Adalbert Ullmer

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Adalbert Ullmer

Adalbert Josef Ullmer , called Albert Ulmer (born August 26, 1896 in Reicholzheim , † January 2, 1966 in Buchen ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

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The son of a cattle dealer completed an apprenticeship as a blacksmith after attending primary school . Ullmer also attended the trade school. On September 20, 1915, he joined the 2nd Baden Grenadier Regiment "Kaiser Wilhelm I." No. 110 . On November 8, 1915, he was assigned to machine gun sniper division 29, with which he took part in the First World War . After his discharge from army service in December 1918, he worked as a worker in Reicholzheim and Heidelberg; later he leased an inn. Ullmer married in 1920; the marriage had three children.

Politically, Ullmer was initially active in the German National Freedom Party . Allegedly since 1926 he worked for the NSDAP. In 1928 he was one of the founders of the NSDAP local group Reicholzheim; later he was the local group leader there. The almost exclusively Catholic place developed into a stronghold of the National Socialists. In 1929 Ullmer was elected to the district assembly.

After the transfer of power to the National Socialists, Gauleiter Robert Wagner appointed Ullmer as Gau inspector in March 1933. In May 1933 he was elected mayor of the municipality of Külsheim . On April 1, 1934, he was appointed mayor and district leader in Buchen im Odenwald . After he gave up this office on January 1, 1938, he only served as district leader of the NSDAP until 1945.

In July 1933, Ullmer joined the National Socialist Reichstag as a replacement for the resigned MP Wilhelm Hug , which he then belonged to as a member of constituency 32 (Baden) until the end of Nazi rule in spring 1945.

At the end of the war, Ullmer fled to Lake Constance; later he was in the Emmendingen sanatorium . During the denazification in 1947 he was sentenced to seven years in a labor camp and other conditions. In 1948 he was given exemption from prison due to illness; In 1952 the case was discontinued because of a mental illness related to a disease from the First World War.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform: the members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924 . Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 , p. 676 .
  • Michael Rademacher: Handbook of the NSDAP Gaue 1928-1945. The officials of the NSDAP and their organizations at Gau and district level in Germany and Austria as well as in the Reichsgauen Danzig-West Prussia, Sudetenland and Wartheland, Vechta 2000 ISBN 3-8311-0216-3 , p. 10.
  • Volker Rödel: Ullmer, Albert Josef. In: Bernd Ottnad (Hrsg.): Baden-Württembergische Biographien. Volume 2. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1999, ISBN 3-17-014117-1 , p. 464 ( online )

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