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Otto Harder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German footballer and SS officer (1892–1956)

Otto Harder
Personal information
Full nameOtto Fritz Harder
Date of birth(1892-11-25)25 November 1892
Place of birthBraunschweig, Germany
Date of death4 March 1956(1956-03-04) (aged 63)
Place of deathHamburg,West Germany
Height1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)[1]
Position(s)Forward
Youth career
–1909FC Hohenzollern Braunschweig
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1909–1912Eintracht Braunschweig2+(2+)
1912Hamburger FC
1912–1913Eintracht Braunschweig1+(1+)
1913–1919Hamburger FC6+(12+)
1917Stettiner SC (wartime guest)
1919–1931Hamburger SV211(378[2])
1931–1934Victoria Hamburg7+(9+)
Total227+(402+)
International career
1914–1926Germany15(14)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Otto Fritz Harder (Nickname: Tull Harder; 25 November 1892 – 4 March 1956) was a Germanfootballer and convictedwar criminal who played forEintracht Braunschweig,Hamburger SV, andVictoria Hamburg. He won twoGerman football championships and played 15 times in theGermany national team. Harder was anSS officer and a warder at theAhlem concentration camp inHanover.

Career

[edit]

Harder was born inBraunschweig. He spent most of his career with Hamburger SV, scoring over 378 goals in 211 games.[3] His football fame in Germany was comparable withUwe Seeler's fame.[4][5]

At the age of 16 he was discovered for football by FC Hohenzollern Braunschweig, and his impact was such that not even twelve months passed before the main club in the city,Eintracht Braunschweig, incorporated him into his ranks. There he received the nickname of "Tull" with which he would be known throughout his career, since his style of play was reminiscent of that ofTottenham Hotspur's center forward at the time,Walter Tull, the first black professional English player who died in action duringWorld War I.

Initially, and since he was barely 17 years old, the young Tull Harder was only called up to play friendly matches with the Eintracht Braunschweig reserve team, which made him nervous, although this situation would not last long, since his quality and his tremendous physique ended up prevailing and he managed to make a career, as they say. At the beginning of 1912 he left forHamburger SV for a few months. Eintracht Braunschweig fans wanted to avoid the departure of their young star at all costs. For this reason, they did not let him take the train to Hamburg, which he had to do almost secretly 25 kilometers from there, at the station in the neighboring town ofPeine. Ultimately, Harder would play one more season with his hometown team before finally committing to Hamburger SV to play on the banks of theElbe.

After the Great War, Harder soon established himself as the team's great star. Through him, Hamburger SV became one of the great German football teams in the 1920s, first reaching the1922 German football championship against1.FC Nürnberg, which officially did not have a champion, and finally making up for it. a year later, in 1923, the year in which Hamburger SV lifted its first German championship title after defeatingUnion Oberschöneweide by a clear 3–0. He would repeat that success in 1928, when he was already 36 years old. That season he established a record for eternity by scoring, on 15 January 1928, Harder scored no less than 12 goals againstWandsbeker FC [de] with the final score was 18–5.[6]

Career in the Nazi Party

[edit]

Following his football career, Harder ran an insurance agency, and in October 1932, he became a member of theNSDAP, before joining theSS in May 1933. In August 1939, he was drafted into theWaffen-SS, and served shortly atSachsenhausen concentration camp, then atNeuengamme in Hamburg by the end of that year.[7] On 30 November 1944, Harder became an SS-Hauptscharführer and a commander (Schutzhaftlagerführer) at the Ahlem camp in Hanover.[8] On 30 January 1945, he was promoted to SS-Untersturmführer (equivalentsecond lieutenant). He also served as a camp commander inUelzen, a subcamp of Neuengamme, which was evacuated under his leadership on 16–17 April due to British attacks, in which prisoners were transferred to the main camp. In May 1945, he was captured by the British military and was taken toIserbrook. Due to health issues, he was initially released, but was arrested again.[9]

AfterWorld War II, Harder was tried forwar crimes by the British military court at theCurio house inRotherbaum. On 6 May 1947, he was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment.[4] After the trial, Hamburger SV excluded him for a short time. However, his sentence was later reduced to ten years in prison, of which he ended up serving only four years. He was released fromWerl Prison before Christmas 1951. Harder later moved toBendestorf,[10] where he worked as an insurance agent until his death on 4 March 1956 in Hamburg.[9]

The Resistance Man and the Football Hero

[edit]

In his 2023 book,The Resistance Man and the Football Hero by Frank Krake, the author contrasts the life of SS camp commandant Harder who "created a living hell" (according toHenry Kissinger, one of the US 84th Division which liberated theAhlem[11]concentration camp), with the life of Gerhard Nijland, a Dutch resistance hero who became a prisoner in Harder's camp. According toThe Times, Nijland was captured after his resistance cell raided the De Nederlandsche Bank which was run by a Dutch Nazi andcollaborator. (The raid had been approved by the Dutch Government in exile). Sent to Harder's camp at Ahlem, Nijland was a forced labourer alongside Jewish slave workers. Nijland died in April 1945 five days after being liberated by the Americans, and was buried in an unmarked grave.[12]

Death

[edit]

Harder died in a hospital inHamburg after surgery in 1956.[4] The Hamburger SV published an obituary

Er war (...) stets ein guter Freund und treuer Kamerad.

