1. Ludolf Haase was a Nazi Party official who served as Gauleiter in Southern Hanover from 1925 to 1928.

1. Ludolf Haase was a Nazi Party official who served as Gauleiter in Southern Hanover from 1925 to 1928.
Ludolf Haase remained personally devoted to Hitler and, while the Party was outlawed, Ludolf Haase carried on activities as Bezirksleiter of the Hanover National Socialist Landesverband a Nazi front organization.
Ludolf Haase pressed Hitler for a commitment not to sanction a merger of the Nazi Party elements with the NSFP.
Ludolf Haase essentially withdrew from the leadership of the Party until such time as he was released from prison and regained his freedom of action.
Ludolf Haase himself rejoined it on 6 March 1925.
On 27 March 1925, Ludolf Haase was appointed the Gauleiter for Gau Gottingen.
In September 1925, Ludolf Haase's Gau joined the National Socialist Working Association, a short-lived group of northern and western German Gaue, organized and led by Gregor Strasser.
Subsequently, Hitler completely repudiated the proposed draft at the Bamberg Conference, a meeting that neither Fobke nor Ludolf Haase attended, and the Working Association was dissolved shortly thereafter.
In February 1943, Ludolf Haase took a position as a personal assistant to the State Secretary and SS-Obergruppenfuhrer Herbert Backe in the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture.
Ludolf Haase died in Ilten, a village of the township of Sehnde in 1972.