Alfred Tischer

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Alfred Tischer (born February 21, 1884 in Meschwitz , † January 27, 1971 in Dresden ) was a German architect , municipal building officer (as city ​​planning director ) and local politician ( NSDAP ).

Life

Carefree home

Tischer studied architecture and received his doctorate in engineering. He was a member of the Association of German Architects and later of the Association of Architects of the GDR .

Tischer is responsible for many of the inter-war buildings in Radebeul in the style of homeland security architecture.

In 1920 Colonel v. Gregory bought the " Sorgenfrei" house in Oberlößnitz, which he owned, to his nephew Alfred Tischer, who in 1933 built a "deliberately simple rural" single-family house on what is now the neighboring property on Augustusweg 46 . Tischer, who lived in Radebeul until 1938, sold Haus Sorgefrei on in 1940, as the repair of the structural damage that had occurred over the decades on this singular example of the Dresden plait style exceeded his means.

In 1933, Tischer was a member of the NSDAP and head of the local council of Oberlößnitz. In this function, he submitted an application for the granting of honorary citizenship to Paul von Hindenburg and Adolf Hitler , which, in addition to the seven NSDAP members, also the three members of the black-white-red battle front agreed. One of these was Tischer's fellow architect, Martin Hammitzsch , who later became Hitler's brother-in-law.

Tischer spent part of his active time in Litzmannstadt .

The author Gunnar Klack suspects that Tischer, the employee responsible for civil engineering, construction and implementation measures in the task force for the reconstruction of cities destroyed by bombs, which was founded towards the end of 1943, could mean Alfred Tischer.

Alfred Tischer lived towards the end of his life in the Dresden old people's home Maille-Bahn in Hosterwitz and died in 1971.

plant

Boathouse
Hertwig-Bünger-Heim with corner pavilion
Single-family house Alfred Tischer

Buildings

Most of the buildings listed below are in the monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany. Monuments in Saxony: City of Radebeul listed cultural monuments . They are therefore not a complete catalog of works .

Fonts

  • The struggle in the German construction industry 1910. (= treatises from the economic seminar of the Technical University of Dresden. Issue 3) Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1912.
  • The Lößnitz as a settlement area. In: Johann Erich Gottschalch (Ed.): Dresdner Jahrbuch and Chronik 1937/1938. (Dresden calendar since 1909). 28/29 Vintage. Joh.Erich Gottschalch publishing house, Dresden 1938.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b Information on a portrait photo from the recording files of the Association of Architects in the GDR in the holdings of the Digital Portrait Archive , last accessed on January 18, 2019
  2. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 64 .
  3. Caroline Ritter: The former “Lebensborn” children's home “Sonnenwiese” in Kohren-Sahlis (1939–1945). In: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony (Ed.): Preservation of monuments in Saxony. Yearbook 2015. Sandstein, Dresden 2016, ISBN 978-3-95498-199-1 , p. 148, note 4.
  4. ^ Frank Andert: Radebeul honorary citizen (part 5): Hindenburg, Hitler and Mutschmann. In: Preview & Review; Monthly magazine for Radebeul and the surrounding area. Radebeuler Monatshefte eV, August 2010, accessed on June 14, 2011 .
  5. Gunnar Klack: Built landscapes. Fehling + Gogel and organic architecture. Landscape and movement as narrative of nature. transcript Verlag, Bielefeld 2015, ISBN 978-3-8394-3290-7 , p. 266. (Note 269: “ Werner Durth only writes the surname Tischer , presumably this is the architect Alfred Tischer (1884–1971) . ")
  6. ^ Written information from the Radebeul City Archives to Jbergner on June 14, 2011 based on the personal files available there
  7. a b Caroline Ritter: The former “Lebensborn” children's home “Sonnenwiese” in Kohren-Sahlis (1939–1945). In: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony (Ed.): Preservation of monuments in Saxony. Yearbook 2015. Sandstein, Dresden 2016, ISBN 978-3-95498-199-1 , p. 143.
  8. Caroline Ritter: The former “Lebensborn” children's home “Sonnenwiese” in Kohren-Sahlis (1939–1945). In: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony (Ed.): Preservation of monuments in Saxony. Yearbook 2015. Sandstein, Dresden 2016, ISBN 978-3-95498-199-1 , pp. 143–149.
  9. The Lebensborn home “Sonnenwiese” in Kohren-Sahlis. In: Claudia Sandke: Der Lebensborn: A representation of the activities of the Lebensborn eV in the context of the National Socialist racial ideology. diplom.de, 2006, ISBN 978-3-8324-9459-9 , pp. 39-41.