Franz Auweck

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Franz Auweck (born August 7, 1884 in Munich ; † April 2, 1964 there ) was a Bavarian politician of the KPD and the SPD .

Life

Auweck graduated from secondary school and attended the Catholic teachers' college in Freising until 1905 . He then worked as an assistant teacher at schools in Schröding, Gilching and Munich. From 1913 he found a job as a teacher.

From 1917 to 1918 he was a soldier as a gunner in the First World War. In 1919 he became a member of the USPD , on whose list he ran for the Bavarian state parliament. He was charged in 1920 for "inciting class hatred and inciting high treason", but the trial ended with an acquittal. In the same year he switched from the USPD to the KPD and in 1921 to the SPD.

In 1922 he moved up on the USPD list and became a member of the Bavarian State Parliament . On December 20, 1923, he lost his eligibility for the state parliament because he moved to Weimar . His successor in the state parliament was Josef zuner .

On October 1, 1922, he was employed as a primary school teacher in Weimar, and on April 10, 1923, with retroactive effect from October 1, 1922, he was dismissed from the Bavarian school service. In addition to his school service, he completed a three-year apprenticeship as a carpenter and passed the journeyman's examination. In 1925 he founded a private vocational secondary school in Thuringia, which was officially recognized in 1926. In 1933 he was dismissed from the Thuringian school service. Until 1943 he worked in a tobacco shop. In 1945 he became the acting head of a primary school in Munich.

Honors

  • In Munich the municipal Franz-Auweck-Abendschule was named after him.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. website of the Franz-Auweck Evening school