Eberhard Schade

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eberhard Schade (born August 15, 1902 in Bückeburg , † August 15, 1971 in Hameln ) was a German engineer and politician ( NSDAP ).

Life

Eberhard Schade was born as the son of the town builder and director of the gas works. After graduating from high school in Adolfinum Bückeburg in 1921 , he studied at the Bergakademie Clausthal and the Technical University of Berlin , which he completed with an examination as a graduate engineer. He then worked as the head of the Schaumburger gas company.

Schade joined the NSDAP in the 1920s. In the state elections in May 1931, he was elected as a member of the state parliament of the Free State of Schaumburg-Lippe , to which he belonged until its dissolution. In parliament, he initially took over the leadership of the NSDAP parliamentary group and in 1933 served briefly as president of the state parliament. On July 14, 1933, in the last session of the Landtag, he ordered the dissolution of parliament.

From 1933 until his dismissal as an honorary official in 1939, Schade was a member of the Schaumburg-Lippische state government and deputy to the state president Karl Dreier .

After leaving the civil service, he worked as a manager in a feed factory in Hameln.

Schade was arrested in 1946 and one year later classified as a member of category IV (“fellow travelers”) in a court proceedings .

literature

  • Beatrix Herlemann , Helga Schatz: Biographical Lexicon of Lower Saxony Parliamentarians 1919–1945 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen. Volume 222). Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2004, ISBN 3-7752-6022-6 , p. 311.