Hans Wellmann (politician, 1890)

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Hans Wellmann (born December 10, 1890 in Hochlar , Recklinghausen district , † November 8, 1968 in Hanover ) was a German politician ( CDU ) and member of the Lower Saxony state parliament .

Life

Wellmann attended elementary school in Recklinghausen and trained in horticulture. After completing the apprenticeship training, various activities followed at home and abroad. From 1912 to 1919 he was a soldier and took part in the First World War. From 1919 to 1933 he was a full-time district manager and association chairman in the Christian trade union . Between 1933 and 1935 he was with the DC circuit unemployed union. From 1935 to 1945 he worked as an accountant and warehouse manager in the construction industry. From 1948 to 1953 Wellmann was employed as labor director in an industrial company . He was a member of the Kolping Family for more than fifty years . Wellmann was holder of the Cross of Merit First Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.

politics

Wellmann was the regional managing director of the CDU as early as 1945 and was also instrumental in building the CDU in Lower Saxony . Together with Bernhard path , he applied to the British military government on October 1 and November 3, 1945 for approval of the Christian Democratic Party. He was the founder and state chairman of the social committee of the Christian-Democratic workforce in Lower Saxony. He was a member of the Lower Saxony state parliament for the first electoral period from April 20, 1947 to April 30, 1951 and the third and fourth electoral periods from June 6, 1955 to May 5, 1963. He was chairman of the Committee for Social Affairs from June 25, 1959 until May 5, 1963.

source

  • Barbara Simon : Member of Parliament in Lower Saxony 1946–1994. Biographical manual. Edited by the President of the Lower Saxony State Parliament. Lower Saxony State Parliament, Hanover 1996, p. 402.

Individual evidence

  1. Hanover Chronicle: from the beginning to the present: Numbers, dates, facts By Klaus Mlynek, page 663