Jakob Bader

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Jakob Bader (born July 20, 1883 in Lahr / Black Forest ; † January 23, 1939 in Karlsruhe ) was a German lawyer and administrative officer. He was police chief of Mannheim and ministerial director .

Life

Jakob Bader was the son of the cigar manufacturer in Lahr, Jakob Bader, and his wife Pauline nee Bühler. His paternal grandfather is considered to be the founder of the tobacco industry in Oberbaden.

After attending grammar school, where he passed his Abitur in 1902, Jakob Bader studied law at the universities of Freiburg im Breisgau, Munich, Kiel, Berlin and Heidelberg and passed the first state examination in 1907. After the second state examination 1911 doctorate Bader in 1912 to Dr. jur. .

Jakob Bader received his first professional position in Karlsruhe as a government assistant. From 1912 to 1914 he was secretary of the Baden Ministry of the Interior. In 1914 he moved to Müllheim as a government assistant.

After the end of the First World War, in which he participated continuously and rose to the rank of captain, Bader was again active as a government councilor in the Baden Ministry of the Interior in 1918. From 1919 he was appointed police director and from 1932 police chief of Mannheim. After the " seizure of power " by the National Socialists, Jakob Bader returned to the Baden Ministry of the Interior in March 1933, where he was promoted to Ministerial Director.

In December 1933 he was accepted into the NSDAP and the date of admission set back to May 1, 1933.

He lived in Karlsruhe, Beethovenstrasse 9, and died in January 1939 of the consequences of an accident that he suffered while visiting a mine in Blumberg.

Honors

family

Since 1921 Bader was married to Margit Wilhelmine nee Ringwald. The marriage had two children.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Ruck: Corpsgeist and State Consciousness. Officials in the German Southwest 1928–1972 , 2014, page 133.