Hans Jacob

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Hans Jacob

Hans Jacob (born August 6, 1884 in Munich ; † July 3, 1949 ibid) was a German tram officer and National Socialist politician.

Life

After attending elementary school and secondary school, Jacob did an apprenticeship as a sculptor and attended the arts and crafts school and advanced training school at the same time. From 1904 to 1906 he was with the 20th Infantry Regiment "Prince Franz" in Lindau in Lake Constance . At the beginning of World War I. Jacob was called as an infantryman on 6 August 1914 and came later in Syria in captivity . On March 21, 1919, he was released as a sergeant .

Jacob then worked for the municipal railway in Munich , most recently in 1920 in the position of a cashier assistant. In July 1920 he began to get involved in the NSDAP ( membership number 1.622), but did not stand out there. He was active there in the Haidhausen section and was appointed second chairman of the party by Adolf Hitler on January 29, 1923 , after Oskar Körner resigned this mandate due to political differences.

After the NSDAP was banned, he and Alfred Rosenberg founded the replacement organization GVG at the beginning of January 1924 on the instructions of Hitler, who was imprisoned at the time . On February 24 of that year, he signed an agreement with Anton Drexler that provided for a merger with the DFVP for the next six months. In the later merger of the DFVP and NSDAP under the name National Socialist Freedom Party (NF), Jacob was the only former NSDAP member on the deputy parliamentary group alongside Gottfried Feder .

In May 1924 Jacob was elected to the Reichstag for constituency 24 (Upper Bavaria-Swabia) , where he represented the NF in the second electoral period until December.

Web links

  • Hans Jacob in the database of members of the Reichstag

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Biographical data according to 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. 228.
  2. 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 , p. 274 .
  3. ^ Wolfgang Horn: Leader ideology and party organization in the NSDAP (1919-1933) . Droste, Düsseldorf 1972, p. 143. ISBN 3-7700-0280-6 .
  4. Horn 1972, p. 177.
  5. Horn 1972, p. 182.