Harald Dickertmann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harald Dickertmann (born November 9, 1909 in Hagen ; † April 14, 1994 in Marquartstein ) was a German ministerial official and federal judge.

Life

Like his brother Werner Dickertmann (1908–1989), Harald Dickertmann attended the secondary school branch of the secondary school and grammar school in his hometown. After he had passed the school leaving examination at Easter 1927, he and his brother enrolled for the summer semester of 1927 at the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg for law. Following the example of their uncle Wilhelm Hölling , the brothers became active in the Corps Hasso-Borussia Freiburg . As an inactive , Harald Dickertmann moved to the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich and the Westphalian Wilhelms University in Münster . Only 20 years old, he passed the trainee exam in July 1930. As a great radio amateur, he wrote his doctoral thesis with Claudius von Schwerin . In 1932 he was awarded a Dr. iur. PhD . After the preparatory service in the area of ​​the Hamm Higher Regional Court , he passed the assessor examination at the Higher Regional Court with "good" in February 1934 . After working as a court assessor, he joined the Deutsche Reichsbahn on October 1, 1935 (1920–1945) . During the three years at the Reich Railway Directorate in Opole , he got to know the eastern regions of the German Empire . Because of his good performance, he was drafted into the Reich Ministry of Transport in July 1938 . He married on May 19, 1939.

For the invasion of Poland to the army confiscated and as a radio amateur of the Signal Corps of the Wehrmacht and Waffen SS allocated, he was in the 208th Infantry Division radio platoon leader and deputy company commander of the news department. In the western campaign to lieutenant d. R. promoted, he received the Iron Cross 2nd class. In the German-Soviet War he was assigned to the Army Field Railways and in June 1941 assigned to the Army High Command - Chief of Transport. 1942 to first lieutenant d. R. and in 1944 to captain d. R. promoted, he received the War Merit Cross of Both Classes with Swords. He registered for use on the war front in 1944 and became a radio officer in a tank brigade.

After the unconditional surrender of the Wehrmacht , he was taken prisoner in Eiderstedt . Since he had been a senior government councilor , he was transferred to the Neuengamme internment camp ("Ratsaktion") and released in early 1946 with his wife, son and daughter. In 1947 denazified in a Bielefeld judicial chamber proceedings , he was able to return to his old career as a Reichsbahn chief inspector at the Reichsbahndirektion Essen . As Oberreichsbahnrat and deputy head of the Bonn liaison office formed in the Federal Ministry of Transport , he was able to regain his previous legal status. From the summer of 1951 he headed the Railway Traffic Office in Aachen. When the formation of the Federal Disciplinary Court was imminent in 1952 , he applied from Aachen for a position as a federal judge . From February 1953 until the incorporation of the five disciplinary and military service senates into the Federal Administrative Court (1967), he was first a federal judge, and from autumn 1958 he was President of the Senate . From October 1972 he headed the first and only disciplinary senate of the Federal Administrative Court responsible for federal civil servants. As an avid skier, he moved to Übersee (Chiemgau) after retiring , where he had built a house. He spent the last few years in a retirement home in Marquartstein, where he died at the age of 84.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 67/431
  2. Dissertation: Radio interference law .
  3. a b c Weber II: Harald Dickertmann II . HB-Post (Corps newspaper of Hasso-Borussia) 1994