— Vereinsnachrichten des Hamburger Sport-Verein, April 1956

'He was (...) always a good friend and loyal comrade.'[10]

For the1974 FIFA World Cup, thesenate of Hamburg published the bookletHamburg '74. Fußballweltmeisterschaft, which praised among othersJosef Posipal, Uwe Seeler and Harder as role models for the young. The sheets mentioning Harder were removed.[10]

Style of play

[edit]

When Harder had the ball at his feet and off he went racing, he would plough through defenders. Then he took his measurements again and while the opposing goalkeeper stood there, pale and helpless, knowing that he could not do anything to stop the shot that was coming. The ball was already in the corner of the goal.[1]

Despite being the height he was in 1918 (1.90m) Harder was quick on his heels, out-pacing defenders and leaving him through on goal, scoring regularly. In 1918, he ran 100m in just over 11 seconds.[13]

Career statistics

[edit]

Club

[edit]
Appearances and goals by club, season, and competition.Only official games are included in this table.[2][3][14][15]
ClubSeasonRegional ChampionshipNorthern GermanyGerman ChampionshipNorth German CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Eintracht Braunschweig1909–100000000000
1910–110000000000
1911–12002+2+000000
Hamburger SV19120000000000
Eintracht Braunschweig1912–13001+1+000000
Hamburger SV1913–146+12+0000006+12+
1914–150000000000
1915–160000000000
1916–170000000000
1917–180000000000
1918–19001+1+000000
1919–2016260000001626
1920–2117282310002031
1921–228125743001722
1922–2313454135002051
1923–2414284920002037
1924–25142761011232341
1925–26122641036001942
1926–2714346924372554
1927–2815424737002256
1928–2910192421001424
1929–302000000020
1930–31810000000810
Victoria Hamburg1931–327+9+0000007+9+
1932–330000000000
1933–340000000000
Total14231841642127510209419

International

[edit]
Scores and results list Germany's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Harder goal.
List of international goals scored by Otto Harder[16]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
15 April 1914Oude Stadion,Amsterdam, Netherlands Netherlands3–14–4Friendly
24 November 1923Stadion Hoheluft,Hamburg, Germany Norway1–01–0Friendly
331 August 1924Deutsches Stadion,Berlin, Germany Sweden1–11–4Friendly
421 September 1924Üllői út,Budapest, Hungary Hungary1–31–4Friendly
514 December 1924Platz des Stuttgarter Sportclub,Stuttgart, Germany  Switzerland1–11–1Friendly
625 October 1925Stadion Rankhof,Basel, Switzerland  Switzerland1–04–0Friendly
72–0
83–0
918 April 1926Rheinstadion,Düsseldorf, Germany Netherlands3–24–2Friendly
1020 June 1929Stadion im Zerzabelshof,Nuremberg, Germany Sweden1–03–3Friendly
112–2
123–2
1331 October 1929Oude Stadion, Amsterdam, Netherlands Netherlands2–13–2Friendly
143–1

Honours

[edit]

Eintracht Braunschweig

Hamburger SV

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"General-Anzeiger für Dortmund und das gesamte rheinisch-westfälische Industriegebiet. 1927-1933".deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de (in German). 8 November 1932.
  2. ^ab"Strikers"(PDF). historical-lineups.com. p. 43.
  3. ^ab"Otto "Tull" Harder, Mittelstormer Hamburger SV (1912-1931)".
  4. ^abcStaff (26 June 2002),"Tull" Harder - Vom Idol zum Kriegsverbrecher (in German),abendblatt.de, retrieved21 August 2008
  5. ^Peters, Fritz (1942),Tull Harder stürmt für Deutschlands Fussballruhm (in German), Hamburg: Falken,OCLC 72331632
  6. ^Reimer Prüß, Jens (2008).Tore, Punkte, Spieler: die komplette HSV-Statistik (in German). Verlag die Werkstatt. p. 35.ISBN 9783895335860.
  7. ^"Otto "Tull" Harder"(PDF) (in German). media.offenes-archiv.de. 2016.
  8. ^Schwab, Georg (5 May 2004),SS personnel serving at Neuengammer, Axis History site, retrieved21 August 2008
  9. ^ab"Otto Fritz "Tull" Harder" (in German). graeber-fussballgoetter.de. 28 May 2020.
  10. ^abcHeinrich, Arthur,Tull Harder - Eine Karriere in Deutschland*(PDF) (in German), retrieved13 August 2008
  11. ^The lede refers to Ahlem, "The Times" refers to "Ahrlen
  12. ^The Times report, April 3, 2023 page 33
  13. ^Tull Harder stürmt (in German). 1942. p. 57.
  14. ^"Tull Harder - Spielerprofil".
  15. ^"Search".www.europeana.eu.
  16. ^"Otto Harder". eu-football.info. Retrieved31 January 2013.

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
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