Anton Haselmayer (12 April 1895 – 22 January 1962) was a German journalist and an early member of the Nazi Party who served as the Gauleiter of Gau Hesse-Nassau South in 1925–1926, but was later dismissed and expelled from the Party. He became a lawyer, but his petitions for reinstatement were repeatedly denied and little is known of his subsequent life.
At the end of 1925, when the large Gau of Hesse-Nassau was divided in two, Haselmayer was named the first Gauleiter for Gau Hesse-Nassau South, which comprised the People's State of Hesse and the southern section of the Prussian Province of Hesse-Nassau, with its capital at Frankfurt am Main.
In these early years of the Party's development when the ban on Adolf Hitler’s public speaking was still in effect, the Gauleiter served as the public face of the Party. Like all Gauleiter, Haselmayer was directly responsible to Hitler and was his personal representative to the Gau. As such, he wielded considerable power over all Party matters within his jurisdiction.
On 23 July 1926, Haselmayer was injured in an attempted assassination attempt in Frankfurt. On 28 July, Hitler wrote a letter to Haselmayer wishing him a speedy recovery and hoping that he would soon be well enough to exact revenge on the perpetrators. Hitler Reden Schriften Anordnungen Februar 1925 bis Januar 1933, Band II: vom Weimarer Parteitag bis zur Reichstagswahl Juli 1926–Mai 1928, Page 33, Document 11: Letter from Hitler to Haselmayer, in German, retrieved 29 January 2021. However, on 22 September 1926, Haselmayer resigned as Gauleiter, ostensibly "for health reasons", though the real reasons for his resignation were never entirely made clear. Furthermore, on 1 October 1928, he was expelled from the Nazi Party.
In 1930, Haselmayer's petition for reinstatement was denied. In March 1936, he obtained a law license and began working as an attorney in Munich. On 5 February 1937, his final petition for clemency and for readmission to the Party was denied. He was even accused of having staged the 1926 attack on himself as a way of improving his standing in the Party. The truth has never been definitively established. No additional details are known of Haselmayer's fate.
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