Heinrich Wilhelm Haltermann

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Heinrich Wilhelm Haltermann (born September 18, 1803 in Lübeck ; † May 20, 1871 there ) was a merchant and senator of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck.

Life

Mengstraße 34 (to the right of the old Schabbelhaus No. 36, around 1900)

Heinrich Wilhelm Haltermann was the son of the Lübeck merchant Johann Christian Haltermann, who came from the island of Fehmarn . He became a citizen of the city in 1833. As a businessman, initially a partner in the Dillmann & Maas company from 1833 , he founded the Haltermann & Brattström company in 1839 with the Swede Marcellus Brattström with its headquarters at Mengstrasse 34, which also served as a residential building. After the death of the two founders, the company was taken over by Carl Alfred Brattström alone. Haltermann was a member of the Schonenfahrer in Lübeck and their senior man . In 1848 he was the first Lübeck senator to be elected by three electoral chambers after the constitutional reform and no longer by the council alone. Haltermann was chairman of the preparatory commission for the introduction of the new constitution. In the Senate he was a. a. the Finance Department, the Debt Deputation, the High School College and the Commission for Commerce and Shipping.

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