Hilde Pleyer

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Hilde Pleyer , née Joseph (born May 24, 1923 in Großpetersdorf , † August 23, 2003 in Oberwart ) was an Austrian politician ( SPÖ ). Pleyer represented the SPÖ from 1966 to 1982 in the Burgenland Landtag and from 1968 to 1969 in the Federal Council .

Pleyer was born as the daughter of the bricklayer Alexander Joseph from Großpetersdorf and attended elementary school in Großpetersdorf. She then worked as an agricultural worker in an agricultural enterprise in Lower Austria and from 1939 worked as a brickworker in the Großpetersdorf brickworks. Between 1941 and 1942 she was employed in the office of the brickworks, in 1942 she worked for the Reich Labor Service and from 1943 to 1945 as an air force intelligence assistant. After the end of the Second World War, she was again employed as a brickworker in Großpetersdorf, where she also worked as a works councilor. She was the paying agent of the union for construction and woodworkers and attended the Otto Möbes business school in Graz from 1951 to 1952 . She then worked for the Oberwart employment office from 1953 to 1966 .

Pleyer was active as a councilor of the SPÖ in Großpetersdorf from 1954 and held the office of deputy mayor from 1982 to 1987. On April 27, 1966, she succeeded Franz Babanitz as a member of the state parliament and was a member of it until April 17, 1968. After the state elections in Burgenland in 1968 , she was elected to the Federal Council on April 24, 1968, but resigned from the Federal Council on July 7, 1969 and moved again to the state parliament on July 14, 1969, this time for Franz Böröczky . Pleyer was a member of the state parliament until October 29, 1982. From 1950 she was also a member of the district women's committee of the Oberwart district, from 1953 district women chairwoman and from 1960 to 1964 she held the office of regional chairwoman of the socialist women of Burgenland.

literature

  • Johann Kriegler: Political manual of Burgenland. Volume 2: (1945–1995) (= Burgenland Research. 76). Burgenland State Archives, Eisenstadt 1996, ISBN 3-901517-07-3 .

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