Albrecht Mertz von Quirnheim
Albrecht Ritter Mertz von Quirnheim (born
25 March 1905; died
21 July 1944) was a
German officer and a
resistance fighter in
Nazi Germany involved in the
July 20 Plot against
Adolf Hitler.
Quirnheim was born to Hermann Ritter Mertz von Quirnheim, a captain on the
Bavarian General Staff, in
Munich. He spent his youth there before his father became head of the Imperial Archive (the
Reichsarchiv) and the family moved to
Potsdam. As a young man, Quirnheim came to know two of his future co-conspirators,
Werner von Haeften and
Hans Bernd von Haeften, through family connections.
Following his
Abitur, Quirnheim joined the
Reichswehr in 1923. His friendship with
Claus von Stauffenberg, who would become the key conspirator in the July 20 Plot, began in 1925. On the outbreak of the
Second World War, Quirnheim was appointed Staff Officer at the General Staff's organizational division.
Quirnheim had initially welcomed
Hitler's seizure of power, but began to distance himself from the régime as he became more aware of its brutality. In 1941, for example, his support for the more humane treatment of civilians in Nazi-occupied
eastern European triggered a dispute between
Alfred Rosenberg (Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories) and
Erich Koch (Reich Commissar for the
Ukraine). In 1942, while being promoted to lieutenant colonel and then to Head of Staff of the 24th Army Corps at the Eastern Front, Quirnheim strengthened his ties to the resistance through his brother-in-law
Wilhelm Dieckmann. He was promoted to colonel in 1943, the same year he married Hilde Baier.
By September 1943, Quirnheim had become involved in the plot to assassinate Hitler. He, his superior General
Friedrich Olbricht and Stauffenberg drew up
Operation Valkyrie, a plan of action to be implemented as soon as Hitler had been killed. Meanwhile, he succeeded Stauffenberg as Chief of Staff at the Army's General Office in
Berlin. Immediately after the attempt on Hitler's life in
East Prussia on 20 July 1944, Quirnheim urged General Olbricht to activate Operation Valkyrie, even though they could not be sure whether Hitler was dead. At about the same time, however, news began to arrive that Hitler had survived the assassination attempt.
Within hours, Quirbheim, Stauffenberg, Olbricht and Werner von Haeften had been arrested, summarily tried by Colonel General
Friedrich Fromm – a quiet supporter who betrayed them once he saw the plot had failed – and were shot and buried in the courtyard of the
Bendlerblock.
Heinrich Himmler subsequently ordered the bodies exhumed, burnt and the ashes scattered.
A few days later, Quirnheim's parents and one of his sisters were arrested by the
Gestapo and his brother-in-law Wilhelm Dieckmann was executed on September 13, 1944.
There is a now a memorial at the spot where Quirnheim and his co-conspirators were shot.
*
List of members of the July 20 plot*
Widerstand*
Photograph of von Quirnheim with ?son