<br>
<br>According to Robert Gibson and Jon Nichol in their book Germany, the reasons for Hitler's success were:
<br>1. The Nazi Party was well organised;
<br>2. People feared the Communists;
<br>3. Hitler was a good speaker;
<br>4. Few people like the governments of the Weimar Republic;
<br>5. Hitler's ideas were popular;
<br>6. There was an agricultural depression;
<br>7. There was mass unemployment;
<br>8. The Communists thought that the Social Democrats were a greater danger than the Nazis;
<br>9. Industrialists supported Hitler.
<br>
<br>These and other factors all contributed to the increasing support of the Nazi Party in the 1920's.
<br>
<br>Hitler, the leader of the NSDAP, was suave, charismatic and always impressive. He would always arrive at functions and meetings in a Mercedes and had extensive visits to the most exclusive hotels in Germany. Hitler had a very memorable personality, and it has been stated that "There is no question that it was the personality of Hitler that held the NSDAP together ... and was the party's main weapon." Hitler was above all of this a passionate and emotive speaker who, some would argue, captured his audiences' attention with greater ease than any other figure in history. "He shone in print