Eugen Orgeldinger

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Eugen Orgeldinger (born April 22, 1897 in Elberfeld , † April 18, 1955 in Mindelheim ) was a German vocational school teacher and state politician of the DVP .

Life

During the First World War he was a naval aviator. From 1919 he studied mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, business administration, psychology and education at the Technical University of Stuttgart. There he was engaged in the AV Alania Stuttgart . In 1924 he completed his studies with the title of Diplom-Ingenieur and in 1926 the second service examination for the higher teaching position took place. From 1924 Eugen Orgeldinger was first as a trade school assessor in Göppingen , from 1931 he was employed in Oberndorf am Neckar as a trade school councilor and headmaster. In 1940 he was deposed by the National Socialists and then worked as a vocational school teacher in Bad Cannstatt and Stuttgart.

In 1945 Eugen Orgeldinger received his doctorate in engineering.

After the Second World War , Eugen Orgeldinger was asked in 1945 by the Minister of Education Theodor Heuss to set up a state vocational educational institute for the offspring of vocational school teachers in Württemberg-Baden , which went into full operation in 1948 and was connected to the TH-Stuttgart. In 1955 Orgeldinger died of a heart attack while taking a cure in Bad Wörishofen / Mindelheim.

Eugen Orgeldinger had been with Hedwig, born in 1924. Bittlingmaier married and had two sons.

politics

As a member of the Center Party since 1930, he was elected 2nd chairman in Göppingen in 1931. In 1945 he was a co-founder of the DVP, secretary and on the board of the DVP / FDP Württemberg - Baden. He was appointed by Prime Minister Reinhold Maier to the provisional parliament for Württemberg-Baden , and in 1946 he was elected to the Constituent Assembly of Württemberg-Baden - constituency of Stuttgart. He was actively involved in the finance committee, the council of elders and the cultural policy committee. In November 1946 he was elected as a member of the state parliament of Württemberg-Baden , of which he was a member until 1950. He was also appointed to the University Advisory Board of the TH Stuttgart .

literature

  • Main State Archive Stuttgart, Ministry for Culture & Sport, obituary Min. Council. Dr. Scheffbuch 1955, Archives State Parliament Baden-Württemberg

Individual evidence

  1. The list of participants is published in: Landkreisnachrichten aus Baden-Württemberg, Volume 4 / Issue 3, September 1, 1965, page 26
  2. Landtag of Baden-Württemberg (ed.): MdL, the members of the Landtag in Baden-Württemberg 1946-1978. Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-12-911930-2 , page 24 and page 199
  3. ^ Frank-Roland Kühnel: Landtag, MPs and constituencies in Baden-Württemberg 1946 to 2009. Stuttgart 2009, ISBN 978-3-923476-01-5 , p. 216.