In 1927, Bormann joined the Nazi Party. His membership number was 60,508. He joined the
Schutzstaffel (SS) on 1 January 1937 with number 278,267. By special order of
Heinrich Himmler in 1938, Bormann was granted SS number 555 to reflect his
Alter Kämpfer (Old Fighter) status.
Early career Bormann took a job with
Der Nationalsozialist, a weekly paper edited by Nazi Party member
Hans Severus Ziegler, who was deputy
Gauleiter (party leader) for
Thuringia. After joining the Nazi Party in 1927, Bormann began duties as regional press officer, but his lack of public-speaking skills made him ill-suited to this position. He soon put his organisational skills to use as business manager for the
Gau (region). In October 1928, Bormann moved to Munich where he worked in the SA insurance office. Initially the Nazi Party provided coverage through insurance companies for members who were hurt or killed in the frequent violent skirmishes with members of other political parties. As insurance companies were unwilling to pay out claims for such activities, in 1930 Bormann set up the
Hilfskasse der NSDAP (Nazi Party Auxiliary Fund), a benefits and relief fund directly administered by the party. Each party member was required to pay premiums and might receive compensation for injuries sustained while conducting party business. Payments out of the fund were made solely at Bormann's discretion. He began to gain a reputation as a financial expert, and many party members felt personally indebted to him after receiving benefits from the fund. In addition to its stated purpose, the fund was used as a last-resort source of funding for the Nazi Party, which was chronically short of money at that time. After the Nazi Party's success in the
1930 general election, where they won 107 seats, party membership grew dramatically. By 1932 the fund was collecting per year. Bormann also worked on the staff of the SA from 1928 to 1930, and while there he founded the National Socialist Automobile Corps, precursor to the
National Socialist Motor Corps. The organisation was responsible for co-ordinating the donated use of motor vehicles belonging to party members, and later expanded to training members in automotive skills.
Reichsleiter and head of the party chancellery After the
Machtergreifung (Nazi Party seizure of power) in January 1933, the relief fund was repurposed to provide general accident and property insurance, so Bormann resigned from its administration. He applied for a transfer and was accepted as chief of staff in the office of
Rudolf Hess, the
Deputy Führer, on 1 July 1933. Bormann also served as personal secretary to Hess from July 1933 until 12 May 1941. Hess's department was responsible for settling disputes within the party and acted as an intermediary between the party and the state regarding policy decisions and legislation. Bormann used his position to create an extensive bureaucracy and involve himself in as much of the decision-making as possible. On 10 October 1933 Hitler named Bormann
Reichsleiter (national leader – the second highest political rank) of the Nazi Party. At the
November 1933 parliamentary election, Bormann was elected as a
Reichstag deputy from electoral constituency 5 (
Frankfurt an der Oder); he was reelected in 1936 and 1938. By June 1934, Bormann was gaining acceptance into Hitler's inner circle and accompanied him everywhere, providing briefings and summaries of events and requests. In 1935, Bormann was appointed as overseer of renovations at the
Berghof, Hitler's property at
Obersalzberg. In the early 1930s, Hitler bought the property, which he had been renting since 1925 as a vacation retreat. After he became
chancellor, Hitler drew up plans for expansion and remodelling of the main house and put Bormann in charge of construction. Bormann commissioned the construction of barracks for the SS guards, roads and footpaths, garages for motor vehicles, a guesthouse, accommodation for staff, and other amenities. Retaining title in his own name, Bormann bought up adjacent farms until the entire complex covered . Members of the inner circle built houses within the perimeter, beginning with
Hermann Göring,
Albert Speer, and Bormann himself. Bormann commissioned the building of the
Kehlsteinhaus (Eagle's Nest), a tea house high above the Berghof, as a gift to Hitler on his fiftieth birthday (20 April 1939). Hitler seldom used the building, but Bormann liked to impress guests by taking them there. While Hitler was in residence at the Berghof, Bormann was constantly in attendance and acted as Hitler's personal secretary. In this capacity, he began to control the flow of information and access to Hitler. During this period, Hitler gave Bormann control of his personal finances. In addition to salaries as chancellor and president, Hitler's income included money raised through royalties collected on his book
Mein Kampf and the use of his image on postage stamps. Bormann set up the
Adolf Hitler Fund of German Trade and Industry, which collected money from German industrialists on Hitler's behalf. Some of the funds received through this programme were disbursed to various party leaders, but Bormann retained most of it for Hitler's personal use. Bormann and others took notes of Hitler's thoughts expressed over dinner and in monologues late into the night and preserved them. The material was published after the war as ''
Hitler's Table Talk''. Historian Mikael Nilsson contends that Bormann (along with
Henry Picker and
Heinrich Heim, who transcribed the material) distorted the table talks so that the content would be useful to help him win disagreements within the Nazi leadership. Picker noted Bormann would make him insert fictitious statements, and that Bormann wanted their notes to fit in with his own fight against the churches. Nilsson notes that Bormann seemed willing to pursue his anti-Christian stance behind Hitler's back. The office of the Deputy Führer had final approval over civil service appointments, and Bormann reviewed the personnel files and made the decisions regarding appointments. This power impinged on the purview of Minister of the Interior
