Fritz Stollberg

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Fritz Stollberg

Fritz Stollberg (born February 25, 1888 in Mülheim am Rhein , † June 23, 1948 in Murnau am Staffelsee ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ), police president and SA leader .

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Fritz Stollberg was born on February 25, 1888 as the son of the commercial manager Reinhold Stollberg and Maria Stollberg, née Faßbinder, in Mühlheim am Rhein.

From the age of 7 to 10 he attended elementary school in Mühlheim am Rhein and then grammar school up to Obersekunda. After that, he worked in mechanical engineering as a trainee at the Deutz gas engine factory until he was 19. At the age of 20 and 21, he attended the higher mechanical engineering school in Cologne for four semesters, from which he graduated as a mechanical engineer. Then he worked again in the engine factory in Cologne-Deutz. In 1912 and 1913, Stollberg was a one-year volunteer with the Jäger Regiment 16 in Mülheim am Rhein. From October 1913 Stollberg worked as a designer at the Güldner engine works in Aschaffenburg.

From 1914 to 1918 Stollberg took part in the First World War, in which he was deployed on the Eastern and Western Fronts, from March 1915 in the rank of battalion adjutant and lieutenant of the reserve.

From 1919 to 1933 he was an offer engineer at Güldner Motoren-Werke in Aschaffenburg. On October 11, 1919, he married Henriette Herrmann, who was born in Cologne on December 7, 1891. On September 1, 1929, he joined the NSDAP in Aschaffenburg under membership number 150.122 and on August 1, 1930, he joined the SA. On January 31, 1932 he was promoted to SA troop leader, on July 1 of the same year to SA staff leader and on January 12, 1933 to SA Sturmbannführer, an activity that he performed full-time from March 15, 1933 after giving up his profession . After his promotion to SA-Obersturmbannführer on June 22nd and SA-Standartenführer on July 1st, all in the same year, he headed the Jägerstandarte J 2 in Aschaffenburg. In November 1935 he moved to Leipzig , where he was appointed SA Oberführer on April 20, 1936 and leader of the SA Brigade 35 on January 30, 1937. On April 10, 1937, he became the acting police chief of Leipzig. This office was definitively transferred to him on May 31, 1938.

In December 1942 he was transferred to Frankfurt am Main , where he was also police chief until 1945. From March 1936 until the end of the Nazi regime in spring 1945, Stollberg was a member of the National Socialist Reichstag for constituency 29 (Leipzig) .

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