Franz Pfeffer Von Salomon (?,?)- He was a Free Corps member and veteran from World War One, he made a name for himself by organizing resistances groups to stop the French occupying the Ruhr. Hitler made Franz commander of the SA after Von Salomon sweared unconditionally loyalty to him in 1926. Von Salomon was fired in 1930 because he failed to stop fellow SA leader Walter Stennes from briefly occupying the Nazis central offices in Berlin. And also Ernst Rohm was able to get all of the SA to swear personal allegiance to him. Ypres, 1917, in the vicinity of the Battle of Passchendaele. ... The Ruhr in Essen-Kettwig The Ruhr is a large river in western Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia) starting near the town of Winterberg in Sauerland and ending in the Rhine in the city of Duisburg. ... SA may stand for: Sturmabteilung (SA, Storm Troopers as in Nazi Germany) Salvation Army San Antonio Saudi Arabia (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code) Seaman Apprentice Second Age of J. R. R. Tolkiens Middle-earth (usually written S.A.) Security Association in the IPsec networking protocol selective availability... Ernst Röhm Ernst Röhm (or Roehm) (November 28, 1887 — July 1, 1934) was a German military officer and most recognized commander of the Nazi Stroomtroopers, known as the Sturmabteilung. ...
VonPfeffer left his post 12 Aug 1930 when Hitler refused to give SA members seats in the Reichstag and the former leader of Reichskriegsflagge, Dr Otto Wagener, was made temporary leader of the SA.
The Reichs War Minister, General Kurt von Schleicher, had secretly agreed with Röhm to place the SA under command of the Reichswehr in case of war (the main concern at this time was a feared invasion of Silesia by Poland).
Von Papen did not last long in his office and was replaced by General von Schleicher, who in turn was replaced by Hitler.