August Stockelmann

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August Hermann Rudolf Stockelmann (born November 15, 1900 in Vechtel ; † May 6, 1945 in Güstrow ) was a German veterinarian and civil servant .

Life

August Stockelmann was born as the son of the farmer Heinrich Stockmann in Klein Mimmelage. In the summer semester of 1921 he began studying at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover and became a member of the Corps Normannia Hanover . In the winter semester of 1923/24 he moved to the University of Munich and joined the Corps Suevo-Salingia Munich . In the summer semester of 1924 he returned to Hanover, where he obtained his veterinary license in July 1926 . In November of the same year he was promoted to Dr. med. vet. PhD. In May 1927 he became a general veterinarian in Gadebusch and Schönberg (Mecklenburg) . On May 1, 1931, he became a member of the NSDAP ( membership number 539.241), headed the NSDAP local group in Schönberg in 1931 and was district leader of the party in the Schönberg district from 1932 to January 1934 . From September 1933 Stockelmann was district administrator for the Schönberg district . He held the district office until January 14, 1934. From April 1934 he was a district veterinarian for the district of Schönberg. In February 1937 he was appointed to the district veterinary council of the district of Güstrow , where he was promoted to the government veterinary council in April 1939 . During World War II he was until August 1941 as a district veterinarian was he in May 1940 of German-occupied Poland in the district Schieratz and district Lask of Reichsgau Wartheland used. He then returned to Güstrow as a government veterinary councilor. When the Red Army marched in on May 6, 1945, he committed suicide with the entire family .

Fonts

  • Dissertation: Studies on the importance and dangers of intravenous air injection in cattle , 1926

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Michael Buddrus , Sigrid Fritzlar, Karsten Schröder, Institute for Contemporary History, Munich: Mecklenburg in the Second World War: the meetings of Gauleiter Friedrich Hildebrandt with the NS management bodies of Gau Mecklenburg 1939-1945: an edition of the meeting minutes , Bremen 2009, P. 1074 [1]
  2. Helge Bei der Wieden : Outline of German Administrative History 1815-1945, Johann Gottfried Herder Institute, 1976, p. 303 [2]
  3. Elise Langfeld: Güstrow in the 20th Century: History and Stories of a Mecklenburg Small Town: with a complete first print of the memories of old houses and their residents in our dear Güstrow , Edition Temmen, 2001, p. 140 [3]