Fritz Stadler

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Fritz Stadler

Fritz Stadler (born July 17, 1892 in Obereching , Sankt Georgen bei Salzburg , † September 12, 1965 in Bludenz ) was an Austrian politician ( SDAP ) and railway official. From 1932 to 1934 he was a member of the Vorarlberg state parliament .

education and profession

Stadler was born in Obereching near Salzburg and first attended elementary school. He then completed the advanced training school in the Bavarian city of Laufen an der Salzach . In 1913 he moved to Bregenz and joined the Imperial and Royal Austrian State Railways . He worked until his retirement in 1952 when the railroad and was after the First World War, members of the Austrian Federal Railways . During the First World War, he served on the Russian front between 1914 and 1915, where he was wounded at Josefshof-Lublin. As a result, he was used in the railway service on the southern front from 1916 to 1918.

Politics and functions

Stadler became a member of the Social Democratic Party and was also involved as a member and first controller of the Dornbirn Workers' Home Association. He was also active as a member of the workers gymnastics club Lauterach, a member of the SOS Children's Village and a member of the Austrian Federation of Trade Unions . Stadler was a member of Lauterach's municipal council between 1919 and 1934, and as a member of the Bregenz constituency, he also represented the Social Democratic Labor Party in the Vorarlberg state parliament from November 22, 1932. Stadler was a member of the Agriculture Committee in the 1932/33 session. He lost his mandate on February 12, 1934 in the course of the Austrian Civil War , although all of their mandataries lost their political mandates after the Social Democratic Party was banned. After the Second World War, Stadler was a member of the Dornbirn city council between 1947 and 1949, and in 1956 he moved with his family to Bludenz.

Private

Fritz Stadler was born as the son of Peter Stadler and Theresia Buschhauser. He married Klementine Tomaselli (1891–1981) in Rankweil in 1920 and had a daughter in 1921 and a son in 1926.

Awards

  • Wound Medal (First World War)

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