Horrible EXECUTION of Julius Streicher - Bestial NAZI Anti-Semite Fueling Nazi Propaganda Machine

Horrible EXECUTION of Julius Streicher - Bestial NAZI Anti-Semite Fueling Nazi Propaganda Machine


Horrible EXECUTION of Julius Streicher - Bestial NAZI Anti-Semite Fueling Nazi Propaganda Machine

Horrible EXECUTION of Julius Streicher - Bestial NAZI Anti-Semite Fueling Nazi Propaganda Machine. In 1922, Julius Streicher persuaded his personal followers to merge with the fledgling Nazi Party officially known as National Socialist German Workers’ Party. As one of the Nazi party’s earliest members, he could count himself among the oldest of the Nazi “old guard.”

In 1923, Streicher established his virulently antisemitic newspaper, Der Stürmer meaning The Attacker.

On November 8–9, 1923, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party led a coalition group in an attempt to overthrow the German government. The plotters hoped to march on Berlin to launch a national revolution but the insurrection failed miserably. Units of the Munich police force clashed with Nazi stormtroopers as they marched into the city center. The two groups exchanged fire, which resulted in the deaths of 16 Nazi Party members and four police officers. This attempted coup d’état, in which Streicher took part, came to be known as the Beer Hall Putsch. Its ringleaders, including Adolf Hitler, were arrested. Hitler was convicted of high treason and sentenced to five years in prison. However, he only served eight months of his sentence.

For these activities Streicher was suspended from his teaching post and spent the following years leading a surrogate local organization of the outlawed Nazi Party.

Following Hitler’s release from prison, the Nazi leader named Streicher Gauleiter or district leader of Middle Franconia, later Franconia.

Between 1924 and 1932 he held a seat in the Bavarian parliament.

After Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party came into power in January 1933 and during the first months of the National Socialist regime, Streicher chaired the Central Committee to Repulse Jewish Atrocity and Boycott Agitation. In this capacity, he helped to organize the famous one-day boycott of Jewish businesses on April 1, 1933.
This boycott, targeting Jewish businesses and professionals, was the first nationwide, planned action against the Jews.

The boycott was both a reprisal and an act of revenge against atrocity stories propaganda that German and foreign Jews, assisted by foreign journalists, were allegedly circulating in the international press to damage Nazi Germany’s reputation.
On the day of the boycott, the members of the SA, which was a paramilitary organization associated with the Nazi Party, stood menacingly in front of Jewish-owned department stores and retail establishments as well as the offices of professionals such as doctors and lawyers. The Star of David was painted in yellow and black across thousands of doors and windows, with accompanying antisemitic slogans. Signs were posted saying “Don’t Buy from Jews” and “The Jews Are Our Misfortune.” Acts of violence against individual Jews and Jewish property occurred throughout Germany. However, the police intervened only rarely.
Although the national boycott operation, organized by local Nazi party chiefs, lasted only one day and was ignored by many individual Germans who continued to shop in Jewish-owned stores, it marked the beginning of the nationwide campaign by the Nazi Party against the entire German Jewish population. A week later, the government passed a law restricting employment in the civil service to “Aryans.” Jewish government workers, including teachers in public schools and universities, were fired.
A key part of Nazi ideology was to define the enemy and those who posed a threat to the so-called “Aryan” race. Nazi propaganda was essential in promoting the myth of the “national community” and identifying who should be excluded. Jews were considered to be the main enemy. However, Jews were not the only group excluded from the vision of the “national community.” Propaganda helped to define who would be excluded from the new society and justified measures against the “outsiders.” These so-called outsiders included Jews, Roma and Sinti people, homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and Germans viewed as genetically inferior and harmful to the “national health” such as people with mental illness and intellectual or physical disabilities, epileptics, congenitally deaf and blind persons, chronic alcoholics, drug users, and others.
While most Germans disapproved of anti-Jewish violence, dislike of Jews, easily stirred up in hard times, extended far beyond the Nazi Party faithful…

