Georg Gyssling (16 June 1893 – 8 January 1965) was a German consul to the United States from 1927 until 1941, since 1933 in Los Angeles.
The German team finished seventh and last in the four-man event at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York.
[2][3] Gyssling was the German Foreign Office representative in Los Angeles, and was sometimes referred to as "Hitler's Hollywood consul".
Nevertheless, later documents revealed that Gyssling despised Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, yearned for a return to a more democratic (albeit nationalistic) Germany, and gave classified information to American intelligence officials before World War II began.
Gyssling was married in 1925 to a German woman named Ingrid Horn, with whom he had two children, Georg and Angelica.