Elisabeth Daur

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Elisabeth Daur (born February 26, 1899 in Altenburg (Reutlingen) as Elisabeth Dipper , † December 28, 1991 in Stuttgart ) was a councilor in Stuttgart after the Second World War and received the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon for her socio-political commitment .

Life and career

Elisabeth Daur completed her schooling at the Königin-Katharina-Stift and the private girls' grammar school in Stuttgart, today's Hölderlin grammar school. In 1918 she passed the Abitur examination at an external high school for boys. For three months she taught as a private teacher to the three sons Claus , Berthold and Alexander of the Stauffenberg family .

In 1919, she began her theology studies in Tübingen as the second woman at a Protestant theological faculty , which she broke off after a year. She married Rudolf Daur in 1921 and moved with him as a pastor's wife to Reutlingen and in 1932 to Stuttgart . The son, born in 1922, died in the war in 1944, and her daughter also married a pastor.

politics

From 1956 to 1968 Daur was a member of the Stuttgart City Council, where she first represented the GVP (All-German People's Party) and, from 1962, the SPD . She was involved in the social , school and health care committees , youth welfare office and the theater advisory board. Until 1975 she was a district adviser in Möhringen and co-founded the Möhringen women's group. Because of her commitment to local politics and her activities in the peace movement, she received the Federal Cross of Merit on Ribbon in 1980.

literature

Elisabeth Skrzypek: Elisabeth Daur b. Dipper, in: Trümmerfrauen der Kommunalpolitik: Women in the Stuttgart City Council 1945–1960, Ed .: Ursula Schleicher-Fahrion, Stuttgart City Archives 2013.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ State bibliography of Baden-Württemberg online. Retrieved January 4, 2017 .
  2. Red .: Ursula Schleicher-Fahrion: Rubble women of local politics: women in the Stuttgart municipal council 1945-1960 . Ed .: Stuttgart City Archives. Stuttgart 2013.
  3. Hinrich Jantzen (Ed.): Names and Works. Sources and contributions to the sociology of the youth movement. tape 3 . Frankfurt 1975, ISBN 3-7638-1253-9 , pp. 79-84 .
  4. Leo bw - discover regional studies online. Retrieved January 4, 2017 .
  5. Julia Vogler: Rubble women of local politics. Milk feeding and equality. Stuttgarter Nachrichten, February 16, 2013, accessed on January 4, 2017 .