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Content

0.42 -> The 1st of October 1946, Nuremberg, Germany.  After more than 10 months on a trial,  
7.74 -> 21 defendants who are among the most important  political, military, and economic leaders of  
13.5 -> Nazi Germany, hear their sentences read.  These high-ranking representatives of the  
18.9 -> criminal Nazi regime have to finally take  responsibility for their crimes and answer  
23.64 -> before an International Military tribunal who  would punish them for unspeakable atrocities  
28.08 -> committed during the Second World War. It is only  the first of many war crimes trials held after the  
34.38 -> Second World War and would become a warning  to war criminals and dictators everywhere. 
39.96 -> Once the true extent of the German atrocities,  especially against Jews, are revealed,  
44.64 -> 12 defendants out of the 21 are sentenced to  death by hanging. One of them is a founder  
50.82 -> and publisher of the violently antisemitic  newspaper, Der Stürmer, Julius Streicher.
58.242 -> Julius Streicher, the ninth child of  a primary school teacher, was born on  
61.14 -> the 12th of February 1885 in Fleinhausen  then part of the German Empire. From 1904,  
67.74 -> Julius worked as a teacher as well and was known  for his short temper and dictatorial demeanor.
73.56 -> In 1909 Streicher was transferred to  Nuremberg, where in 1913 he married  
78.66 -> Kunigunde Roth - the daughter of a baker and  brewer in Bamberg. The marriage produced two sons.
84.06 -> The First World War began  on the 28th of July 1914. 
89.52 -> Streicher enlisted with the German Army and served  in the 6th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment.  
94.68 -> Despite having several reported instances  of poor behavior in his military record,  
99 -> he became a lieutenant and was awarded  the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd Class.
103.26 -> The First World War ended on the 11th of  November 1918 when the German leaders signed  
109.44 -> the armistice in the Compiègne Forest in France. The trauma of Germany's defeat and the turmoil of  
115.68 -> the immediate interwar years drove Streicher to  radical political activity. In 1919, he joined  
121.98 -> the Society for Defense and Protective Action,  a right-wing association agitating against the  
126.84 -> newly founded socialist Bavarian Republic. Here,  for the first time, Streicher displayed the fierce  
132.78 -> antisemitic rhetoric for which he would later  become notorious. Soon after, he helped to found  
138.12 -> the Nuremberg wing of the German Socialist Party,  which, despite the reference to socialism in its  
143.46 -> name, espoused right-wing ultra-nationalist,  anti-Catholic, and antisemitic principles.
148.5 -> Streicher sought to move the German Socialists  in a more virulently antisemitic direction – an  
154.5 -> effort which aroused enough opposition that he  left the group and in 1921 he joined the German  
159.42 -> Working Community. However, Streicher's  rhetoric against the Jews continued to  
164.16 -> intensify to such a degree that the leadership  of the German Working Community thought he was  
168.72 -> dangerous and criticized him for his obsessive  "hatred of the Jews and foreign races”.  
173.46 -> In 1922, Streicher persuaded his personal  followers to merge with the fledgling Nazi  
179.46 -> Party officially known as National Socialist  German Workers' Party. As one of the Nazi party's  
185.4 -> earliest members, he could count himself  among the oldest of the Nazi “old guard.”
190.08 -> In 1923, Streicher established his  virulently antisemitic newspaper,  
195 -> Der Stürmer meaning The Attacker. On November 8–9, 1923, Adolf Hitler and  
201.6 -> the Nazi Party led a coalition group in an attempt  to overthrow the German government. The plotters  
207.18 -> hoped to march on Berlin to launch a national  revolution but the insurrection failed miserably.  
213.36 -> Units of the Munich police force clashed with  Nazi stormtroopers as they marched into the  
218.1 -> city center. The two groups exchanged  fire, which resulted in the deaths of  
222.84 -> 16 Nazi Party members and four police  officers. This attempted coup d'état,  
227.7 -> in which Streicher took part, came to be known  as the Beer Hall Putsch. Its ringleaders,  
232.62 -> including Adolf Hitler, were arrested.  Hitler was convicted of high treason and  
237.6 -> sentenced to five years in prison. However,  he only served eight months of his sentence.
242.4 -> For these activities Streicher was  suspended from his teaching post and  
246.42 -> spent the following years leading a surrogate  local organization of the outlawed Nazi Party.
