Adolf Heincke

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Adolf Heincke

Adolf Wolf Heincke (born February 14, 1901 in Verden ; † August 29, 1986 there ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Career

After attending elementary school and the Verden cathedral grammar school up to Obersekunda, Heincke was trained as a furrier . He completed his apprenticeship with his father in Verden, then worked in Hildesheim, Braunschweig and Salzburg, before taking his master craftsman examination in Harburg in 1930. From 1930 to 1936 he worked as a master furrier in his father's business, but did not take it over as he increasingly worked for the NSDAP. Heincke married in 1931; there were four children from the marriage.

Political activity

Heincke joined the NSDAP as early as 1925 (membership number 10.456), but left again at the end of 1926. On January 28, 1928, Heincke and five other party comrades re-founded the NSDAP local group in Verden ; Heincke was appointed local group leader by Gauleiter Otto Telschow . In 1930 Heincke was appointed district leader.

Even before 1933, Heincke was employed as the second chairman of the district trade association. After 1933 Heincke was a district craftsman, city councilor and senator in Verden as well as a member of the Verden district council.

From 1932 to 1933 Heincke sat in the Prussian state parliament . After his election to the Prussian state parliament in 1932, Heincke gave up his position as district leader and became a district economic advisor . After the dissolution of the Prussian state parliament, Heincke was a member of the National Socialist Reichstag from November 1933 until the end of the Nazi regime in spring 1945 as a member of constituency 15 (East Hanover).

In 1934 Heincke became district master craftsman in Lüneburg, first chairman of the Reich Association of German furriers , Reich guild master of the furrier, hat and glove making trade, member of the federal executive committee of the Northwest German Craftsmen Association, later (around 1937) district leader of the NSDAP of the Bremervörde district , district inspector of the Gau administration East-Hanover NSDAP, then (around 1939) district leader of the NSDAP of the Lüneburg district .

In October 1939, Heincke was drafted into the Wehrmacht and participated in the Second World War as a reserve lieutenant in an infantry regiment. After being wounded in November 1942, Heincke was exempted from further military service as a uk, i.e. indispensable , and took over the position of senior division manager in the Gauleitung East Hanover.

Internment and Post-War Life

In July 1945 Heincke was interned as a public official, first in Fallingbostel and later in Neuengamme . In April 1948 he was charged with denazification before the Bergedorf Court of Justice and sentenced to four years in prison on May 24, 1948 and transferred to the Esterwegen prison camp.

A pardon from 1949 was granted on September 19, 1949 due to the TB death of his wife in 1947 and the TB disease of three of his four children on September 19, 1949 and the remainder of the sentence was suspended. Heincke took over the fur and hat shop in Verden, which had meanwhile been leased out. Heincke died on August 29, 1986 in Verden; he is buried in the cathedral cemetery there.

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. 218 .
  • Joachim Woock: Hitler's willing helpers: National Socialists in the Verden district, Part 4: NSDAP district leader 1925–1937. In: Home calendar for the district of Verden 2010. P. 181–191.
  • Michael Rademacher: Handbook of the NSDAP Gaue 1928-1945. Vechta 2000, ISBN 3-8311-0216-3 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. First entry in the Pelz-Fachverzeichnis Winckelmann of 1957, p. 202.