Hellmuth Heye
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Hellmuth Heye | |
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9 August 1895 — 10 November 1970 (aged 75) | |
Place of birth | Beckingen |
Place of death | Mittelheim |
Allegiance | Germany |
Years of service | 1914-1945 |
Rank | Admiral |
Commands held | Admiral Hipper |
Awards | Ritterkreuz |
Hellmuth Guido Alexander Heye (9 August 1895 in Beckingen – 10 November 1970 in Mittelheim) was a German admiral in World War II and politician in post-war Germany.
[edit] Naval career
Heye graduated from high school in Berlin in early 1914 and immediately joined the Imperial Navy. From April 1939 to September 1940 he commanded the Heavy Cruiser Admiral Hipper. While taking his ship to Trondheim in April 1940 to land invasion troops there (Operation Weserübung), he encountered the British destroyer HMS Glowworm and sank it. Heye reportedly sent a message to the British Admiralty through the Red Cross praising the gallantry of Glowworm's commander and crew, and this is said to have contributed to LtCdr Gerard Roope receiving (posthumously) the first Victoria Cross of World War II.
In 1941 Heye was promoted to Vice Admiral, and from September to November 1942 he was commanding admiral of the German naval forces in the Black Sea. From April 1944 onward he was commanding admiral of the small naval combat forces, which included mini-submarines, combat divers, etc. He received the Knight's Cross on 18 January 1941.
[edit] Civilian career
After the war Heye published a number of works on naval strategy, history and warfare. He subsequently advised the German government on issues concerning the establishment and organization of a new military. In 1953 he joined the centrist party CDU (Christian Democratic Union) of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and represented this party in the Federal Parliament (Bundestag) from 1953 to 1961, elected for the district of Wilhelmshaven-Friesland.
On 8 November 1961 the Bundestag elected him unanimously as its Ombudsman for the Military (Wehrbeauftragter). In the autumn of 1964, Heye published a series of articles in a German news journal, warning of a risk of the German military once again drifting into isolation from society at large. This triggered a vigorous and sharply worded debate between him and the ministry of defense. Frustrated by what he perceived to be inadequate support from Parliament, Heye resigned his position on 10 November 1964.
[edit] References
- Walther-Peer Fellgiebel (2000), Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Podzun-Pallas. ISBN 3-7909-0284-5
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