Lewald was born in 1860. His aunt was Jewish novelist
Fanny Lewald. Lewald became a
civil servant in
Prussia in 1885, and became the acting Reich Commissioner in 1903. In that role, Lewald attended the
1904 World's Fair (held along with the
Olympic Games), where he disagreed with
Kaiser Wilhelm II over whether the
Deutscher Olympischer Sportbund, of which he was the President, should be politically independent. After Berlin won the right to stage the
1916 Summer Olympics (which were later cancelled due to the outbreak of
World War I), Lewald encouraged the German Reich to invest in the games, arguing that it was comparable to a World Trade Exhibition. By the end of World War I, Lewald was so well connected as the highest civil servant of Imperial Germany that he personally wrote the abdication speech of the last imperial government. At the time of the
Kapp Putsch, Lewald was the acting Head of Government as all ministers had left Berlin. He refused being forced at gun-point to provide government funds for elements in the military in revolt. Lewald, a conservative, was getting into more and more difficulties with the Social Democratic governments and eventually retired from the Civil Service in 1923. However, he retained more than ten honorary positions, e.g. in charge of German international student exchange, serving on the boards of several prominent museums and the National Olympic Committee; he had been the under
Secretary of State. and
Avery Brundage at the
1936 Summer Olympics == 1936 Olympics ==