Friedrich Stanik

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Friedrich Stanik (born April 11, 1898 in Borkum , † February 25, 1964 in Hamburg ) was a German businessman, member of the Hamburg citizenship and SA brigad leader.

Life

On December 1, 1929, he joined the NSDAP ( membership no. 181.901). From March 1929 to December 1930 he led SA-Sturm 17 (Motorsturm) in Hamburg. Then he became a member of the National Socialist Motor Vehicle Corps (NSKK) as member No. 879. From May 1, 1931, he headed the NSKK in Hamburg. From 1931 he was a member of the Hamburg parliament until 1933.

In the spring of 1932 tensions arose within the German National Handicrafts Association (DHV) because of the direction of Heinrich Brüning's policy . Stanik was commissioned by the management of the Hamburg district to condemn the DHV's position on this policy in an article. The DHV responded by excluding Stanik from the DHV. From 1932 he was on the supervisory board of Hamburger Hochbahn AG (HHA). From April 10, 1933, the members of the NSDAP determined the personnel policy at the HHA. The composition of the chairman of the board of directors, the members of the board of directors and the director of the HHA were changed so that Stanik took the post of general director and chairman of the board and thus had Wilhelm Stein on leave. He remained in this position until 1945.

In 1934, on December 21, he was appointed to the Hamburg State Council . In 1937 and from 1939 to 1941 he was Gau inspector and from 1941 deputy to Gau leader Karl Kaufmann in Gau Hamburg with the tasks of deploying manpower z. B. entrusted after an air raid. On January 30, 1939, he was awarded the Golden Party Badge of the NSDAP .

In 1942 he moved to the SA on September 15 with the rank of SA Oberführer. His promotion to SA group leader took place on August 5, 1943 in the SA group Hansa. In the same year he was previously promoted to SA brigade leader.

Individual evidence

  1. Henning Timpke, Documents on the Gleichschaltung of the State of Hamburg 1933, Frankfurt / Main 1964, p. 325.
  2. Iris Hamel, German National Sales Aid Association and National Trade Union, Frankfurt / Main, 1967, pp. 251-252.
  3. Henning Timpke, Documents on the conformity of the State of Hamburg 1933, Frankfurt / Main 1964, p. 144.
  4. Ulrich Alexis Christiansen, Hamburgs dark worlds the mysterious underground of the Hanseatic city, Berlin 2008, p. 67.
  5. Angelika Ebbinghaus, Karsten Linne, No closed chapter: Hamburg in the "Third Reich", Hamburg 1997, p. 120.
  6. Michael Rademacher, Handbook of the NSDAP-Gaue 1928–1945, Vechta 2000, p. 74.
  7. ^ Klaus D. Patzwall, The Golden Party Badge, Norderstedt 2004, p. 87.
  8. Andreas Schulz, Dieter Zinke, Die Generale der Waffen-SS and the Police, Volume 3, Bissendorf 2008, p. 562.
  9. Der SA-Führer, issues 1–12, Munich 1943, p. 189.