Albert Bayerle

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Albert Bayerle (born November 30, 1906 in Augsburg , † August 3, 1972 in Munich ) was a German local politician . He was the authorized representative of the Sendlinger Konsumverein and SPD city ​​councilor in Munich. From 1960 to 1972 he was Munich's third mayor .

Life

Bayerle lived in Obersendling from 1908 and joined the SPD in 1924 . He completed a commercial apprenticeship. Then he worked as a correspondent, sales manager and advertising manager.

Worked in the consumer association Munich-Sendling 1933–1945

To 2 May 1933, he became an authorized signatory of the company founded on 20 February 1886 the next room "Maibräu" economy of eleven Sendlinger metalworkers consumer association Munich-Sendling , the second consumer association in Munich. In 1932 the Sendlinger Konsumverein had a turnover of 20 million Reichsmarks , 58,332 members and 1,244 employees. In the Weimar Republic, consumer cooperatives had a market share of around ten percent throughout Germany. During the Weimar Republic, the National Socialist- dominated "Combat Group Against Department Store and Consumer Associations" under the merchants Georg Sturm and Albert Künzel intimidated customers, members and employees of the consumer association. On May 2, 1933, the Sturmabteilung occupied the headquarters of the unions and confiscated the unions' assets for the benefit of the German Labor Front (DAF). On May 3, 1933, the management bodies of around 1,200 consumer cooperatives in the German Reich were replaced by the DAF. This appointed party comrades Hans Sander and Werner Langenhan as managing directors of the production and sales facility, dismissed the members of the board of directors of the Munich-Sendling consumer association: Hans Bauer , Albert Bayerle and Georg Bergmann filed charges against them for mismanagement and thus damage to the financial interests of the cooperative members .

World War II and after

In World War II Bayerle was on the Eastern Front used. From 1949 Bayerle was chairman of the district committee Sendling . In 1952 he was elected to the Munich City Council for the first time. He was hoisted from position 45 on the list to position 2 , which earned him the nickname “ Hiding King ”.

From 1956 to 1960 he was chairman of the SPD parliamentary group in Munich City Hall . From 1960 to 1972 he was appointed third mayor of Munich. He was head of the economic and transport office. In 1971, his commitment to trade fairs and exhibitions was honored with the award of the Golden Citizen Medal by the City of Munich .

Individual evidence

  1. 204-I- 78 WNT Erich Scheibmayr Last Home, p. 177
  2. ^ Martin H. Geyer, Inverted World: Revolution, Inflation and Modernity, Munich 1914–1924, p. 179
  3. ^ The Munich workers' movement: Social Democratic Party, Free Trade Unions, State and Society in Munich 1890-1914
  4. ^ Der Spiegel , October 23, 1963, Albert Bayerle