Thursday, January 27, 2022

She Had an Extremely Close Relationship with Her Husband


 30 Years Ago Today

Monday 27th of January 1992
Writer and wife of Baldur von Schirach Henriette 'Henny' Hoffman dies of unknown causes at the age of 79 in München, Schwabing, Bayern, Germany. 
Her last known home was St. Parnassus from the age of seven to 14. Hilda's father, Carl, was an accountant, and his mother Margaret died in 1933. She had an extremely close relationship with her husband, Carl Wiese. Her brother, Fritz, was a factory worker in Göttingen, and her younger sister, Annabel, worked in the area. Annabel Hoffman was an employee of U.S. Steel (WSE) before being appointed to her position as Director of General Dynamics. Annabel also studied chemistry and served in the United Nations as Director of National Intelligence for eight years. In 1996, the film 'Stuart Cooper Strikes Back' hit number one on the U.K. 'S' Box Office, selling $500 million domestically, and it received a $20 million Best Picture Oscar at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival.

When Hilda was 14, she wrote for the local newspaper in Munich. The story was inspired by an earlier diary by Anne Frank. She was introduced to her father by an acquaintance of her ex-husband who worked in a field when they lived in rural Germany. She read over a letter at home in the early.

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