.
Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, third from left. During the
occupation of the Ruhr in 1923, the directorate of the Krupp works ordered its employees to cease work, in line with the German policy of
passive resistance to the occupation. A French military court sentenced Gustav Krupp to 15 years forced labour, though he was released on parole after six months once the German government abandoned its passive resistance strategy. The
Versailles Treaty prevented Germany from making armaments and
submarines, forcing Krupp to significantly reduce his labour force. His company diversified to agricultural equipment, vehicles and consumer goods. However, using the profits from the Vickers patent deal and subsidies from the
Weimar government, Krupp secretly began the rearming of Germany with the ink barely dry on the treaty of Versailles. It secretly continued to work on
artillery through subsidiaries in
Sweden, and built submarine pens in the
Netherlands. In the 1930s, it restarted manufacture of
tanks such as the
Tiger I and other war materials, again using foreign subsidiaries. Krupp was a member of the
Prussian State Council from 1921 to 1933. While Krupp was an avowed
monarchist, his first loyalty was to whoever held power. He once left a business meeting in disgust when another industrialist, who was the one hosting the meeting, referred to the late President
Friedrich Ebert as "that saddlemaker"
(Der Sattelhersteller). Krupp initially opposed the
Nazis. However, after Hitler became chancellor of Germany, at the
secret meeting with Adolf Hitler and leading German industrialists on February 20, 1933, he contributed one million
Reichsmark to the Nazi party's fund for the
March 1933 election, which enabled Hitler to take control of the government. After Hitler won power, Krupp became, as
Fritz Thyssen later put it, "a super Nazi", and contributed to the
Adolf Hitler Fund of German Trade and Industry which was established in June 1933 to support the Nazis. As president of the
Reichsverband of German industry he led the effort to expel its Jewish members. Like many German nationalists, Krupp believed that the Nazis could be used to end the Republic, and then be pushed aside to restore the Kaiser and the old elites. When all parties were abolished and civil liberties suspended following the
Reichstag fire and Hitler's grab for absolute power, Krupp found that he and the rest of the old elites were firmly in the grip of the Nazis; the movement they had hoped to ride back into power upon had instead emasculated them. Despite this, Krupp was always flexible, and cooperated with Hitler's dictatorship. Hitler had tried to gain entry to the Krupp factories in 1929, but was rebuffed because Krupp felt he would see some of the secret armament work there and reveal it to the world. Bertha Krupp never liked Hitler even though she never complained when the company's bottom line rose through the armaments contracts and production. She referred to him as "that certain gentleman"
(Dieser gewisse Herr) and pleaded illness when Hitler came on an official tour in 1934. Her daughter Irmgard acted as hostess. ==World War II==