Carl Nehls

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Carl Peter Johannes Nehls (born February 25, 1894 ; † unknown) was a German politician ( FDP ).

Life

Nehls was a retailer by profession and lived in Fuhlsbüttel . He joined the NSDAP in 1937 .

After the Second World War he joined the FDP and was chairman of the Fuhlsbüttel-Langenhorn district association in the late 1940s. In the general election in 1949 , he was elected to the state parliament in the constituency of Ohlsdorf on the election proposal of the Father City Association of Hamburg , in which the FDP had participated. At the same time he was also elected to the Hamburg-North district committee on the same day . While he resigned from the citizenship after one electoral term, he was still a member of the district committee from 1953 to 1957 - now on the list of the now civic electoral alliance Hamburg-Block . In the citizenry, he campaigned for the catering and bakery industries, among other things: In 1952, he criticized the restrictions on the sale of cakes on Sundays to the period from 12.30 to 2.30 p.m. and in 1953 the amount of fees charged to restaurants in Hamburg would have to pay for a dance permit (270 DM) or an exemption from curfew (360 DM). In other large cities, these fees are significantly lower.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Christof Brauers: The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953. Start as a bourgeois left party. Martin Meidenbauer Verlagbuchhandlung, Munich 2007, page 410, ISBN 978-3-89975-569-5 .
  2. ^ "Christmas joy for civil servants" in: Hamburger Abendblatt dated December 18, 1952, accessed on September 5, 2018.
  3. "The citizenship approved six million for the airport" in Hamburger Abendblatt from September 10, 1953, accessed on September 5, 2018.