Ernst Lucke

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Ernst Lucke (born June 8, 1873 in Glauchau ; † after 1942 ) was a German craftsman (wood turner) and politician (economic party).

Live and act

Lucke attended elementary school in Glauchau. Then he completed an apprenticeship as a turner. From 1894 to 1907 he was a capitulator and sergeant in infantry regiment No. 106 in Leipzig . During this time he also attended the capitulant and adult education center in Leipzig and - with the status of an intern - the University of Leipzig .

In 1906 he successfully passed the entrance examination for the middle civil service career for the railroad, post office and general manager. On May 1, 1908, he joined the post office in Chemnitz . He later passed the postal assistant, the senior postal secretary and finally, in 1923, the administrative examination.

After the First World War , Lucke began to become increasingly politically active. He finally found a political forum in the Reichspartei des Deutschen Mittelstandes (Economic Party ). From 1920 to 1926 Lucke was a city councilor in Chemnitz. Since 1922 he sat on the church council and in 1923 he became the first chairman of the Chemnitz district association in the association of Saxon homeowners' associations. From 1924 to July 1932 Lucke was a member of the Berlin Reichstag for his party , in which he represented constituency 30 (Chemnitz-Zwickau). He was the only politician of the economic party who won a direct mandate during the Weimar period.

In the Chemnitz address books of 1938 and 1943 Lucke is a senior postal inspector. D. with residence at Elsasser Straße 19.

Fonts

  • Words of Great Germans as a means of education , Berlin 1942. (Information sheet of the Reich Labor Front)
  • Guiding principles for the corporate vocational trainer , slea

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Commission for the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties: Contributions to the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties , 1960, p. 101.
  2. Chemnitz address book 1938 ; Chemnitz address book 1943