Bernhard Buchholz

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Bernhard Buchholz

Bernhard Buchholz (born August 19, 1870 in Knopen , Heilsberg district , East Prussia ; † June 20, 1954 in Amberg , Bavaria ) was a German politician (center).

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Bernhard Buchholz was born in 1870 in the village of Knopen near Guttstadt in East Prussia. After attending elementary school in Knopen and high school in Allenstein , Braunsberg and Neustadt in West Prussia , where he graduated from high school in 1892, he studied law in Breslau and Königsberg . Since 1896 Buchholz was a trainee lawyer at the Königsberg Higher Regional Court . From October 1896 to October 1897 Buchholz belonged to the foot artillery regiment "von Linger" in Königsberg. After the second state examination in law, he settled as a lawyer and notary in Neumark in West Prussia . In 1903 Buchholz married Elisabeth Orlowski, a daughter of Karl Orlowski and Julie Orlowski, née Kluth. Among other things, Maria Jacobi (⚭ with the chemist Karl-Rudolf Jacobi) emerged from the marriage.

In 1910 Buchholz became the owner of the Jakobkowo manor in the Löbau district (West Prussia) . Buchholz took over political offices as a city councilor in Neumark and as a representative of the city of Neumark in the district council of the Löbau district.

At the First World War Buchholz took only as a battery commander and later as commander of a militia -Fußartillerie- battalion in part. When the Löbau district fell to Poland in 1920 ( Polish Corridor ), Buchholz settled in Allenstein as a lawyer and notary. In July 1922 he became legal advisor to the local government . In January 1923 he became the Government appointed in Olsztyn. In February 1923 he was appointed government councilor in Schneidemühl ; shortly afterwards, in May 1923, he was finally promoted to the senior government council. Most recently, Buchholz, who was also a department head in the regional council of Grenzmark Posen-West Prussia, was promoted to government director.

From May 1924 to May 1928 Buchholz was a member of the Catholic Center Party in the Reichstag .

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