The identity of the buyer for the Fuehrer's Siemens rotary telephone, who bid by phone, has not been made public.
The phone, which has the Nazi leader's name engraved on it and a swastika, was found in his Berlin bunker in 1945.
Soviet soldiers gave it to British officer Sir Ralph Rayner as a souvenir shortly after Germany surrendered.
Rayner recovered the phone from Hitler's bunker while visiting Berlin on the orders of Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery just a few days after the end of the war, according to Rayner's personal account and shipping documents from that time period, according to the auction house.
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"He could still smell burning flesh," Ranulf Rayner said, recalling his father's description of the underground shelter where Hitler spent his final days. In his words, it was a "dreadful hellhole."
The phone, originally a black Bakelite phone, later painted crimson, was sold by auction house Alexander Historical Auctions in Chesapeake City, Maryland, yesterday.
The auction house had described the telephone as "Hitler's mobile device of destruction" and called it "arguably the most destructive 'weapon' of all time, which sent millions to their deaths around the world."
A porcelain figure of an Alsatian dog, also owned by Hitler, fetched USD 24,300. It was bought by a different bidder, the BBC reported.
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