Friedrich Wilhelm Lange

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Friedrich Wilhelm Lange also Fritz Lange (born October 22, 1878 in Sietow ; † after November 1, 1961 in the office of Berkenthin ) lawyer, Senate Secretary and State Councilor of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck .

Life

Lange was the son of the preposition Wilhelm Ernst August Lange (1839–) at the village church in Sietow and his wife Emma Elisabeth, née. Menke. After graduating from high school in Waren (Müritz) in 1896, he began studying law at the University of Rostock , moved to the universities in Erlangen and Leipzig and enrolled again in Rostock in 1898. Doctorate to Dr. jur. After completing his training, he first joined the ministerial administration service of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin as a secretary and in 1904 joined the administration service of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck, where he became a police advisor in the police office in 1907 and later received the title of senate secretary.

In 1918, on behalf of Mayor Emil Ferdinand Fehling, he conducted the first talks with the Workers 'and Soldiers' Council in Lübeck. In 1919 he became one of the two Senate Commissioners for negotiations on the planned unification of Lübeck with the Principality of Lübeck . From 1920 he was State Councilor of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck and represented it several times as a deputy authorized representative for individual aspects in the Reichsrat .

In 1933 he was retired without giving a reason under Section 6 of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service “to simplify administration”. He joined the NSDAP as a member on May 1, 1933 . His admission was refused due to the membership ban that was ordered on April 19, 1933 and came into force on May 1 . With the approval of Mayor Otto-Heinrich Drechsler and Senator Ulrich Burgstaller , however, he was able to continue to exercise his honorary posts.

In retirement, Lange was, among other things, protonotary of the Parcham'sche Foundation and since the Gleichschaltung in August 1933 as secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Charitable Activities from 1933 to 1945 under the directors Hans Sellschopp and Otto Bernhard Clausen, its actual managing director until 1945, after May 1945 its managing director Director until Adolf Ihde was elected . He negotiated the transition of its museums to state sponsorship on behalf of the company, which was only completed in the course of 1934. In 1942 he was reactivated due to the war and represented as a councilor of state i. R. entrusted with the management of the school and cultural affairs of Lübeck, which had to be filled again due to the war effort and the death of city councilor Hans Wolff . In September 1945 he was ousted by the British Military Government.

Fonts

  • Secret Diplomacy: Political Future Crime Novel. Lübeck: Wessel [1921] (crime and detective novels 10)
  • Contributions to the history of the Charitable Promotion Society, its committees and subsidiaries, and the institutions they support. Lübeck 1940

literature

  • Hartmut Bickelmann : The "non-profit" and their institutions after the Second World War in: Society for the promotion of non-profit activities (Ed.): 200 years of permanence and change in bourgeois community , Schmidt-Römhild , Lübeck 1988, p. 118 ff.
  • Bernd Dohrendorf: The Influence of National Socialism on the Lübeck Society for the Promotion of Charitable Activity in: Society for the Promotion of Charitable Activity (Ed.): 200 years of permanence and change in bourgeois community , Schmidt-Römhild , Lübeck 1988, pp. 95–117
  • Joachim Lilla : Lange, Friedrich Wilhelm in: The Reichsrat: Representation of the German States in the Legislation and Administration of the Reich 1919-1934 a biographical manual with the involvement of the Bundesrat Nov. 1918 - Febr. 1919 and the State Committee Feb. - Aug. 1919. Düsseldorf: Droste 2006 ISBN 3-7700-5279-X , pp. 126-127; Pp. 168-169.
  • Jörg Fligge : Lübeck schools in the "Third Reich": a study on the education system in the Nazi era in the context of developments in the Reich. Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2014 ISBN 978-3-7950-5214-0

Individual evidence

  1. ^ According to Lilla based on information from the Sietow birth registry
  2. ^ Friedrich Walter: Our regional clergy from 1810 to 1888: biographical sketches of all Mecklenburg-Schwerin clergy. Self-published, Penzlin 1889, p. 295
  3. Brother Wilhelm (see Rostock matriculation) was retired as a member of the Confessing Church by the Güstrower German Christian state superintendent Kentmann in the Mecklenburg Church Battle in 1935, but refused to vacate the rectory. See Hannelore Braun: Responsibility for the Church: Autumn 1935 to Spring 1937 , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1993, p. 574
  4. ^ Entry 1896 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  5. ^ Entry 1898 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  6. Proof of this is the minutes of the governing body of the non-profit from May 12, 1934.
  7. ^ Dohrendorf, p. 109
  8. ^ Georg Behrens: 175 years of non-profit work , Lübeck 1964, p. 91.