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Hermann Goering's
Field Marshal Baton
The History of the Baton
The field marshal's special symbol was the baton.
Hitler
presents Field Marshal Baton to
Hermann Goering |

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Field
Marshal General
of the Air Force
Hermann Goering |

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A Field Marshal is, in some nations, the highest military rank,
one step above a full General; and of a comparable rank to the highest
ranking General(s) in an army that does not use such a term. As
the highest rank, answerable only to the nation's ruler, appointments
have often been made as much for political as for military purposes,
and not infrequently as a way to publicly reward a successful general.
And so it was with great pomp and ceremony that Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler
presented this baton (see picture below) to Hermann Goering in 1938.
Since the rank of Field Marshal is usually reserved for Army Generals,
Goering, as the head of Germany's Air Force (Luftwaffe), therefore
received the special title of Field Marshal General of the Air Force.
Goering enjoyed wielding power and the baton embodied this. It
was carried by the Luftwaffe chief when the Germans received the
surrender of France in the old railroad car at Compiegne, France,
in 1940. On May 7, 1945, this baton was discovered in Berchtesgaden,
Germany. It was later turned over to the U.S. Government in 1948.
The baton itself is inscribed with "The Fuhrer to the first
Field Marshal General of the Air Force Hermannn Goering, 4 February
1938." The staff of blue velvet is adorned with Nazi eagles,
as well as German Iron Crosses. Both ends of the baton feature the
German Air Force symbol (another eagle), encrusted with diamonds.
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