Joseph thin jaw

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Joseph Dünnebacke , occasionally Josef Dünnebacke, (born August 6, 1878 in Hengsbeck , † July 14, 1963 in Recklinghausen ) was a German association and local politician ( CDU ).

Family origin

The Dünnebacke family originally comes from the village of Grafschaft in the Sauerland , where the name can still be read on several old half-timbered houses . The family history is closely linked to the monastery County connected, the inventor of the first several times mentioned in documents from 1507 to 1528 namesakes Hans Dünnebacke (Hans Dunne baking and Hans Donbacken) as hunters and Messner served. His wife is listed in the books as Dunbecksche .

Life dates

From 1912 on, Dünnebacke was the first chairman of the Association of Municipal Officials of the Province of Westphalia. From 1918 to 1924 he was a city councilor and chairman of the Recklinghausen Center Party . In 1916 he was one of the founders and board members of the Caritas Association Recklinghausen, the first foundation in the diocese of Münster. From 1926 on, Dünnebacke was an alderman and member of the magistrate, from 1927 a full-time city councilor (welfare, health, youth). On March 19, 1933, he was forcibly removed from office during a "Volkssturm" initiated by the SA on the town hall; the subsequent suspension in 1933 was followed by Dünnbake's forced retirement by the National Socialists in 1934. From 1936 he headed the church tax fund of the Catholic parishes. After the end of the Second World War he was a co-founder of the CDU in 1946 and its parliamentary group chairman in 1947/48 and 1952–56 in Recklinghausen. From 1948 to 1952, at the time of the city's development, he was Lord Mayor of the city and was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit.

Honors

literature

  • Anton Dünnebacke (ed.): History of the Dünnebacke family. Vol. 1. Bigge / Ruhr 1938.
  • Maria Thiemann (Ed.): History of the Dünnebacke family. Vol. 2. Recklinghausen 1979.
  • Keywords Josef Dünnebacke and Georg Möllers, "Volkssturm" on the town hall , in: www.recklinghausen.de/Gedenkbuch.
  • Georg Möllers (Hrsg.): Politics for the citizens. 50 years of the Recklinghausen CDU parliamentary group. Recklinghausen 1996.
  • Andreas Witt: The beginnings of the CDU in Recklinghausen and the importance of the city as a meeting place for the CDU in the British zone. In: Vestische Zeitschrift 99 (2002), pp. 403-484.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Anton Dünnebacke (ed.): History of the Dünnebacke family . Vol. 1. Bigge / Ruhr 1938. pp. 9-11
  2. ^ Commemorative book of the city of Recklinghausen, www.recklinghausen.de/Gedenkbuch
  3. Maria Thiemann (ed.): History of the Dünnebacke family . Vol. 2. Recklinghausen 1979. Pages 348 and 354