Helmuth Albrecht (politician)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helmuth Albrecht

Helmuth Albrecht (born November 26, 1885 in Gladbeck , † August 28, 1953 in Kressbronn on Lake Constance ) was a German politician ( DVP ).

Life

He was the son of the mine director Theodor Albrecht and his wife Anna geb. Shepherd. After attending the secondary schools in Essen , Bückeburg and Hanover , Albrecht completed a degree in higher mining from 1905 to 1909 at the universities of the Philipps University of Marburg , the Georg August University of Göttingen , the Technical University of Hanover and the Clausthal Mining Academy . He became active in the Corps Teutonia zu Marburg (1906) and in the Corps Hannovera Göttingen (1907). In 1909 he passed the exam as a mountain trainee and in 1913 as a mountain assessor . He then worked as the manager of operations for the International Drilling Company in France. In January 1914 he became director of the Carlshall union, a potash salt mine in Lühnde near Algermissen .

Albrecht took part in the First World War as a volunteer from August 2, 1914 to March 1919 . In October 1915 he was appointed lieutenant in the reserve with the Schleswig-Holstein Dragoon Regiment No. 13. During the war, he was used on the western and eastern fronts and on the battlefields in Syria . He received the Iron Crosses of both classes and was also awarded the Iron Crescent . After the end of the war, Albrecht returned to his previous work. From 1924 to 1930 he was General Director of the potash works in Volpriehausen . He then became a board member of Burbach-Kaliwerke AG based in Magdeburg (today K + S ).

Helmuth Albrecht was married to Hannah Ruppersberg, daughter of Albert Ruppersberg , with whom he had five children, since July 1914 . The historian of the same name Helmuth Albrecht is his grandson.

MP

In the Reichstag election in 1920 , Albrecht was elected to the German Reichstag , which he belonged to until July 1932. In parliament he represented the constituency of South Hanover - Braunschweig.

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 102/962; 42/861