Carl Moering

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Carl Philipp Ferdinand Möring (born July 16, 1818 in Hamburg ; † February 4, 1900 there ) was a German businessman and Hamburg senator.

Life

His parents were Carl Philipp Heinrich Möring (* February 6, 1787; † April 1, 1873) and his wife Wilhelmine Sophie Ferdinand Schiller .

Möring's father was a businessman and senior citizen in Hamburg. Möring therefore grew up in Hamburg. He did a commercial apprenticeship and worked in his father's company Möring & Co. In 1815 he became a Hamburg citizen, from 1835 to 1838 he was at the head of the Hamburg Citizens' Militz . In 1838 he was appointed archdeacon and in 1843 senior elder.

"Carl Philipp Ferdinand Möring", collective grave Senators (IV),
Ohlsdorf cemetery

In the same year he became a partner in his father's company. From 1846 to 1850 he took on the honorary post of director of the Sparkasse from 1827 , where he held a comparable position again as President of the Sparkasse from 1827 from 1881 to 1884. Möring worked in the poor college from 1848 to 1851, was military commissioner from 1852 to 1854 and from 1858 to 1861 a member of the Commerzdeputation. In 1859 he was elected to the newly established Hamburg citizenship , to which he belonged until his election to the Senate on January 7, 1861. He worked in the Senate for an extraordinarily long time, including temporarily Weddeherr and for a long time headed the Senate Commission for the administration of the Kunsthalle .

He married Bertha Elisabeth Michahelles on December 1, 1849 (* June 23, 1822, † April 22, 1908). The marriage remained childless.

In the Ohlsdorf cemetery , one of the collective grave plates of Senators (IV) from the Althamburg Memorial Cemetery commemorates Carl Möring, among others.

Others

The merchant Rudolf Heinrich Möring (born July 23, 1831 in Hamburg; † December 17, 1907 there) was his cousin, who later became a member of the citizenship and from 1874 to 1881 a member of the Reichstag ( NLP ). The Möringbogen in Winterhude is named after both of them .

source

Individual evidence

  1. Bernd Haunfelder : The liberal members of the German Reichstag 1871-1918 . A biographical handbook, Münster 2004, ISBN 3-402-06614-9 ; P. 281