Johann Wilhelm Jacob

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Johann Wilhelm Jacob (born August 23, 1816 in Kaiserslautern ; † September 3, 1888 there ) was a Palatinate reindeer and landowner. From 1869 to 1875 he was a member of the Bavarian state parliament.

Pfaffenhof's wine cellar

Life

Jacob was the son of the economist, landowner and member of the state parliament Johann Nicolaus Jacob (1774–1856) and Charlotte Späth (1778–1845). He took over a winery in Herxheim am Berg , today's Pfaffenhof , from his father , which his grandchildren sold again in 1911. In Kaiserslautern he was involved in a number of companies and start-ups.

After the death of Franz Tafel , he followed him on March 31, 1869 to the 22nd state parliament of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies . His constituency was Kirchheim -Kaiserslautern, since 1877 Kaiserslautern. Jacob belonged to the Bavarian Progressive Party and was confirmed in his post by elections in 1869 and 1875, but then submitted his resignation, which was approved on October 21, 1875. His successor was Philipp Peter Schmidt , who had a relative of Jacob's wife.

Jacob's listed grave frames the morgue of the main cemetery in the south view with the grave of the building contractor Leonhard Kröckel . Like this one, Jacob's grave shows a torch and Kröckel's grave the cross. His youngest brother, the doctor and author Carl Jacob , became a member and secretary of the Palatinate district council in 1865 and was president of this district parliament from 1873 to 1882. Jacobstraße in Kaiserslautern is named after the family.

literature

  • August and Elise Gerle: The Jacob family . Kaiserslautern 1931. p. 8f (with photo).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. See his entry in the parliamentary database.
  2. Rudolf H. Böttcher: Philipp Peter Schmidt - After the little wreath all the hardship of the law . In: The family ties of the Palatinate Revolution 1848/1849. A contribution to the social history of a bourgeois revolution. Special issue of the Association for Palatinate-Rhenish Family Studies. Volume 14. Issue 6. Ludwigshafen am Rhein 1999. p. 307.