Heinrich Janson

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Heinrich Janson

Heinrich Janson (born August 31, 1869 in Kleinbockenheim , now Bockenheim an der Weinstrasse , † April 22, 1940 in Albisheim ) was a German politician (DVP).

Live and act

In his youth, Janson attended elementary school in Kleinbockenheim, the Latin school in Grünstadt and the secondary school in Augsburg . Later he was trained at the agricultural school in Wiesbaden . Janson then worked as a farmer on his parents' farm near Kleinbockenheim. Around 1890 he joined the 2nd Bavarian Uhlan Regiment . In 1895 Janson founded his own vineyard property in Albisheim in the Palatinate. Through his marriage to Mrs. Schloßstein, Janson came into the possession of the old mill in the village, which he had converted into an elegant house, which was popularly known as the Schlößchen.

In 1901 Janson became the owner and manager of the Albisheim electricity company. In the same year he became a member of the Albisheim municipal council. In 1910 he took over the office of mayor of the municipality. He also held positions as chairman of the Palatinate farmers' union and, from 1902 to 1919, as a member of the Kirchheimbolanden district council. He also received the title of economics council .

At the First World War Janson took the leader as the replacement squadron 5th Bavarian Regiment Chevaulegers part.

Around 1919 Janson joined the German People's Party (DVP). On May 4, 1921, Janson entered the Weimar Republic's first Reichstag, elected in June 1920, as a replacement for the deceased MP Karl Gebhart , to which he initially belonged until March 1924 as a representative of constituency 30 (Palatinate). After a nine-month absence from parliament from March to December 1924, Janson was able to return to the Reichstag in the December 1924 election, to which he was a member until September 1930. After leaving the Reichstag, Janson withdrew into private life.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Life data according to Wilhelm Heinz Schröder : BIORAB-Online.
  2. Friedrich Wilhelm Weber: The history of the Palatinate mills of a special kind , 1981, p. 27.