Franz Röhm

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Franz Röhm (born January 24, 1894 in Potsdam , † December 25, 1969 in Mettingen ) was a German administrative lawyer and district administrator .

Live and act

Franz Röhm graduated from high school in autumn 1913 and did his military service as a one-year volunteer . He studied - interrupted by the war effort from summer 1916 to summer 1918 - at the University of Berlin Law and received his doctorate in 1922 in Giessen with the thesis "The Extraordinary courts in the German Empire since the revolution of 1918" . Before he was appointed government assessor in Potsdam on February 28, 1924 , he worked as a trainee lawyer at the Berlin Superior Court. In the period from March 21 to August 7, 1925, Röhm was entrusted with the representative administration of the Hamm District Office and transferred to the Hildesheim government on September 1, 1925 .

From February 18, 1926 he was temporarily employed in the Prussian Ministry for People's Welfare . After that he stayed as a member of the government in the Prussian administration until October 18, 1928, when he was commissioned with the provisional administration of the Heinsberg District Office. On March 14, 1929, he became the head of the district of Heinsberg and remained in office until he moved to Mayen on October 1, 1932. After the provisions of the law for the restoration of the professional civil service on September 22nd, 1933 put into temporary retirement , his dismissal came in October 1933. He was then later administrative law advisor at the Prussian Higher Administrative Court and also clerk at the Potsdam district government . After his release on August 29, 1940, Röhm worked in the headquarters of C&A Brenninkmeijer .

At the end of 1952 he retired from professional life.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla : Senior administrative officials and functionaries in Westphalia and Lippe (1918–1945 / 46). Biographical manual. Aschendorff, Münster 2004, ISBN 3-402-06799-4 , pp. 153f. ( Publications of the Historical Commission for Westphalia. 22, A, 16 = historical work on Westphalian regional research. Economic and social history group. 16).