251.58 -> Following Hitler's release from  prison, the Nazi leader named  
254.64 -> Streicher Gauleiter or district leader  of Middle Franconia, later Franconia.
259.74 -> Between 1924 and 1932 he held a  seat in the Bavarian parliament.
264.96 -> After Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party came into  power in January 1933 and during the first months  
271.98 -> of the National Socialist regime, Streicher  chaired the Central Committee to Repulse  
276.36 -> Jewish Atrocity and Boycott Agitation. In this  capacity, he helped to organize the famous one-day  
282.3 -> boycott of Jewish businesses on April 1, 1933. This boycott, targeting Jewish businesses and  
289.14 -> professionals, was the first nationwide,  planned action against the Jews.
292.86 -> The boycott was both a reprisal and an  act of revenge against atrocity stories  
297.78 -> propaganda that German and foreign  Jews, assisted by foreign journalists,  
301.56 -> were allegedly circulating in the international  press to damage Nazi Germany's reputation. 
306.72 -> On the day of the boycott, the members of the SA,  which was a paramilitary organization associated  
312.12 -> with the Nazi Party, stood menacingly in front  of Jewish-owned department stores and retail  
316.8 -> establishments as well as the offices of  professionals such as doctors and lawyers.  
320.94 -> The Star of David was painted in yellow and  black across thousands of doors and windows,  
325.92 -> with accompanying antisemitic slogans. Signs  were posted saying "Don't Buy from Jews" and  
332.82 -> "The Jews Are Our Misfortune." Acts of  violence against individual Jews and  
338.22 -> Jewish property occurred throughout Germany.  However, the police intervened only rarely. 
343.56 -> Although the national boycott operation,  organized by local Nazi party chiefs,  
348.12 -> lasted only one day and was ignored by  many individual Germans who continued  
352.26 -> to shop in Jewish-owned stores, it marked  the beginning of the nationwide campaign  
356.16 -> by the Nazi Party against the entire  German Jewish population. A week later,  
360.84 -> the government passed a law restricting  employment in the civil service to "Aryans."  
366.06 -> Jewish government workers, including teachers  in public schools and universities, were fired. 
371.1 -> A key part of Nazi ideology was to define  the enemy and those who posed a threat to  
377.04 -> the so-called “Aryan” race. Nazi propaganda  was essential in promoting the myth of the  
382.44 -> “national community” and identifying who should  be excluded. Jews were considered to be the main  
388.2 -> enemy. However, Jews were not the only group  excluded from the vision of the "national  
391.92 -> community." Propaganda helped to define who would  be excluded from the new society and justified  
397.44 -> measures against the "outsiders." These so-called  outsiders included Jews, Roma and Sinti people,  
403.86 -> homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Germans  viewed as genetically inferior and harmful to  
409.68 -> the "national health" such as people with mental  illness and intellectual or physical disabilities,  
414.42 -> epileptics, congenitally deaf and blind persons,  chronic alcoholics, drug users, and others. 
420.96 -> While most Germans disapproved of anti-Jewish  violence, dislike of Jews, easily stirred up in  
426.84 -> hard times, extended far beyond the Nazi Party  faithful. The majority of Germans at least  
432.6 -> passively accepted discrimination against the  Jews. An underground report prepared in January  
438 -> 1936 by an observer for German Social Democratic  Party leaders in exile noted: “The feeling that  
444.06 -> the Jews are another race is today a general one.” During periods preceding new measures against  
449.76 -> Jews, propaganda campaigns created an atmosphere  tolerant of violence against the Jews. Propaganda  
455.82 -> that demonized Jews also served to prepare  the German population, in the context of  
460.5 -> national emergency, for harsher measures, such  as mass deportations and, eventually, genocide.
466.8 -> One of the central elements of the Nazi propaganda  machine became Streicher’s antisemitic newspaper  
472.02 -> Der Stürmer which reached a peak circulation of  600,000 in 1935. "Der Stürmer" which very often  
479.7 -> presented caricatures of Jews was characterized  by a combination of anti-Semitism and pornographic  
485.1 -> obsessions. One of Streicher's constant themes  was the sexual violation of ethnically German  
490.92 -> women by Jews, a subject which he used  to publish semi-pornographic tracts and  
