Heinrich Haselmayer

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Heinrich Johann Haselmayer , often wrongly Haselmeyer (born July 13, 1906 in Würzburg , † January 21, 1978 ibid) was a German doctor, Nazi functionary and politician ( FDP ).

Life

Haselmayer has been active in National Socialist organizations since his youth. He was a member of the SA in 1922/23 and took part in the Hitler putsch in 1923. Haselmayer studied medicine in Würzburg , Berlin , Kiel and Hamburg . In 1927 he joined the NSDAP . In 1927/28 he was co-founder and university group leader of the NSDStB in Würzburg. In 1929/30 he was a member of the SS and was the head of the NSDStB in Berlin. In the summer of 1930 Haselmayer went to Kiel, where he exposed himself as the organizer of a campaign against the liberal theologian Otto Baumgarten , who was insulted in National Socialist leaflets as a “ traitor ”, “ philosemite ” and “ pacifist ”. When the University of Kiel then refused him enrollment, Haselmayer enrolled at the University of Hamburg. There he acted in 1930/31 as organizational leader of the NSDStB university group. Haselmayer had been AStA chairman in Hamburg since February 1931 , but had to resign in June 1931 for abuse of office. From the spring of 1931 he was a gaured speaker for the Hamburg NSDAP. From 1932 to 1934 he was head of the national education department in the Hamburg district of the NSDAP. He completed his studies with the graduation to the Dr. med. at the University of Hamburg . The title of his dissertation , published in 1932, was "A Contribution to the Sterilization Question of the Insane". According to the leader lexicon was a special interest of racial science .

After the handover of power to the National Socialists , in March 1933 he succeeded the head of the Hamburg Adult Education Center, Kurt Adams, who had been replaced by the National Socialists . As Hamburg chairman of the Kampfbund for German culture , he became second deputy chairman of the Patriotic Society from 1765 , but left office in 1934. After Haselmayer gave a drunken speech in the Netherlands in May 1936 , he lost the leadership of the Hamburg Adult Education Center and was expelled from the NSDAP. Haselmayer worked as a resident doctor in Hamburg since 1938.

After the end of the war, Haselmayer was in Allied internment custody until 1947 and was denazified as an exonerated person after his release . He then lived and practiced as a general practitioner and obstetrician in Hamburg-Bergedorf , where he lived with his wife and their four children. On the night of January 14-15, 1953, Haselmayer was arrested in his Bergedorf detached house by British military police at the instigation of the British High Commissioner , as he was considered one of the "ringleaders" of the Naumann district . He and other accused were briefly imprisoned in the British prison in Werl . Haselmayer was committed to the FDP at the local level in the Hamburg district of Bergedorf .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Third Reich , Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 230.
  2. Geoffrey J. Giles, Students and National Socialism in Germany , Princeton, New Jersey 1985, pp. 74 ff.
  3. Das Deutsche Führerlexikon 1934/1935 , Verlaganstalt Otto Stollberg, Berlin 1934, p. 173 f.
  4. a b Nazi conspiracy - Nau-Nau , In: Der Spiegel , issue 4/1953 of January 21, 1953, pp. 5-7.
  5. Das Deutsche Führerlexikon 1934/1935 , Verlaganstalt Otto Stollberg, Berlin 1934, p. 174.
  6. Marlis Roß: The Exclusion of Jewish Members 1935. The Patriotic Society in National Socialism , (Ed.), Patriotic Society of 1765, Hamburg 2007, p. 51f.
  7. Marlis Roß: The Exclusion of Jewish Members 1935. The Patriotic Society in National Socialism , (Ed.), Patriotic Society of 1765, Hamburg 2007, p. 54.
  8. Hamburger Abendblatt, November 14, 1957.