Career
Proksch enrolled in the Kaiser Infantry Regiment Number. 1 of the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1910 and then the Railway Academy in Linz in 1912 before taking a job with the government railways. He returned to the army in 1914 with the Infantry Regiment Number.
91 and saw action during the First World War in Poland and Russia.
In 1922, Proksch began to team up with the Passau National Socialists to fight against leftists in Linz. Later, he was a featured speaker in Passau and other towns in Lower Bavaria.
He also served on Linz City Council for the party from 1923 to 1932. Proksch was appointed deputy Landesleiter in 1928 and then held the full leader"s post between 1931 and 1933, although real power rested with Hitler"s German appointee Theodor Habicht.
However Proksch did have strong influence over finances and he was credited with eliminating the 30,000 schillings of debt that the party found itself in.
He fled to Germany on 24 June 1933 following the banning of the Nazi Party in Austria but returned in time to take part in the coup attempt that resulted in the killing of Engelbert Dollfuss in 1934. Returning to Germany, he was elected to the Reichstag in 1936. Given Proksch"s position as a Hitler loyalist his profile was raised following the Anschluss, in keeping with the other leaders of that tendency.
Appointed to the Sturmabteilung as a Gruppenführer he was promoted to Obergruppenführer in 1943.
In 1940 he was also made a Reichstreuhänder der Arbeit and served as president of the labour office for Vienna and Lower and Upper Danube.