496.02 -> images detailing degrading sexual acts.  Streicher’s Der Stürmer became a medium of  
501.72 -> political pornography. The fascination with  the pornographic aspects of the propaganda  
507.6 -> in Der Stürmer was an important feature for many  antisemites. His portrayal of Jews as subhuman and  
512.76 -> evil is considered to have played a critical role  in the dehumanization and marginalization of the  
518.28 -> Jewish minority in the eyes of common Germans  – creating the necessary conditions for the  
523.2 -> later perpetration of the Holocaust. Streicher propagated an eliminatory  
528 -> and unusually vulgar anti-Semitism, which  earned him criticism even within his party. 
533.34 -> In one of his speeches, he explained that the  semen of a Jew is a "foreign protein" that gets  
539.16 -> into blood of an "Aryan" woman during sexual  intercourse and from there poisons her soul.  
545.16 -> Streicher claimed that after just one such  sexual encounter, such Aryan woman would be  
549.84 -> quasi-Jewish impregnated and could no longer give  birth to "Aryan" children but only "bastards".
556.32 -> Streicher's publishing firm, which was  financially very successful and made  
560.16 -> him a multi-millionaire, also released  three antisemitic books for children,  
563.58 -> including the 1938 Der Giftpilz  translated as The Toadstool or  
569.1 -> The Poisonous Mushroom. It became one of  the most widespread pieces of propaganda,  
573.18 -> which "warned" German children about the dangers  allegedly posed by Jews to them personally,  
577.92 -> and to German society in general, by using the  metaphor of an attractive yet deadly mushroom.
584.1 -> In 1936 Streicher also issued “Trust No Fox on his  Green Heath and No Jew on his Oath”, an infamously  
592.14 -> anti-Semitic children's picture book by then 20  years old Elvira Bauer a kindergarten teacher,  
597.3 -> art student, and Nazi supporter. In the book  the Jews are represented as "children of the  
603.18 -> devil," evil creatures who cannot be trusted,  and a stark contrast to idealized "Aryans."  
609.18 -> The book, printed in at least 70,000 copies, is  divided into ten sections, one of them being:”  
615.36 -> The Father of the Jews is the Devil”. Works of Nazi propaganda such as this  
620.58 -> were used to indoctrinate the youth  of Germany into Nazi racial ideology.
625.32 -> Despite the “success” of his Stürmer and  his strong personal association with Hitler,  
630.06 -> who valued him as a protégé, Streicher was  often viewed as volatile and mercurial by  
635.4 -> leading officials. While useful as a purveyor  of virulent and often prurient antisemitism  
640.74 -> to the German masses, he had enemies  within party circles. His disagreeable  
645.66 -> temperament, reckless ambition, and overzealous  self-enrichment, principally from Jewish property  
650.64 -> seized or “purchased” during “Aryanization”  efforts, made him enemies in party circles. 
655.32 -> To protect himself from accountability,  Streicher relied on Hitler's protection.  
660.48 -> The Führer declared that Der Stürmer was his  favorite newspaper, and saw to it that each weekly  
665.82 -> issue was posted for public reading in special  glassed-in display cases known as "Stürmerkasten".
671.1 -> Julius Streicher was also a sexual deviant known  for his sexual escapades. Competing Nazi Party  
678 -> functionaries such as Hermann Göring spread  the word that he raped political prisoners.
682.32 -> Because of his role as Gauleiter of Franconia,  he also gained the nickname of “Frankenführer”,  
688.02 -> "King of Nuremberg" and the "Beast  of Franconia”. In August 1938,  
692.94 -> Streicher ordered that the Grand Synagogue  of Nuremberg to be destroyed. He later  
697.92 -> claimed that his decision was based on his  disapproval of its architectural design,  
701.82 -> which in his opinion "disfigured  the beautiful German townscape”.
705.36 -> Despite his special relationship with Hitler,  after 1938 Streicher's position began to unravel.
712.02 -> During the Kristallnacht, which was a series  of coordinated violent riots against the Jews  
716.82 -> throughout Nazi Germany and recently incorporated  territories which occurred on the 9th – 10th of  
721.56 -> November 1938, eleven people were murdered in  Nuremberg alone. The Jews in Streicher’s Gau  
728.04 -> Franconia, capital of which was Nuremberg, were  forced by psychological pressure or by force  
733.26 -> to sell their properties, to cede houses and  businesses to Streicher or to persons named by  
738.24 -> him. In many cases, the compensation payments for  these extortions were less than ten percent of the  
