Abstract
This picture was taken in August 1929 during the 4th NSDAP Reich
Party Congress in Nuremberg. The party rally led to violent
confrontations between National Socialists and Communists, causing the
Nuremberg city council to prevent the party conventions from being held
in Nuremberg for the following two years. This colored photograph shows
22-year-old Horst Wessel (1907-1930), leader of a Berlin SA storm troop,
during the SA’s march through Nuremberg. In addition to uniformed SA
men, some civilians can also be seen returning the Hitler salute. Wessel
had joined the Nazi Party in 1926 as a law student, but dropped out of
college two years later and made a living with odd jobs. A protégé of
the Nazi Party’s Berlin district leader, Joseph Goebbels, he quickly
rose within the SA. The SA storm troop he led was known as a brutal gang
of thugs that sought out confrontations with communist and social
democratic groups. When Wessel was shot dead in his apartment by a KPD
member in 1930, Nazi propaganda stylized him into a martyr. A battle
hymn he had written was named after him and declared the party
anthem.