Anti-Nazi drawing published in the PM newspaper For the State
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn84805-irn4754 an entity of type: RecordSet
Leon Schleifer was born in 1900 in Germany. He served in the German army at the end of World War I (1914-1918). He became a political cartoonist and his work was published in the anti-Nazi press. He also specialized in courtroom trial sketches. After the appointment of Hitler as Chancellor in 1933, Schliefer emigrated to the United States. He changed his name to William Sharp and continued his career as an editorial cartoonist and illustrator. His work was published in the New York Times, Life Magazine, and other publications. He died in 1961, age sixty-one years.
The drawing was aquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1991.
1940 October 27
irn4754
Anti-Nazi drawing published in the PM newspaper
For the State
overall: Height: 14.020 inches (35.611 cm) | Width: 20.000 inches (50.8 cm)
Four Storm Troop bullies in 1932 haouled an enemy of the Nazis out of his house in Beuthen, Silesia, and stomped him to death. They were sentenced to death and while they were awaiting execution, Hitler sent them congratulations. When he became Chancellor, they were pardoned. One or two of them got very good jobs in the Nazi party. In that year, political murders jumped from eight a month to 19 a month in June, went to 86 a month in July.
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Image of six gentlemen standing in Nazi uniforms, five of whom have visible swastikas on their left arm; the sixth man, whose right side faces the viewer, is being crowned with a garland upon his head by one of the other figures; all look on at the scene, one on right hand side holding a garland on a pillow.
lower right hand corner, in ink,"The Bother slayers are hailed as hero" (written in hand other than the artist's)