744.06 -> actual value. At the meeting of leading National  Socialist functionaries, which took place on the  
749.28 -> 12th of November 1938 under the chairmanship of  Hermann Göring, an investigative commission was  
754.8 -> set up which encountered a corruption  and stopped Streicher's Aryanizations.  
758.64 -> The commission was not disturbed by the fact  that the Jews in the Nuremberg district had  
763.08 -> actually been robbed and murdered, but rather  that Streicher had enriched himself who,  
767.28 -> from a National Socialist point of  view, was not entitled to do so.
770.58 -> In addition, Streicher was charged with spreading  untrue stories that Göring - commander-in-chief  
776.46 -> of the German air force – the Luftwaffe - was  impotent and that his daughter was a product of  
780.9 -> artificial insemination. Göring’s daughter  Edda was baptised on the 4th of November  
785.94 -> 1938 at Carinhall, Hermann Göring’s country  residence, and Adolf Hitler became her godfather. 
792.42 -> Streicher was also confronted with unconcealed  adultery, several furious verbal attacks on  
797.58 -> other Gauleiters and striding through the  streets of Nuremberg cracking a bullwhip.
801.84 -> Even high-ranking party comrades  considered him "not entirely sane",  
806.04 -> but he still enjoyed Hitler's personal protection. Streicher was brought before the Supreme Party  
811.14 -> Court and judged to be "unsuitable for  leadership." On the 16th of February 1940,  
816.78 -> he was stripped of his party offices and  withdrew from the public eye. Though he  
821.94 -> was forbidden to enter Nuremberg, by Hitler’s  order he was permitted to retain the title of a  
826.5 -> Gauleiter and wear the associated uniform. Der  Stürmer and the associated publishing house,  
832.02 -> from which Streicher made millions of Reichsmarks,  were left to him on Hitler's instructions. Despite  
837.54 -> his unsavory reputation, Hitler remained committed  to Streicher, whom he considered a loyal friend.  
843.78 -> Streicher then lived on his estate farm known  as Streicher-Hof, 20 kilometers from Nuremberg. 
849.72 -> In 1943, Streicher's wife, Kunigunde  Streicher, died after 30 years of marriage.  
855.9 -> When Germany surrendered to the Allied  armies in May 1945, Streicher later said,  
860.76 -> he decided not to commit suicide. Instead,  he married his former secretary, Adele Tappe.
866.64 -> In the end, justice finally caught up with  Streicher after he was arrested on the 23rd  
872.1 -> of May 1945 at his escape location in the  Alps. Streicher, a "radical anti-Semite",  
878.52 -> who presented himself as a  painter with the name Sailer,  
881.52 -> was arrested by the American soldiers led  by a group of American officers of the  
885.9 -> 101st Airborne Division led by Major Henry  Plitt who had Jewish roots. At that time,  
891.54 -> information was circulating among the public that  “the greatest Jew-baiter” was arrested by a “Jew”.
897.48 -> While being interrogated, Streicher gave the  impression that he was mentally confused.
902.52 -> He was then tried at the Nuremberg Trials which  
905.4 -> were held against representatives  of the defeated Nazi Germany.  
908.88 -> He faced two charges: Conspiracy to commit  crimes against peace and Crimes against humanity.
914.64 -> During the trial, Streicher displayed for the  last time the flair for courtroom theatrics  
919.92 -> that had made him famous earlier. He answered  questions from his own defence attorney with  
924.54 -> diatribes against Jews, the Allies, and the  court itself, and was frequently silenced by  
929.88 -> the court officers. He also peppered his  testimony with references to passages of  
934.62 -> Jewish texts he had so often carefully selected  and inserted into the pages of Der Stürmer.
940.14 -> Edward Gardner, a former US army soldier,  who during the Nuremberg trials for six  
945.72 -> months guarded Adolf Hitler's henchmen,  recalled many years later that when  
949.8 -> Julius Streicher was going to the court, he  would always ask soldiers for chewing gum.
953.7 -> Streicher was largely shunned by all of the  other Nuremberg defendants among whom he had  
959.52 -> the lowest IQ. In the morning, Streicher would do  his exercises on the floor, then flush the toilet  
966 -> and wash his face with a toilet water becoming  the so-called “Dirty old man” of the prison.
970.62 -> He would also make up numerous accusations. Streicher claimed that after his capture he  
976.92 -> had been mistreated by the Allied soldiers.  According to his account they ordered him to  
981.48 -> take off his clothes in his cell undressed  for days, burned him with cigarettes and  
