Fritz Ebenböck

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Fritz Ebenböck (born March 8, 1901 in Regensburg , † 1982 ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

Ebenböck was a graduate engineer . Ebenböck joined the SA and the NSDAP in 1922. In the following year he became leader of the 11th company of the SA regiment in Munich. He was directly involved in the 1923 Hitler putsch . After the dissolution of the NSDAP, he rejoined the party in 1926 (membership number 45.004) and in 1930 the SA. In 1934 he had already achieved the rank of SA Obersturmbannführer.

From 1934 to 1935 he was president of TSV 1860 Munich .

In December 1934 he became the "Reichsbetriebsgemeinschaftswalter" (Reich operating community administrator) of the Reich operating association "Druck". He held this position until August 1937, when he became the head of the Reichsbetriebsgemeinschaft (later specialist office) "Printing and Paper" ”. He ran on the nomination of the NSDAP on the list position No. 203 in the Reichstag election on March 29, 1936. Ebenböck was not elected to the Reichstag , however. At that time he lived in Berlin-Wilmersdorf , Uhlandstrasse 118.

In December 1934 he was also head of the Reich Main Office of the NSDAP. On the occasion of the Reichshandwerkertag in Frankfurt am Main, Fritz Ebenböck was personally accepted into the SS by Heinrich Himmler . In 1938 he had already achieved the rank of SS-Standartenführer .

With effect from January 30, 1943 he was promoted to SS-Oberführer .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. He was the recipient of the medal in memory of November 9, 1923