Adolf Heiz

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Adolf Heiz (born January 24, 1892 in Mulhouse ; † February 9, 1959 ) was a German politician ( DPS ).

Heiz grew up in Mulhouse in Alsace , where he completed an apprenticeship at the General Elsässische Bankgesellschaft after completing his training, which also took him on as an employee. From 1914 to 1918 he took part in the First World War as a soldier.

With the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, Alsace returned to France. Heiz 'family was expelled and settled in Saarbrücken . He returned to his profession and held managerial positions for various banks. From 1930 he worked as a freelance tax advisor and passed the tax advisor examination at the Reichsfinanzschule Berlin in 1939.

After the Second World War he was elected to the Saarbrücken city council in 1946 via the free list. Heiz was a founding member of the Saar Democratic Party (DPS) in 1946, but was excluded from the party in December 1947, partly because of his criticism of the German-Saarland demarcation. In 1950 he rejoined the party after it was re-established. In December 1955, Heiz was elected to the Saarland state parliament. There he was a member of the committees for internal administration and local politics, for budgetary and financial questions, for constitutional questions, for cultural politics as well as for public works and reconstruction. Heiz died before the end of the legislative period; Ilse Reiter moved up for him in the Landtag.

literature

  • Landtag des Saarlandes (ed.): Manual. State Parliament of the Saarland. Saarbrücken 1957. p. 337.