Andrée Bölken

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Andrée Bölken , also Andreas Bölken (born July 25, 1901 in Bremen , † February 27, 1965 in Bremen) was a German politician (BDV, CDU) and Senator from Bremen.

Life

Bölken initially grew fruit and vegetables and later switched to dairy farming. Soon afterwards he was selling premium milk under his name . The Bolken milk was a term in the Bremen districts Horn and Schwachhausen . In the 1930s, Bölken had sales outlets at the main train station and other places in Bremen, where he sold mixed milk beverages. Business was good despite the war.

In 1945 Bölken was appointed chairman of the Bremen district farming community by the head of the Weser-Ems regional farming community. In the same year he became Senator for Nutrition, in the Senates Vagts and Kaisen I (until autumn 1946). As an initially non-party, he was not nominated again for the new Senate. He then became a member of the Bremen Democratic People's Party (BDV) and soon afterwards a member of the CDU . After leaving the Senate, Bölken remained head of the district peasantry. From 1947 to 1951 he was a member of the Bremen citizenship for the CDU . During this time, the lifting of his immunity in the citizenry, due to involvement in the arbitration chamber proceedings in the course of denazification , was considered. Mayor Wilhelm Kaisen (SPD) stood up for him. In 1948 he organized the first agricultural exhibition in Bremen. Bölken remained president of the Bremen Chamber of Agriculture until 1960 and was active in exhibitions. In 1952 he acquired the Louisenthal estate with the Louisenthal country house in Horn-Lehe , where he set up a hotel. In 1953 he resigned from the CDU. In 1954, Bölken set up the central self-control laboratory of the Federal Association of German Preferred Milk Producers on his farm.

In 1954 he was a member of a committee for the construction of a city ​​hall in Bremen . In 1955 he bought a sports hall on Bürgerweide on behalf of the Bremen Exhibition and Exhibition Company , in order to enable the construction of the town hall with its demolition.

Bölken had been a commercial member of the Haus Seefahrt Foundation since 1951 . He died childless in 1965.

Honors

The Senator-Bolken Street in the Bremen district Horn was named after him.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Haus Seefahrt: Schaffer of the merchants and guests of honor - guest list 1952–1966 . ( Memento from January 13, 2013 in the Internet Archive )