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Crowds in Vienna during Anschluss; Hitler motorcade and at Hotel Imperial

Film | Digitized | Accession Number: 2006.265.2 | RG Number: RG-60.4553 | Film ID: 2828

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    Crowds in Vienna during Anschluss; Hitler motorcade and at Hotel Imperial

    Overview

    Description
    Leaflets and newspapers litter a Vienna street and swirl around in the wind. Pro-Schuschnigg graffiti and the Vaterlandisches Front [Fatherland Front] symbol are visible on the pavement near Hotel Atlanta. The scene shifts to show crowds of people on the street. They appear to be shouting slogans and some give the Nazi salute. At 01:04:49 the German travel agency "Deutsches Reich" on Kärtner Strasse is visible, complete with Nazi eagle. This was a notorious meeting point for NS followers; eyewitness testimony at the DÖW Austrian Archive indicates that on March 11 the staff was broadcasting German radio at high volume to a growing audience of Nazi sympathizers. It is located to the right of the Opera house. Austrian policemen move the crowds along and occasionally strike people with their clubs. This is most likely March 10 or 11, when the Schuschnigg government was still in power but the takeover was imminent. The crowds have no flags or other Nazi symbols yet. Before the takeover the Nazi party and the salute were illegal. See Helen Baker's diary entry below.

    Scenes from a few days later begin at 01:05:44. These scenes were shot after the German army has entered Austria (they were probably shot on March 15; see diary entries below). Huge crowds of people are gathered in front of the parliament building and some march in the street. People gathered on the Athena statue wave flags and salute. A parade of men in shiny helmets marches by; people are visible sitting in trees. The camera pans across German military vehicles as they move slowly down the street. Some of the vehicles are stopped and uniformed men stand in the street. Austrian Nazis in black uniforms march down the street. 01:07:39 Pan across huge crowds, probably waiting for Hitler to appear at Heldenplatz on March 15. Lots of flags and hands in the air saluting. 01:08:18 Hitler is visible in his car through the crowd. Close-up of ecstatic girls' faces. German soldiers march past Goering (?). German police (?) hold back the crowds. Very long shot of Hitler as he appears briefly on the balcony of the Hotel Imperial. A wide empty street in the foreground and SA men holding back crowds in the background. Hitler appears again, closer this time, riding down the street in his open car, followed by tanks and other military vehicles and men on horseback. Another shot of Hitler riding by. A group of uniformed men holding Nazi flags stand at attention in a courtyard. Some look to be SA and some are Hitler Youth. They salute; they are probably taking an oath of allegiance. 01:12:32 Goebbels stands on a balcony and speaks into microphones. Shots of the crowd. A flock of doves or pigeons is released and flies into the air. Hitler stands on the balcony, first alone then with Goebbels, as the crowd salutes wildly. These scenes are from April 9, 1938 (see diary entry below). The birds were released to carry the news of the peaceful annexation back to Germany.

    Letter dated March 10: "When some small group dared to respond to "Heil Hitler" with "Heil Schuschnigg," there was usually a sharp exchange of words containing some insulting remarks about the Jews, with a final exchange of blows...A crowd of Nazis would stop in front of a Jewish store and shout their heads off while the poor frightened owner looked on helplessely from upper windows. It was really dreadful."

    March 11 diary entry: "Streets full of marching, shouting crowds. Followed one and heard "Schuschnigg ist zurueckgetreten [Schuchnigg has resigned]." Policemen seemed to be leaving the center of the action...Saw a policeman give a Nazi salute, called a traitor, but before long, all were giving. Armbands, flags, swastikas appeared like magic."

    March 15 diary entry: "The "Fuehrer" due to speak at 11 in Heldenplatz. We went and hope we got some good pictures of the saluting crowds, as well as of him at his hotel...Meanwhile troops had arrived and tanks and machine guns etc. etc. till they filled the streets & no cars were running. Army of Occupation!"

    April 9 diary entry: "Der tag des Grossdeutschen Reiches!" We go early and see the arrival of Hitler at the Rathaus received by Burgomeister; announcement of Day by Goebbels; 2 min of silence...carrier pigeons released; Fuehrer appears -- salutes, heils, songs."

