Heinrich Laue

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Heinrich Laue (born October 6, 1877 in Harburg , † June 25, 1963 in Hamburg ) was a German politician ( DHP , Lower Saxony State Party , FDP ).

Laue was a furniture dealer by trade. In the Weimar Republic he belonged to the German-Hanover Party and was its Harburg district chairman. After the end of the Second World War he was one of the founders of the Hamburg regional association of the Lower Saxony state party , from which the German party emerged in November 1946 . First he was chairman of the NLP in Hamburg and later until the end of 1947 DP chairman in the Harburg district . In 1946 he was appointed to the Appointed Citizenship by the British occupying power as the only representative of his party and joined the FDP parliamentary group there as a guest. This collaboration resulted in a merger of the FDP and NLP in the 1946 state election , which only consisted of the FDP Laue and his deputy Heinrich Buchholz giving two of the four candidate places in constituency 18 ( Heimfeld , Marmstof , Neugraben, Fischbek , Moorburg , Francop , Neuenfelde and Cranz ).

At the beginning of October 1949, Laue joined the FDP with some party friends. In the election to the Harburg district committee , which was carried out together with the township election in 1949 , he was elected as an FDP candidate on the list of the father-city federation in this regional representation of the Süderelbe district. Four years later - the FDP now ran together with the CDU, BHE and Laue's former party friends from the DP as the Hamburg bloc - it initially failed, but after a few weeks he moved to the district committee in 1953 for Theodor Hoorn, who was elected to the Hamburg parliament . In 1957 - now 80 years old - he decided not to run again.

Individual evidence

  1. Christof Brauers, Die FDP in Hamburg, Martin Meidenbauer Verlagsbuchhandlung, Munich 2007, p. 242, footnote 4.
  2. Brauers, p. 250.
  3. Hamburger Stadtnachrichten, edition of October 3, 1949, page 4.
  4. ^ Official gazette of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, years 1949 and 1953.