Wilhelm Frick, and was an example of the overlapping responsibilities typical of the Nazi regime. Bormann travelled everywhere with Hitler, including trips to Austria in 1938 after the
Anschluss (the annexation of Austria into
Nazi Germany), and to the
Sudetenland after the signing of the
Munich Agreement later that year. Bormann was placed in charge of organising the 1938
Nuremberg Rally, a major annual party event. Hitler intentionally played top party members against one another and the Nazi Party against the civil service. In this way, he fostered distrust, competition, and infighting among his subordinates to consolidate and maximise his own power. He typically did not give written orders; instead he communicated with them verbally or had them conveyed through Bormann. Falling out of favour with Bormann meant that access to Hitler was cut off. Bormann proved to be a master of intricate political infighting. Along with his ability to control access to Hitler, this enabled him to curtail the power of
Joseph Goebbels, Göring, Himmler,
Alfred Rosenberg,
Robert Ley,
Hans Frank, Speer, and other high-ranking officials, many of whom became his enemies. This ruthless and continuous infighting for power, influence, and Hitler's favour came to characterise the inner workings of the Third Reich. As
World War II progressed, Hitler's attention became focused on foreign affairs and the conduct of the war to the exclusion of all else. Hess, not directly engaged in either of these endeavours, became increasingly sidelined from the affairs of the nation and from Hitler's attention; Bormann had successfully supplanted Hess in many of his duties and usurped his position at Hitler's side. Hess was concerned that Germany would face a war on two fronts as plans progressed for
Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the
Soviet Union scheduled to take place later that year. He flew solo to Britain on 10 May 1941 to seek peace negotiations with the British government. He was arrested on arrival and spent the rest of the war as a British prisoner, eventually receiving a life sentence – for crimes against peace (planning and preparing a war of aggression), and conspiracy with other German leaders to commit crimes – at the
Nuremberg trials in 1946. Speer later said Hitler described Hess's departure as one of the worst blows of his life, as he considered it a personal betrayal. Hitler ordered Hess to be shot should he return to Germany and abolished the post of Deputy Führer on 12 May 1941, assigning Hess's former duties to Bormann, with the title of Head of the
Parteikanzlei (
Party Chancellery). In this position he was responsible for all Nazi Party appointments, and was answerable only to Hitler. By a Führer decree (
Führererlass) on 29 May, Bormann also succeeded Hess on the six-member
Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich, which operated as a war cabinet. He simultaneously was awarded cabinet rank equivalent to a
Reichsminister without portfolio. Associates began to refer to him as the "
Brown Eminence", although never to his face. Bormann's power and effective reach broadened considerably during the war. By early 1943, the war produced a labour crisis for the regime. Hitler created a three-man committee with representatives of the State, the army, and the Party in an attempt to centralise control of the war economy. The committee members were
Hans Lammers (head of the
Reich Chancellery), Field Marshal
Wilhelm Keitel, chief of the
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (Armed Forces High Command; OKW), and Bormann, who controlled the Party. The committee was intended to independently propose measures regardless of the wishes of various ministries, with Hitler reserving most final decisions to himself. The committee, soon known as the
Dreierausschuß (Committee of Three), met eleven times between January and August 1943. However, they ran up against resistance from Hitler's cabinet ministers, who headed deeply entrenched spheres of influence and were excluded from the committee. Seeing it as a threat to their power, Goebbels, Göring, and Speer worked together to bring it down. The result was that nothing changed, and the Committee of Three declined into irrelevance.
Role in Kirchenkampf Article 24 of the
National Socialist Program, issued in 1920, advocated for
positive Christianity, and a
Reichskonkordat (Reich Concordat) treaty with the
Vatican was signed in 1933, purporting to guarantee religious freedom for Catholics. But many Nazis believed that Christianity was fundamentally incompatible with Nazism. Bormann, who was strongly anti-Christian, agreed. Historian
Alan Bullock comments that out of political expediency, Hitler intended to postpone the elimination of the Christian churches until after the war, but his repeated hostile statements against the church indicated to his subordinates that a continuation of the
Kirchenkampf (church struggle) would be tolerated and even encouraged. Bormann was one of the leading proponents of the ongoing campaign against the Christian churches. Speer notes in his memoirs that while drafting plans for
Welthauptstadt Germania, the planned rebuilding of Berlin, he was told by Bormann that churches were not to be allocated any building sites. As part of the campaign against the
Catholic Church, hundreds of monasteries in Germany and Austria were confiscated by the Gestapo and their occupants were expelled. In 1941, the Catholic Bishop of Münster,
Clemens August Graf von Galen, publicly protested against this persecution and against
Action T4, the Nazi
involuntary euthanasia programme under which the mentally ill, physically deformed, and incurably sick were to be killed. In a series of sermons that received international attention, he criticised the programme as illegal and immoral. His sermons led to a widespread
protest movement among church leaders, the strongest protest against a Nazi policy up until that point. Bormann and others called for Galen to be hanged, but Hitler and Goebbels concluded that Galen's death would only be viewed as a martyrdom and lead to further unrest. Hitler decided to deal with the issue when the war was over.