    Letter dated April 10: "Hitler arrived in Vienna at eleven o'clock and proceeded by auto to the City Hall...at one minute before twelve the formal proclamation of the "Tag des Grossdeutschen Reiches" was made from the balcony of the City Halll...Then Hitler appeared on the balcony and everyone "heiled" and saluted and yelled (with two notable exceptions)...Ross and I were at the City Hall, then roamed the town taking pictures until three o'clock...."
    Duration
    00:08:09
    Date
    Event:  March-April 1938
    Locale
    Vienna, Austria
    Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Stan Baker
    Contributor
    Camera Operator: Ross A. Baker
    Subject:
    Biography
    Ross Allen Baker was born on November 13, 1886, in Greencastle, Indiana, to Philip S. and Luemma Allen Baker. His father was a chemistry professor at DePauw University. Ross received a BA in chemistry from DePauw and a PhD in 1914 from the University of Wisconsin. He married Helen Fredericka Porter on December 30, 1914. The couple had five sons: Philip, Porter, Frederick, Stanley, and Raymond. He held various teaching positions throughout the US and in England. He was a national counselor for the Boy Scouts of American and helped write the merit badge booklet. During World War I (1914-1918), Ross served in the Chemical Warfare Service specializing in the use of mustard gas. He later became active in efforts to have nations ban the use of biological and chemical weapons in the League of Nations, and later in the United Nations. He was active in several professional associations. In 1928, he was a US delegate for an International Union of Chemistry meeting at the League of Nations and, in 1938, a US delegate to the International Congress of Chemistry in Rome, Italy. In 1937, Ross held a position as professor of chemistry at the City University of New York. During the 1930s, there had been technological advances in optics and photography in European universities and American scientists sought to emulate this work. Ross received a sabbatical leave to take courses in microchemistry at the University of Vienna. Ross, his wife, and three of their five sons lived in Vienna from early 1937 until May 1938; summers were spent in travel. In May 1938, the family accompanied Ross to Rome and also witnessed public events for the summit meeting of Hitler and Mussolini. They travelled the rest of the summer and then returned to the US. Ross retired from San Diego State. He passed away, age 92, in 1978 in San Diego, Ca.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Silent
    Genre/Form
    Amateur.
    B&W / Color
    Black & White
    Image Quality
    Excellent
    Time Code
    01:04:31:00 to 01:13:39:00
    Film Format
    • Master
    • Master 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - reversal original - B-wind
      Master 2828 Video: Digital Betacam - NTSC - small
      Master 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - reversal original - B-wind
      Master 2828 Video: Digital Betacam - NTSC - small
      Master 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - reversal original - B-wind
      Master 2828 Video: Digital Betacam - NTSC - small
      Master 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - reversal original - B-wind
      Master 2828 Video: Digital Betacam - NTSC - small
    • Preservation
    • Preservation 2828 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - silent - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2828 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2828 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - silent - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2828 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2828 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - silent - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2828 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2828 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - silent - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2828 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
    • User
    • User 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - answer print - A-wind
      User 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - answer print - A-wind
      User 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - answer print - A-wind
      User 2828 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - answer print - A-wind

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    You do not require further permission from the Museum to access this archival media.
    Copyright
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Conditions on Use
    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum places no restrictions on use of this material. You do not require further permission from the Museum to reproduce or use this film footage.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Film Provenance
    The donor's father, Ross Baker, a chemist and professor at the City University of New York, was on a six-month sabbatical studying at the University of Vienna when the Germans entered Austria in March, 1938. Baker's wife, Helen, and three of his five sons were also living in Vienna. In September 2006, the youngest son, Stan, donated two reels of 16mm black and white film shot by his mother and father in Austria and Italy in 1938 to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In addition to the footage, Mr. Baker donated other items from his time in Vienna, including pro-German propaganda leaflets, posters, and newspapers, the 16mm Kodak camera used to shoot the film, and his mother's diaries and letters, which detail her thoughts and perceptions of the events as they occurred.
    Note
    Note that the sequences from 01:08:22 to 01:08:57 and 01:12:19 to 01:13:39 are from Austrian newsreels. The second segment containing several shots of the Hitler/Goebels speech on the balcony of city hall on April 9 corresponds to Ostmark Wochenschau issue #16B/38 (issued April 15). The Bakers either could not shoot there since photography was banned, or were disappointed with their results, so spliced in the professional footage.

    This film is featured in the Ephemeral Films Project: National Socialism in Austria. Watch the historic film through an innovative film player showing contemporary images, geographical mapping, and shot-level analysis here: http://efilms.ushmm.org/film_player?movieID=41&movieSig=EF-NS_041_USHMM&movieSpeed=18
    Film Source
    Stanley A. Baker
    File Number
    Legacy Database File: 4893
    Record last modified:
    2024-02-21 08:02:34
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn1004058

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