Hermann Schroer

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Hermann Schroer

Hermann Schroer (born April 27, 1900 in Elberfeld , † March 7, 1958 in Wuppertal ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

In his youth Schroer attended elementary school, middle school and secondary school in Elberfeld . After graduating from high school in 1920 he worked in the city administration of Ronsdorf .

From 1921 to 1924 Schroer studied law at the universities of Bonn and Munich. He passed the first state examination in law in 1924. The second followed in 1929.

At the end of 1921, Schroer, then a student in Munich , joined the NSDAP ( membership number 32.743). In 1922/23 he was a member of the Munich SA.

From 1924 to 1932 Schroer was a legal employee of the Rundschau , the specialist body of the German tailoring trade.

In January 1930 Schroer settled down as a lawyer in Wuppertal. In the following years he worked as legal advisor to the local SA and as head of the Gaurechtskammer in Düsseldorf . In 1932 he became Gauführer of the National Socialist Legal Guardian Association in Düsseldorf.

From March 1933 to November 1933 and from April 1938 to May 1945 Schroer sat as a member of the Reichstag, in which he represented constituency 22 (Düsseldorf East). In 1934 Schroer became department head of the Reichsleitung and in 1938 Reichsamtsleiter. He was also a city councilor and councilor in Wuppertal, a member of the Academy for German Law and head of the legal department as well as deputy chairman of the court of honor of the Düsseldorf Chamber of Commerce.

As city councilor, Schroer wrote to the later president of the Reichsschrifttumskammer Hanns Johst on June 22nd, 1933: "that as an old Pg. From 1922 and as city councilor I supervise the Wuppertal theater, which is not urban, in the interest of National Socialism. As a result of my authority and With my membership in the Gauleitung I was able to avoid wild interventions ...

In the years 1952–1954 Schroer represented the detective Wilhelm Ober, who had been convicted as a war criminal, in his trial against the state of North Rhine-Westphalia to reinstate the old rank from before the end of the war, in the course of several such trials on the basis of Section 131.

In the post-war period, his work Murder, Judaism, the Death Penalty in the Soviet Occupation Zone was placed on the list of literature to be sorted out.

Fonts

  • Blood and Money in Judaism. Represented on Jewish law , Munich 1937–1938 (with Joseph Caro)
  • Murder, Judaism, Death Penalty , Rather , Munich 1939.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Wuppertal in the time of National Socialism" Ed. Klaus Goebel, 1984, Wuppertal, Peter Hammer Verlag, ISBN 3-87294-251-4
  2. http://www.polunbi.de/bibliothek/1946-nslit-s.html