George Mosse wrote of Bormann's beliefs:
Richard Overy describes Bormann as an atheist.
Personal Secretary to the Führer Preoccupied with military matters and spending most of his time at his military headquarters on the
eastern front, Hitler came to rely more and more on Bormann to handle the domestic policies of the country. On 12 April 1943, Hitler officially appointed Bormann as Personal Secretary to the
Führer. Speer described Bormann as having
de facto control over all domestic matters, and this new appointment gave him the power to act in an official capacity in any matter. Historian
Jonathan Petropoulos notes that all
Führer decrees were routed through Lammers at the Reich Chancellery, where state affairs were handled. , Yugoslavia, April 1941 (now Maribor, Slovenia) Bormann was invariably the advocate of extremely harsh, radical measures when it came to the treatment of
Jews, the conquered eastern peoples, and prisoners of war. He signed the decree of 31 May 1941 extending the 1935
Nuremberg Laws to the annexed territories of the East. Thereafter, he signed the decree of 9 October 1942 prescribing that the permanent
Final Solution in
Greater Germany could no longer be solved by emigration, but only by the use of "ruthless force in the special camps of the East", that is, extermination in
Nazi death camps. A further decree, signed by Bormann on 1 July 1943, gave
Adolf Eichmann absolute powers over Jews, who now came under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Gestapo. Historian
Richard J. Evans estimates that 5.5 to 6 million Jews, representing two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe, were exterminated by the Nazi regime in the course of
The Holocaust. Knowing Hitler viewed the
Slavs as inferior, Bormann opposed the introduction of German criminal law into the conquered eastern territories. He lobbied for and eventually achieved a strict separate penal code that implemented
martial law for the Polish and Jewish inhabitants of these areas. The "Edict on Criminal Law Practices against Poles and Jews in the Incorporated Eastern Territories", promulgated 4 December 1941, permitted corporal punishment and death sentences for even the most trivial of offences. Bormann supported the hard-line approach of
Erich Koch,
Reichskommissar in
Reichskommissariat Ukraine, in his brutal treatment of Slavic people.
Alfred Rosenberg, serving as head of the
Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories, favoured a more moderate policy. After touring collective farms around
Vinnytsia, Ukraine, Bormann was concerned about the health and good physical constitution of the population, as he was concerned that they could constitute a danger to the regime. After discussion with Hitler, he issued a policy directive to Rosenberg that read in part: Bormann and Himmler shared responsibility for the
Volkssturm (people's militia), which drafted all remaining able-bodied men aged 16 to 60 into a last-ditch militia founded on 18 October 1944. Poorly equipped and trained, the men were sent to fight on the eastern front, where nearly 175,000 of them were killed without having any discernible impact on the Soviet advance. In early 1945, Bormann edited the
Bormann dictations of supposed remarks made by Hitler to Bormann; the authenticity as well as the degree of editing applied by Bormann to Hitler's original remarks are disputed among historians.
Last days in Berlin On 16 January 1945, Hitler transferred his headquarters to the
Führerbunker ("Leader's bunker") in Berlin, where he (along with Bormann, Bormann's secretary
Else Krüger, and others) remained until the end of April. The
Führerbunker was located under the Reich Chancellery garden in the government district of the city centre. The
Battle of Berlin, the final major Soviet offensive of the war, began on 16 April 1945. By 19 April, the
Red Army started to encircle the city. On 20 April, his 56th birthday, Hitler made his last trip above ground. In the ruined garden of the Reich Chancellery, he awarded
Iron Crosses to boy soldiers of the
Hitler Youth. That afternoon, Berlin was bombarded by Soviet artillery for the first time. On 23 April,
Albert Bormann left the bunker complex and flew to the Obersalzberg. He and several others had been ordered by Hitler to leave Berlin. In the early morning hours of 29 April 1945,
Wilhelm Burgdorf, Goebbels,
Hans Krebs and Bormann witnessed and signed
Hitler's last will and testament. In the will, Hitler described Bormann as "my most faithful Party comrade" and named him executor of the estate. That same night Hitler married
Eva Braun in a civil ceremony. As Soviet forces continued to fight their way into the centre of Berlin, Hitler and Braun
committed suicide on the afternoon of 30 April. Braun took
cyanide and Hitler shot himself. Pursuant to Hitler's instructions, their bodies were carried up to the Reich Chancellery garden and burned. In accordance with Hitler's last wishes, Bormann was named as
Party Minister, thus officially confirming that he held the top position in the Party. Grand Admiral
Karl Dönitz was appointed as the new
Reichspräsident (President of Germany) and Goebbels became
head of government and
Chancellor of Germany. Hitler did not name any successor to the title Führer. Goebbels and his wife
Magda committed suicide the next day. The Battle in Berlin ended when General der Artillerie
Helmuth Weidling, commander of the Berlin Defence Area, unconditionally surrendered the city to General
Vasily Chuikov, commander of the
Soviet 8th Guards Army on 2 May. ==Death, rumours of survival and discovery of remains==