Günther Schulze-Fielitz

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Günther Schulze-Fielitz (born November 22, 1899 in Hanover , † February 1, 1972 in Essen ) was a German civil engineer , state secretary and manager in the construction industry.

Life

Günther Schulze was a son of the garden architect and Szczecin City Garden Director Otto Schulze (1869–1930). It was not until 1940 that he added the maiden name of his paternal grandmother's maiden name to his frequent family name Schulze to make it easier to distinguish between them, and since then he has been called Günther Schulze-Fielitz .

After a brief war mission in the First World War, he studied civil engineering at the Technical University of Hanover . There he became a member of the Corps Hannovera in 1919 . From 1927 he worked for the road construction administration of the Pomeranian Province in Szczecin . From 1933 to 1945 he was one of the leading employees in the division of Fritz Todt and his successor Albert Speer . Initially, he was a senior employee of the Inspector General for German Roads and was responsible for the area of ​​rural roads. In the summer of 1938, when Todt was transferred to the management of the Westwall building, Schulze-Fielitz set up the management office in Wiesbaden, which was then taken over by Willi Henne . Schulze-Fielitz built up Todt's office with the appointment of Todt's general representative for the regulation of the construction industry . With the rank of State Secretary at the Reich Minister for Armaments and Ammunition , he was Todt's deputy from 1942. Under Albert Speer he headed the General Inspector for Water and Energy (GIWE).

After the war, Günther Schulze-Fielitz was on the board of directors of Hochtief AG in Essen from 1952 , and later switched to the company's supervisory board . His eldest son Eckhard Schulze-Fielitz (* 1929) is a well-known German architect.

In the German Democratic Republic , Schulze-Fielitz's work Die Bauwirtschaft im Krieg (1941) was placed on the list of literature to be segregated.

Fonts

  • The construction industry in the war. (= Writings on the structure of the state . Volume 53). Junker and Dünnhaupt , Berlin 1941.
  • The Dr. Todts. In: The architecture. 5th year, 1942, pp. 43–50.
  • The armaments and the armaments worker. In: Josef Pöchlinger (Ed.): Front in the home. The book of the German armaments worker. Berlin / Vienna / Leipzig 1942, pp. 34–43.
  • with Wolfgang Triebel: Economic preparation of the residential buildings. (= Writings of the Neue Bauwelt, construction technical booklets. Issue 1). Berlin 1951.

literature

  • N / A: State Secretary ret. D. Reg.-Builder Schulze-Fielitz †. In: road and highway. Born in 1972, issue 4, p. 180.
  • Walter Naasner: New Power Centers in the German War Economy 1942–1945. The economic organization of the SS, the office of the general plenipotentiary for labor and the Reich Ministry for Armaments and Ammunition / Reich Ministry for Armaments and War Production in the National Socialist system of rule. (= Writings of the Federal Archives . Volume 45). Boppard 1994, ISBN 3-7646-1929-5 .
  • Christiane Botzet: Ministerial Office, Special Powers and Private Sector. The general agent for the regulation of the construction industry. In: Rüdiger Hachtmann , Winfried Suss (ed.): Hitler's commissioners. Special powers in the National Socialist dictatorship. (= Contributions to the history of National Socialism . Volume 22). Wallstein, Göttingen 2006, ISBN 3-8353-0086-5 , pp. 115-137.

Individual evidence

  1. 1866–1966, Corps Hannovera at the Technical University of Hanover. 1966, p. 94.
  2. ↑ top v .: Appointment of Ministerialdirektor Schulze-Fielitz as State Secretary. In: The street. 9th year 1942, issue 3/4, p. 38.
  3. polunbi.de