Hanns Scharff

Birthday December 16, 1907

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Rastenburg, East Prussia, Germany (now Kętrzyn, Poland)

DEATH DATE 1992-9-10, Bear Valley Springs, Tehachapi, California, United States (84 years old)

Nationality Russia

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1907

Hanns-Joachim Gottlob Scharff (December 16, 1907 – September 10, 1992) was a German Luftwaffe interrogator during the Second World War.

He has been called the "Master Interrogator" of the Luftwaffe, and possibly of all Nazi Germany; he has also been praised for his contribution to shaping U.S. interrogation techniques after the war.

Scharff was born on December 16, 1907, in Rastenburg, East Prussia (now Kętrzyn, Poland), to Hans Hermann Scharf and Else Scharf (née Jahn) and was the second of three sons, the elder being Eberhardt and the younger, Wolfgang, who died in his teens.

Hanns Scharff added an extra 'f' to the end of his last name as an adult; some ancestors spelled their last names that way.

1913

Margaret was the daughter of Captain Claud Stokes, first a pilot in Rhodesia in 1913, and later a squadron leader and flying ace in the Royal Flying Corps.

1917

Scharff's father, a Prussian Army officer before and during the First World War, died in 1917 in Wiesbaden from wounds received during World War I on the Western Front in France in July 1916.

He was the recipient of the Iron Cross (I and II Class), the Reuss Cross, and the Hanseatic Cross, "all for bravery in combat," of which his son was immensely proud.

Scharff's mother was the daughter of one of the founders of one of Germany's largest textile mills.

Her father, Christian G. Jahn, lived at the spacious Villa Jahn in Greiz, Germany, just south of Leipzig and adjacent to the large textile factory compound.

After Hans Hermann Scharf's first stint in the army before World War I, he joined Christian Jahn as a partner in the textile business, moving his family into the Villa Jahn to live with his father-in-law.

His son, Hanns Scharff, was raised in the Villa Jahn until adulthood and schooled in Leipzig.

During his schooling there, he was first trained in various forms of art, which eventually served as a basis for his profession after World War II.

Scharff's older brother, Eberhardt, was expected to take over the textile business from his grandfather, Jahn.

Hanns was also encouraged to learn the family business and trained for three years in textiles and weaving while still a teenager.

Next, he was trained in merchandizing and marketing, and finally exporting.

Scharff then traveled to work in the Adlerwerke Foreign Office in Johannesburg, South Africa, to gain experience in sales (specifically of the Adler automobiles produced in Frankfurt, Germany) for one year.

However, he was so successful at his job that, instead of returning to Germany, he was promoted to Director of the Overseas Division and continued to make Johannesburg his home for the next ten years leading up to the outbreak of World War II.

While in South Africa, Scharff met and married a South African British woman, Margaret Stokes.

1939

Scharff was visiting Greiz, Germany, during the summer of 1939 when World War II broke out.

Because of the war and inability to travel, he was more or less stranded in Germany.

After finding work in Berlin and while living in Berlin with his wife and then three children, he was drafted into the Wehrmacht; he subsequently trained for two months in Potsdam.

Scharff was originally to be posted to the Russian Front.

However, when Margaret Scharff learned of her husband's destination, she intervened, angry at the thought of a fluent English-speaking German soldier's life being wasted at the Eastern Front.

She talked her way into the office of a German general in Berlin and pleaded her husband's case, convincing the general of the error which was about to take place.

The general sent a telegram to Scharff's panzer unit, informing his superiors that Scharff was to be transferred immediately to the Dolmetscher Kompanie XII (Interpreters Company 12), based in Wiesbaden, to serve as a German/English interpreter.

He had been slated to leave for the Russian Front the morning the telegram arrived.

His fellow grenadiers were sent on to Russia.

After traveling by train to Wiesbaden, Scharff asked at the train station where Dolmetscher Kompanie XII was based, not having been given any indication of its location before leaving his panzer unit.

Unfamiliar with Kompanie XII, the Military Police at the train station directed Scharff to report to another panzergrenadier battalion destined for the Eastern Front.

Frustrated and concerned over his new battalion's unwillingness to transfer him to his correct unit, Scharff recalled his father's letter to each of his boys shortly before he died.

1943

As an Obergefreiter (equivalent to Private First Class), he was charged with interrogating captured American fighter pilots after he became an interrogation officer in 1943.

He has been highly praised for the success of his techniques, in particular, because he never used physical means to obtain the required information.

Scharff's interrogation techniques were so effective that he was occasionally called upon to assist other German interrogators in their questioning of allied bomber pilots and aircrews, including those crews and fighter pilots from countries other than the United States.

Additionally, he was charged with questioning many more important prisoners who were funnelled through the interrogation center, such as senior officers and famous fighter aces.

1948

In 1948, Scharff was invited by the United States Air Force to lecture on his interrogation techniques and first-hand experiences.

The U.S. military later incorporated his methods into its curriculum at its interrogation schools.

Many of his methods are still taught in U.S. Army interrogation schools.

Scharff was granted immigration status.

1950

From the 1950s until he died in 1992, he redirected his efforts to creating mosaics.

He became a world-renowned mosaic artisan, with his handiwork on display in locations such as the California State Capitol building; Los Angeles City Hall; several schools, colleges, and universities, including the giant Outdoor Mosaic Mural facade of the Dixie State College Fine Arts Center; Epcot Center; and in the 15-foot arched mosaic walls featuring the story of Cinderella inside Cinderella Castle at Walt Disney World, Florida.