Hans Kummerfeldt

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Hans Kummerfeldt

Hans Kummerfeldt (born April 4, 1887 in Boizenburg / Elbe , † May 17, 1963 in Nordhastedt ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

After attending elementary school in Boizenburg and a higher boys' school, Kummerfeldt completed an apprenticeship in blacksmithing in Schwerin . In addition, he was taught at the trade school. After temporary membership in the body squadron of the 1st Mecklenburg Dragoon Regiment 17 and eight years of journeyman and traveling years, Kummerfeldt passed the master's examination in 1912. Later he started his own business.

From 1914 Kummerfeldt took part in the First World War as a standard smith with the 7th battery of the 9th Field Artillery Regiment .

In the 1920s, Kummerfeldt joined the NSDAP. For this he worked intensively as a party speaker. Advertisements for his company, which Kummerfeldt had printed in newspapers in the early 1930s, demonstrate that his thinking was also strongly permeated by the National Socialist worldview in his private life. He lived as a blacksmith in Nordhastedt .

Since 1929 Kummerfeldt was a member of the Schleswig-Holstein Provincial Parliament . From 1932 to autumn 1933 he sat in the Prussian state parliament and then from November 1933 until the end of the Nazi regime in spring 1945 he was a member of the National Socialist Reichstag as a member of constituency 13 ( Schleswig-Holstein ).

Kummerfeldt also served from 1933 to 1938 as President of the Chamber of Crafts in Flensburg and from 1938 to 1945 as President of the Chamber of Crafts in Lübeck and as regional master craftsman of the Nordmark.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Frank Omland: "The old parliamentarianism no longer existed." The Schleswig-Holstein members of the NSDAP in the Reichstag 1924-1945. In: Working group for research into National Socialism in Schleswig-Holstein (ed.): Critical approaches to National Socialism in Schleswig-Holstein. Festschrift for Gerhard Hoch on his 80th birthday on March 21, 2003 (= information on Schleswig-Holstein Contemporary History, issue 41/42.) Kiel 2003, p. 100–129, here table p. 120.
  2. Kay Dohnke / Norbert Hopster: Low German in National Socialism , 1994, p. 162.