World War II Georg Heinrich von Neufville (27 October 1883 – 3 November 1941) was a German military officer, a Freikorps leader, a member of the Nazi Party and an SA-Gruppenführer.
Neufville was born in Frankfurt, the son of a banker, and was descended from a very old noble family (originally from France) long prominent in the city's banking industry.
In 1902, Neufville enlisted in the 3rd Neumark Mounted Grenadiers, a Royal Prussian Army regiment headquartered in Bromberg (today, Bydgoszcz).
[1] At the war's end, Neufville founded and commanded the Neufville Volunteer Guard State Rifle Corps, a Freikorps unit that was involved in disarming the workers and soldiers council in Frankfurt, and that also participated in the Kapp Putsch against the Weimar Republic in April 1920.
He was accepted into the peacetime Reichswehr and served in Wehrkreis III in Berlin, with the 6th Division in Münster and with the 2nd Cavalry Regiment.
Neufville worked in the Supreme SA Leadership (OSAF) in Munich and, by 1936, was an SA-Oberführer and the head of the SA-Ausbildungsamt (training office).