Clemens Moser (politician, 1885)

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Clemens Moser (born September 1, 1885 in Hausen am Andelsbach , † November 4, 1956 in Sigmaringen ) was a Prussian politician ( center , CDU ).

Life

Moser attended the elementary school in Hausen and from 1899 to 1905 the Sigmaringen grammar school, where he passed the Abitur. From 1905 to 1910 he studied in Tübingen and Strasbourg. In 1911 he passed the first state examination and then served as a one-year volunteer in 1911/1912 . The seminar year in Trier followed in 1912/1913, and the trial year in Cologne-Mülheim from April 1913 to April 1914. He then took part in the First World War , most recently as a lieutenant in the reserve. At Christmas 1918 he became a student assistant and from Easter 1919 taught Latin and history at the Realreform-Gymnasium in Hechingen . In 1927 he became teacher . After the seizure of power by the Nazis, he was suspended from duty in April 1933 and transferred in September 1933 to retire. At times he was employed by the Sigmaringen tax office. In 1944, he was in political custody in Saulgau for ten weeks as part of the Grid Action .

politics

From 1922 to 1933 he was a member of the municipal parliament in the Hohenzollern region . From February 1926 to September 30, 1930 he was a deputy member and from September 30, 1930 to April 1933 a member of the Prussian State Council . During the time of National Socialism he could not continue his political engagement legally.

From May 28 to October 1945 he was district administrator in the district of Hechingen . In 1945 he became President of the Hohenzollernsche Lande for the time the business of the District President in Sigmaringen was transferred to the State Secretariat for the French-occupied area of ​​Württemberg and Hohenzollern in Tübingen. Between October 16, 1945 and July 22, 1947 he was State Director in the rank of State Secretary for Labor at the State Secretariat Tübingen and head of the Ministry of Labor of Württemberg-Hohenzollern in the Schmid II cabinet . From 1946 to March 1950 he was also governor of the regional association of the Hohenzollern Lands .

Awards

In 1950 he became an honorary citizen of Hausen am Andelsbach.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla : The Prussian State Council 1921–1933. A biographical manual. With a documentation of the State Councilors appointed in the “Third Reich” (= manuals on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 13). Droste, Düsseldorf 2005, ISBN 3-7700-5271-4 , p. 110.

Individual evidence

  1. http://dl.ub.uni-freiburg.de/diglit/zhg1970/0255/ocr