Hanns Ruckdäschel

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Hanns Ruckdäschel

Hanns Ruckdäschel (* 21st April 1886 in Schwarzenbach an der Saale , † 3. May 1938 in Nuremberg ) was a German teacher and ethnically - Nazi politician.

Life

After attending the elementary school in Wasserknoden ( Berneck District Office in Upper Franconia ) and the teacher training college in Bayreuth (from 1899 to 1904), Ruckdäschel was an assistant teacher in Goldkronach , Haag , Tannfeld and Lützenreuth . From 1909 he was a teacher, from 1921 a main teacher at the primary school in Nuremberg .

In September 1914, Ruckdäschel reported during the First World War as a volunteer in the riding ends Division of the 5th Field Artillery Regiment "King Alfonso XIII. from Spain ” to the Bavarian Army . Since 1915 he was in the field on the Western Front , most recently with the replacement field artillery regiment as a deputy sergeant . Ruckdäschel was seriously wounded on September 19, 1916 during the Battle of the Somme . He also fought in front of Verdun and in Flanders at the end of September . In 1918 he was wounded again. Ruckdäschel received the Iron Cross II. Class and the Military Merit Cross II. Class.

From 1919 to 1921 he was a member of the board of directors of the Association of German War Participants, editor of the magazine Der Kriegteilnehmer , chairman of the Central Association of German War Disabled and War survivors for the Northern Bavarian Gau and secretary of the Bavarian Civil Service Association in the Northern Bavaria Gau. After the end of the war, Ruckdäschel joined the German Workers' Party and was active in the working group of the patriotic associations in Nuremberg.

In May 1924 Ruckdäschel moved for the constituency 26 (francs) in the Reichstag , where he remained until December, in the second term National Socialist Freedom Movement represented. In Bayreuth he was the leader of the 25-man branch of the German National Freedom Party and was terrorized in this capacity by Julius Streicher . Even an offshoot of the German Volkish Freedom Movement led by him hardly got beyond Nuremberg and only had 60 to 70 members during its short existence.

literature

  • Martin Schumacher (Hrsg.): MdR The Reichstag members of the Weimar Republic in the time of National Socialism. Political persecution, emigration and expatriation, 1933–1945. A biographical documentation . 3rd, considerably expanded and revised edition. Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-5183-1 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Martin Schumacher (ed.): Md R., the members of the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic in the time of National Socialism. 3rd, considerably expanded and revised edition. Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, p. 407.
  2. ^ Rainer Hambrecht: The rise of the NSDAP in Middle and Upper Franconia (1925-1933) . University of Würzburg, 1975, p. 73.
  3. Hambrecht 1975, p. 90.