986.1 -> making him extinguish them with his bare feet,  allowed him to drink only water from a toilet,  
990.78 -> made him kiss the feet of Black soldiers and  beat him with a bullwhip. He further claimed  
996.54 -> that some of the soldiers also spat on him  and forced his mouth open to spit into it. 
1001.16 -> In addition, Streicher complained  that all his judges were Jews.
1006.02 -> Most of the evidence against Streicher came from  his numerous speeches and articles over the years,  
1010.22 -> which as prosecutors contended, were so  incendiary that he was an accessory to  
1014.66 -> murder, and therefore as culpable as those who  actually ordered the mass extermination of Jews.  
1020.06 -> They further argued that he kept  up his antisemitic propaganda even  
1023.84 -> after he was aware that Jews were being  slaughtered with reports and photographs.  
1028.46 -> However, Streicher claimed to have known  nothing about the Holocaust saying that  
1032.54 -> he was been merely a “nature lover” who only  wanted the “foreigners” out of the country.
1036.02 -> On the 1st of October 1946 the International  Military tribunal acquitted Streicher of crimes  
1042.86 -> against peace, but found him guilty of crimes  against humanity, and sentenced him to death  
1048.02 -> by hanging. The judgment against him read, in  part: “For his 25 years of speaking, writing and  
1054.92 -> preaching hatred of the Jews, Streicher was widely  known as 'Jew-Baiter Number One.' In his speeches  
1061.52 -> and articles, week after week, month after month,  he infected the German mind with the virus of  
1067.1 -> anti-Semitism, and incited the German people to  active persecution. ... Streicher's incitement to  
1072.98 -> murder and extermination at the time when Jews in  the East were being killed under the most horrible  
1077.9 -> conditions clearly constitutes persecution  on political and racial grounds in connection  
1082.88 -> with war crimes, as defined by the Charter,  and constitutes a crime against humanity.”
1088.94 -> Streicher, along with Hans Fritzsche - the  preeminent German Nazi broadcaster, were  
1093.56 -> the first persons to be indicted for what would  later be classified as incitement to genocide.
1098.42 -> While Göring, Streicher's archnemesis, committed  suicide only hours before execution, Julius  
1104.54 -> Streicher fared far worse. Streicher was  executed by American Army sergeant John  
1109.4 -> C. Woods who had no documented pre-war  experience as a hangman. It is believed  
1114.92 -> that he was deliberately bad at his  job to make the 10 Nazi war criminals  
1118.7 -> that he executed on that day, suffer as  they all died in long agonizing death.
1124.04 -> The Nazis executed by sergeant Woods fell  from the gallows with a drop insufficient  
1128.24 -> to snap their necks, resulting in their  death by strangulation that in some cases  
1132.5 -> lasted several minutes. Additionally,  the trapdoor was too small causing  
1137.6 -> several of the condemned to suffer  bleeding head injuries as they fell.
1141.26 -> On the 16th of October 1946,  the day of his execution, 
1145.58 -> at the bottom of the scaffold  Streicher, a total fanatic,  
1149.24 -> shouted "Heil Hitler! The American officer then  said, “Ask the man if he has any last words.”  
1155.9 -> When the interpreter had translated, Streicher  shouted, “The Bolsheviks will hang you one  
1160.82 -> day.” “Purim-Fest 1946!” alluding to the  Jewish festival of Purim, which recalls  
1166.34 -> the Jews' victory over their enemy Haman, who  together with his 10 sons, was also hanged.
1171.86 -> When the black hood was lowered over his head,  Streicher’s muffled voice could be heard to say,  
1177.2 -> “Adele, my dear wife.” At that instant  the trap door opened with a loud bang.  
1183.62 -> Joseph Kingsbury-Smith, who covered the  executions for the International News Service,  
1187.58 -> reported that Streicher, then 61 years old,  "went down kicking" and could be heard groaning  
1192.86 -> under the scaffold after he dropped through the  trap-door. Because he fell from the gallows with  
1197.36 -> insufficient force to snap his neck, his horrible  convulsing lasted 15 long minutes before he died. 
1203.24 -> After that, his corpse was cremated  and scattered in the river Isar.
1207.98 -> Sergeant Woods later not only insisted he  had performed all executions correctly,  
1213.14 -> but also stated he was very proud of his work.
1216.98 -> There were no tears shed for Julius Streicher.
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Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2lkBzqNAns