Alexander Czéh

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Alexander Czéh (born October 7, 1876 in Johannisberg ; † May 24, 1955 in Wiesbaden ) was a German administrative officer and district administrator in the Geilenkirchen and Geilenkirchen-Heinsberg districts .

Life

The son of the secret government councilor Andreas Carl Franz Czéh and Barbara Klein from Wiesbaden studied law at the universities of Würzburg , Kiel , Paris and Leipzig from 1895 to 1899 .

After Czéh started working in government administration as a government trainee in Wiesbaden in 1902, he was employed as a government assessor in 1906, first in the district office of Ragnit , then in the district office of Schlochau and finally, from 1909, at the police chief in Frankfurt am Main . In 1911, Czéh was taken over by the government in Wiesbaden and promoted to government councilor in 1913.

During the First World War , Czéh did his military service and was discharged prematurely from military service as a captain of the reserve and battery leader and awarded the Iron Cross 1st class.

After a temporary employment with the government in Aachen from 1917, Czéh was appointed provisional in 1919 and officially as district administrator of the Geilenkirchen district from 1920. When it was merged with the Heinsberg district to form the new Geilenkirchen-Heinsberg district, he was also taken over as district administrator for the newly formed district on October 1, 1932. Czéh served here until 1945 and then spent the rest of his life in Wiesbaden.

Czéh was married to Maria von Pelser-Berensberg (* 1894), a daughter of the mine director Otto von Pelser-Berensberg .

Literature and Sources