Adam Sühler

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Adam Sühler (born March 25, 1889 in Lindau near Trebgast ; † January 28, 1964 there ) was a German politician ( DNVP , CSU ).

Life

After attending elementary school, Sühler went to the agricultural winter school in Wunsiedel at the beginning of the twentieth century , before he was drafted into military service and took part in the First World War . In 1919 he took over his parents' farm, which he managed until 1952. In 1919 he became deputy chairman of the Bavarian Land Association . At the Bavarian Chamber of Farmers he was a member of the tax commission until 1922 and then an expert on the tax commission until 1928. In 1925 he became the first mayor of his home town of Lindau in the Kulmbach district . He was also a member of the district chamber of farmers in Kulmbach-Land, the district chamber of farmers in Upper Franconia , the tax court and the senior evaluation committee of the state tax office in Nuremberg, as well as the German agricultural council. From 1928 to 1932 he was a member of the Bavarian State Parliament for the joint parliamentary group of the Bavarian Land Federation and the DNVP.

After the end of the Second World War , Sühler was co-founder of the Bavarian Farmers' Association (BBV) in 1945 , became mayor of Lindau again and at the end of the year joined the CSU, where he was a member of the state executive for four years. From 1946 to 1958 he was president of the district association of the BBV in Upper Franconia and then honorary president. In 1946 he was a member of the regional advisory committee , then the state constituent assembly and finally the first freely elected Bavarian state parliament , where he was also a member of the executive committee of the CSU parliamentary group. In 1947 he was also district administrator of the district of Kulmbach for nine months. He resigned this office in September after he was appointed State Secretary in the State Ministry for Agriculture in the Ehard II cabinet, which was in office until 1950. At the end of 1949 he resigned his state parliament mandate after being elected to the Senate , which he took up in early 1950. From 1952 to 1958 he was one of the secretaries there. He then represented the Senate in the Bavarian Broadcasting Council from 1958 to 1961 . In 1963, Sühler did not stand for another term in the Senate; his son Gustav Sühler took over the mandate .

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