Ferdinand Schürmann

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Ferdinand Schürmann

Ferdinand Schürmann (born January 26, 1896 in Münster ; † September 29, 1966 there ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

After attending elementary school from 1902 to 1910, Schürmann completed an apprenticeship as a locksmith from 1910 to 1913 while also attending a commercial advanced training school.

In August 1914 Schürmann volunteered to take part in the First World War . He was wounded twice in the war and was promoted to vice sergeant. He was also awarded the Iron Cross II. Class and the Wound Badge. On October 3, 1918, Schürmann was taken prisoner by the British , from which he returned in October 1919.

From 1919 to 1933 Schürmann earned his living as a telgraph worker and as a craftsman at the telegraph construction office in Münster. Politically, he began to be active in the NSDAP ( membership number 25.902). For this he was in March 1933 city councilor in Münster and in June 1933 representative of the district leader of the German Labor Front (DAF). In April 1934 he also became head of the district operations cell and district administrator of the DAF.

In July 1934 Schürmann became an honorary head of department at the city administration of Münster. Two months later, in September 1934, he entered the National Socialist Reichstag as a replacement for the resigned MP Walter Nagel , to which he belonged until the end of Nazi rule in spring 1945 as a representative of constituency 17 (North Westphalia).

Since March 1, 1935, Schürmann was also a member of the Prussian State Council . Since January 30, 1938, he was the holder of the Golden Party Badge of the NSDAP .

literature

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Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Klaus D. Patzwall : The golden party badge and its honorary awards 1934–1944 . Patzwall, Norderstedt 2004, ISBN 3-931533-50-6 , p. 86 .