Kurt Angermann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kurt Angermann (born March 31, 1898 in Klaushagen in the Regenwalde district , Pomerania ; † March 28, 1978 in Recklinghausen ) was a German administrative lawyer.

Life

Angermann took part in the First World War from 1915 to 1918. From 1919 he studied law at the (still Royal) University of Greifswald . In early 1919 he joined the VDSt Greifswald in the Association of German Student Associations . In 1920 he moved to the Albertus University in Königsberg . After interim semesters , he became a court assessor from 1921. From 1923 to 1926 he was a government trainee in Gumbinnen, with the district administrator in Angerburg and Pillallen, with the tax office in Angerburg and with the chief of police in Königsberg. 1926–1930 he was a government assessor in Königsberg, with the district administrator in Recklinghausen and with the state commissioner to support the East Prussian goods market in Königsberg. From 1930 he was a councilor for the government in Königsberg and for the Upper President of Lower Silesia. On July 1, 1932, he joined the NSDAP. For this he committed himself as head of the district headquarters. From March 25, 1933 he was Vice President of the government in Königsberg and department head for the church and school system in Gumbinnen. In April 1933 he was assigned to the district president. Together with Hermann Bethke, he was a member of the “Königsberger Kreis”, a kind of “think tank” run by Gauleiter Erich Koch . In 1939 he became the representative of the district president in Königsberg. From May 1941 he was initially appointed provisional, in December 1941 he was finally appointed district president in Königsberg. As a qualified lawyer and administrator, he served as the interface between the administration and the NSDAP until 1945. After the Second World War he was district director in Recklinghausen .

The German author and director Joachim Hoell , born in 1966, is his grandson.

Individual evidence

  1. Marc Zirlewagen: Biographies of the clubs German students. Volume 1: Members A – L. 2014, ISBN 978-3-7357-2288-1 , p. 20.
  2. Hedwig Schrulle: Administration in dictatorship and democracy: the district governments of Münster and Minden / Detmold from 1930 to 1960. F. Schöningh, 2008, p. 623. ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
  3. ^ Christian Rohrer: National Socialist Power in East Prussia. Verlag Martin Meidenbauer, 2006, p. 558. ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
  4. ^ Albert Krebs: Fritz-Dietlof Graf von der Schulenburg: between reasons of state and high treason. Leibniz-Verlag, 1964, p. 323. ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).