Wagner 29 April Bernd Freytag von Loringhoven · Gerhardt Boldt · Rudolf Weiss  · Wilhelm Zander · Heinz Lorenz · Willy Johannmeyer 30 April Nicolaus von Below 1 May Erich Kempka · Traudl Junge · Gerda Christian · Constanze Manziarly · Else Krüger · Otto Günsche · Heinz Linge · Johann Rattenhuber · Werner Naumann · Wilhelm Mohnke · Hans-Erich Voss · Heinrich Doose · Gerhard Schach · Ewald Lindloff · Heinz Krüger · Hans Reisser · Alwin-Broder Albrecht · Josef Ochs · Ernst-Günther Schenck · Georg Betz · Ludwig Stumpfegger · Martin Bormann · Hans Baur · Artur Axmann · Walther Hewel · Günther Schwägermann · Armin D. Lehmann · Peter Högl 2 May Rochus Misch · Helmuth Weidling · Hans Refior · Theodor von Dufving · Siegfried Knappe Date uncertain Helmut Kunz Still present on 2 May Erna Flegel · Werner Haase · Fritz Tornow · Johannes Hentschel Committed suicide Ernst-Robert Grawitz · Adolf Hitler / Eva Hitler (Eva Braun) · Joseph Goebbels / Magda Goebbels · Wilhelm Burgdorf · Hans Krebs · Franz Schädle Killed Hermann Fegelein · Goebbels children · Grawitz family Uncertain Heinrich Müller References ^ Waite, Robert. The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler. N.p.: n.p., 1993. Google Books. Web. 31 Jan. 2010. [1] ^ Riefenstahl, Leni. Leni Riefenstahl: A Memoir. N.p.: Picador, 1995. Google Books. Web. 28 Jan. 2010. [2] Kershaw, Ian. Hitler: 1936-1945: Nemesis, Vol. 2. N.p.: W. W. Norton & Company , 2001. Google Books. Web. 31 Jan. 2010. [3] Riefenstahl, Leni. Leni Riefenstahl: A Memoir. N.p.: Picador, 1995. Google Books. Web. 28 Jan. 2010. [4] Waite, Robert. The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler. N.p.: n.p., 1993. Google Books. Web. 31 Jan. 2010. [5] Persondata Name Wolf, Johanna Alternative names Short description Date of birth 1 June 1900 Place of birth Munich, Bavaria, Germany Date of death 5 June 1985 Place of death Munich, Bavaria, Germany