After leaving Nagold for Munich, Schroeder was employed as a shorthand-typist in the
Oberste SA-Führung, the
Sturmabteilung (SA) high command. There she got to know
Adolf Hitler in early 1933, when he had just been appointed
chancellor. He took a liking to Schroeder and hired her in June 1933. Schroeder lived at Hitler's World War II Eastern Front military headquarters, known as the
Wolfsschanze (Wolf's Lair) near
Rastenburg, from 1941 until he and his staff departed for the last time on 20 November 1944. When Hitler withdrew his headquarters to the
Führerbunker in Berlin in January 1945, she went with him and his staff. Before late April 1945 Hitler would regularly have lunch with Schroeder and fellow secretary
Johanna Wolf. On 20 April 1945, during the
Battle of Berlin, Schroeder, Wolf,
Albert Bormann, Admiral
Karl-Jesko von Puttkamer, Dr
Theodor Morell, Dr
Hugo Blaschke, six shorthand-typists and several others were ordered by Hitler to leave Berlin by aircraft for the
Obersalzberg. The group flew out of Berlin on different flights on aircraft of the
Fliegerstaffel des Führers over the following three days. Her account of her service as Hitler's secretary (
Er war mein Chef, Herbig, 2002) is an important source in the study of the
Nazi years. ==Life after the war==