Hilde Eiserhardt

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Hilde Eiserhardt , née Stahl (born February 24, 1888 in Esch (Waldems) ; † April 6, 1955 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German lawyer in a leading position at the German Association for Public and Private Welfare .

biography

In 1917 Stahl had the family name changed to "Eiserhardt".

Eiserhardt doctorate after studying law in 1918 to Dr. jur. At the German Association for Public and Private Welfare (DV) Eiserhardt was a consultant from 1919 and then from 1922 to 1936 deputy managing director of the DV under Wilhelm Polligkeit . Eiserhardt, who was retired in 1937, belonged to the German professional association of social workers. She was a vehement advocate of a preservation law that was never enacted , which was supposed to regulate the legal basis for the compulsory placement of so-called "anti-social" and "inferior" people. At the time of National Socialism , she worked for the Bavarian State Association for Wandering and Homeland Service and, together with Alarich Seidler and Wilhelm Polligkeit, published the 1938 publication Der Nonseßhaft Mensch , in which the premises of Bavarian wandering welfare were propagated as the basis for a "Reich solution to the anti-social question" were. She also worked for the Sociographical Institute in Frankfurt a. M. active.

After the Second World War she worked for the Frankfurt am Main welfare office. From 1946 to 1950 she resumed her function as deputy managing director of the DV, was a member of the DV board from 1947 to 1950 and of the main committee of the DV from 1947 to 1955.

She married Wilhelm Polligkeit in 1950.

literature

  • Matthias Willing: Hilde Eiserhardt (1888–1955). Life and work of a German welfare lawyer NDV 83, issue 8 and 9, 2002.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Birth entry of Hildegard Stahl in the Hessian State Archives Marburg (HStAM) . As an addendum is documented there on February 28, 1917: According to a notification from the Grand Ducal House of Justice and the Foreign Office in Karlsruhe on February 8, 1917, Hildegard Stahl's family name has been changed to "Eiserhardt". She is also allowed to use the designation "woman".
  2. a b German Association for Public and Private Welfare - Exhibition (PDF; 14.8 MB)
  3. ^ A b Matthias Willing: The Preservation Law (1918-1967). A legal historical study on the history of German welfare. Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2003, p. 98
  4. ^ Matthias Willing: The Preservation Law (1918-1967). A legal historical study on the history of German welfare. Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2003, p. 176