Hans Dauser

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Hans Dauser

Hans Dauser (born October 5, 1877 in Marktoffingen , † May 10, 1969 in Munich ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ) and SS leader . He was State Secretary in the Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs, of which he was deputy head, and was also a member of the Reichstag from 1933 to 1945 . Before that, he was a member of the Bavarian State Parliament from 1928 to 1933 .

biography

Dauser attended elementary and private school and also took socio-economic courses. After completing his training, he first worked in agriculture. From 1912 he was the association secretary at Concordia. Between 1916 and 1918 he was a soldier in the First World War , where he served as a private in a replacement squadron. After the end of the war he became a member of the BVP and from 1920 to 1923 he was secretary of the war-disabled welfare of the Bavarian Warrior League. In the fall of 1921 he joined the Nazi Party, for which he himself from 1922 to 1933 as Reich orator operated. After the dissolution of the NSDAP, he rejoined the party on June 1, 1925 ( membership number 10.158). In 1928 he entered the Bavarian state parliament for the NSDAP, where he became a member of the committee for tasks of an economic nature. He was a member of the state parliament until 1933, before he became a member of the National Socialist Reichstag for constituency 24 in November 1933 .

On April 25, 1933, Dauser became senior state secretary and head of the “Labor and Welfare” department in the Bavarian State Ministry of Economics and from July 1943 in the State Ministry of the Interior. From June 27, 1933 to November 28, 1936 he was acting head of the Bavarian State Ministry for Economic Affairs. Dauser became a member of the SS on January 7, 1935 with the rank of SS-Standartenführer. On April 1, 1935, he was officially deputy to the Bavarian Minister of Economics. On September 13, 1936, he was also appointed SS-Oberführer and on January 1, 1943, SS-Brigadführer. Dauser was then chairman of the Reich Committee for Housing and Settlements and from 1941 until the end of the war he was deputy chairman of the Reich Advisory Council for Social Housing. Dauser was also the patron of the Reich Association for Housing and Settlement.

After the end of the Second World War he was interned by the Allies from 1945 to 1948 and in 1948 was denazified as an "incriminated" person after a trial chamber procedure . After all, he lived in Munich .

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform: the members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924 . Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 .

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