Albert Paul (politician)

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Albert Paul (born June 28, 1879 in Mühlhausen / Thuringia ; † January 28, 1949 in Gadderbaum - Bethel ) was a German civil servant, local politician of the DDP and manager.

Life

After passing the Abitur examination at the Tilesius-Gymnasium in 1899, Albert Paul studied law at the Eberhard-Karls-University . In 1899 he was reciprocated in the Corps Borussia Tübingen . When he was inactive , he moved to the Georg-August University in Göttingen . In 1903 he passed the first law exam. The clerkship he graduated in Celle. In 1908 he passed the assessor examination. In 1909 he became 1st city councilor in Bernburg and in 1912 city councilor in Magdeburg . In May 1919 Paul was elected Second Mayor of Magdeburg and was particularly responsible for welfare in the magistrate under Lord Mayor Hermann Beims ( SPD ). In 1927 he became chairman of the savings bank and giro association for the province of Saxony - Thuringia - Anhalt in Magdeburg. He was chairman of the board of directors of the Mitteldeutsche Landesbank in Magdeburg, member of the board of the German Savings Banks and Giro Association , member of the board of directors of the life insurance company Saxony, Thuringia, Anhalt and the city ​​fire society . When the National Socialists were brought into line with the Savings Banks Association in 1933, Paul initially remained its full-time managing director, but left office the following year due to health issues. Paul was adopted at the association assembly in Magdeburg on October 6, 1934 and honored by the Upper President of the Province of Saxony, State Councilor Curt von Ulrich ( NSDAP ), after he had presented the annual report for 1933. His successor at the head of the Savings Bank Association was the acting head of the association General Landscape Director a. D. Wolf Dietrich von Trotha . He was married to Mathilde Morsbach since 1909. His brother Richard Paul was a consultant at the state tax office in Magdeburg.

Awards

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b Bauer: Corpslist of Borussia zu Tübingen, 1991, p. No. 245
  2. Manfred Wille: Magdeburg's departure into modernity. Magdeburg local politics from the end of the First World War to the beginning of the Nazi dictatorship. City Planning Office Magdeburg, Magdeburg 1995. p. 22. (PDF; 7.8 MB)
  3. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 126/245.
  4. ^ Annual report of the Savings Banks and Giro Association for the Province of Saxony, Thuringia and Anhalt for 1933 , p. 32/33 - holdings of the historical archive of the East German Savings Bank Association (OSV)
  5. ^ Annual report of the Savings Banks and Giro Association for the Province of Saxony, Thuringia and Anhalt for 1934 , p. 44 - Holdings of the historical archive of the OSV
  6. ^ Deutsche Sparkassenzeitung , No. 199, October 11, 1934, p. 5 - Holdings of the historical archive of the OSV.