Gustav Hülser

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Gustav Hülser

Gustav Hülser (born September 22, 1887 in Ober-Emmelsum , Dinslaken district; † May 6, 1971 in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse ) was a German politician (DNVP; CSVD; CDU).

Live and act

After attending the village school in Ober-Emmelsum, Hülser was trained as a gardener in Duisburg. Until 1912 he practiced his profession in Duisburg , around the city of Dresden and in various Berlin suburbs. He was then appointed to Dresden as Protestant workers' secretary, an activity he continued in 1925. A year later, in 1913, Hülser was elected full-time first chairman of the German Gardeners Association.

After temporarily participating in the First World War , Hülser returned to his homeland in 1917 as a war disabled: From then on he worked on the main board of the Christian-national central association of agricultural workers, whose district management in the Silesian district he took over in February 1923. As a journalistic analogue to his trade union work, Hülser edited the Deutsche Gärtner-Zeitung (1913/1914) and the Rundschau (1919–1930), the newspaper of the Central Association of Agricultural Workers. In addition, he worked as an editor for the Christian-Social Press Service and as an editor for the Silesian Country Post in Wroclaw.

After the First World War, Hülser joined the German National People's Party (DNVP) at the end of 1918 . From 1919 to 1920 he sat for this in the city council of Bielefeld (see BV). From May 1924 to September 1930 he was a member of the Reichstag as a member of the DNVP - or from 1929 of the Christian-Social People's Service, a party split from the DNVP, of which he was second Reich Chairman - for constituency 7 (Breslau).

In 1925, Hülser took over as the representative of the Silesian Provincial Synod. In 1926 Hülser became a lecturer for social policy and the labor movement at the Evangelical Social School in Spandau , and later head of the Christian national school for agricultural workers of the Central Association of Agricultural Workers.

In the years 1933 to 1943, Hülser held the office of State and Reich Managing Director of the German Evangelical Men's Work in Berlin. He then moved to the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein , where he headed the department for vocational training.

After the Second World War , Hülser found a new political home in the Christian Democratic Union (CDU): For this he sat from 1951 to 1963 in the state parliament of Rhineland-Palatinate , where he chaired the petitions committee from 1955 to 1959 led. Furthermore, Hülser, who was assigned to the liberal-Protestant wing of his party, was at times a member of the executive committee of the CDU parliamentary group in the state parliament: in 1959 he gave up his seat on the parliamentary committee to Helmut Kohl , a newcomer to parliament .

Hülser's estate, which contains recordings of experiences and correspondence and has a volume of 0.15 linear meters of shelving, is now stored in the archive of social democracy .

Fonts

  • Letters to self-thinking workers , 1921.
  • To German farm workers! , 1922.
  • The national and state political significance of the trade unions , slea
  • Republic and Black-Red-Gold , Berlin 1926.
  • People's Political Service , 1929.
  • Social policy and its opponents , 1929.
  • People's Political Service , 1929.
  • The Christian-Social People's Service and the Parties , Berlin s. a. [1930].
  • Christian social service in the Reichstag from December 1929 to July 1930 , Berlin 1930.

Individual evidence

  1. Bernhard Vogel: The phenomenon. Helmut Kohl in the judgment of the press, 1960-1990 , 1990, p. 140.

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