Fritz Neubecker

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Fritz Neubecker (born October 13, 1903 in Berlin ; † October 28, 1995 there ) was a German politician ( SPD ).

Fritz Neubecker was the son of a typesetter and attended elementary school . He was employed by a lawyer and joined the Socialist Workers' Youth (SAJ) in 1920 . In the following year he also joined the SPD and in 1922 the Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold . He worked for the JHW Dietz publishing company . After the " seizure of power " by the National Socialists , Neubecker worked in the accounting department of Kali Chemie and was illegally active in the resistance group of Franz Klühs and Max Fechner .

After the Second World War in 1945, Neubecker was one of the signatories of the SPD's appeal and became a board member of the SPD's central committee . In the first Berlin election in 1946 , he was elected to the district assembly in the Tempelhof district. Since Otto Burgemeister became district mayor of Berlin-Tempelhof, Neubecker moved up to the city ​​council of Greater Berlin in January 1947 . In the same year he became commercial director of the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG) until he retired in 1968 for reasons of age.

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