David Fischer (politician)

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Johann David Fischer (born March 23, 1873 in Berlin ; † January 4, 1934 there ) was a German lawyer , administrative officer and politician .

Life

After studying law and completing his legal clerkship , Fischer joined the Prussian judicial service and worked temporarily in the Ministry of Commerce . He became district administrator in Gummersbach until 1911 and then went back to Berlin, first in the Ministry of Commerce, later he came to the Prussian Ministry of Finance .

During the First World War he was chief of the field railways in Romania , in the Generalgouvernement of Warsaw and Upper East . In 1918 he became head of the administrative office for demobilization . In 1921 he was sent to the Reparations Commission in Paris as State Secretary ; there he tried to make the reparations payments more bearable for the German Reich. He continued to work as State Secretary in the Reich Ministry of Finance until 1926, when he was bid farewell because there shouldn't be two State Secretaries in one ministry. From then on he headed the supervisory boards of the imperial companies Vereinigte Aluminum-Werke and VIAG .

David Fischer died on January 4, 1934, shortly before he could be registered as a “ half-Jew ” by the law to restore the civil service , at the age of 60 in Berlin. He left behind his wife and seven children. Fischer was buried in the Dahlem cemetery. The grave has not been preserved.

During his studies in 1891 he became a member of the Germania Tübingen fraternity .

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 2: F-H. Winter, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8253-0809-X , pp. 32-33.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Files of the Reich Chancellery. Retrieved November 12, 2016.
  2. Peter Josef Belli: The Lautawerk of the United Aluminum Works AG (VAW) from 1917 to 1948. An armaments company in regional, national, international and political contexts. (at the same time a contribution to the industrial history of Niederlausitz) . Lit Verlag, Münster / W. 2012, ISBN 978-3-643-11716-8 ( limited preview in Google Book Search).
  3. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende: Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 , pp. 568-569.