The Army Personnel Office (HPA; Heeres Personal Amt, Heerespersonalamt or Heeres Personalamt) was a German military agency formed in 1920 and charged with the personnel matters of all officers and cadets of the army of the Reichswehr and later the Wehrmacht . With increased recruitment of officers in 1935 and especially in the Second World War, it was given multiple new tasks. The growing demands led to numerous organisational changes.
In October 1942, Major General Rudolf Schmundt became the new head of the HPA. After his death from injuries received during the assassination attempt on Hitler's life of 20 July 1944, General Wilhelm Burgdorf took over the function.
The agency had several departments (Abteilung). [1]
No. | Portrait | Chief | Took office | Left office | Time in office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Johann von Braun (1867–1938) | Generalleutnant7 December 1918 | 1 April 1922 | 3 years, 115 days | |
2 | Wilhelm Heye (1869–1947) | Generalleutnant1 April 1922 | 1 October 1923 | 1 year, 183 days | |
3 | Hermann Reinicke (1870–1945) | Generalmajor1 October 1923 | 1 February 1927 | 3 years, 123 days | |
4 | Joachim von Stülpnagel (1880–1968) | Oberst1 February 1927 | 1 October 1929 | 2 years, 242 days | |
5 | Günther von Hammerstein-Equord (1877–1965) | Oberst1 October 1929 | 1 November 1930 | 1 year, 31 days | |
6 | Erich von dem Bussche-Ippenburg (1878–1957) | Generalleutnant1 November 1930 | 1 October 1933 | 2 years, 334 days | |
7 | Viktor von Schwedler (1885–1954) | Oberst1 October 1933 | 4 February 1938 | 4 years, 126 days | |
8 | Bodewin Keitel (1888–1953) | Generalmajor4 February 1938 | 1 October 1942 | 4 years, 239 days | |
9 | Rudolf Schmundt (1896–1944) | Generalmajor1 October 1942 | 1 October 1944 † | 2 years, 0 days | |
10 | Wilhelm Burgdorf (1895–1945) | General der Infanterie12 October 1944 | 2 May 1945 † | 202 days |
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