Julius Bachem (politician, 1887)

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Julius Bachem (born July 27, 1887 in Cologne , † August 4, 1959 in Schlitz ) was a German civil servant and conservative politician.

Bachem came from a publishing family and was born as the son of the lawyer and center politician Julius Bachem .

In 1917 Bachem was given the management of the Pleschen district office. At the same time he was a department head at the senior executive committee for the province of Westphalia . In 1920 he took over the administration of the Sankt Goarshausen district . After being expelled by the Allied troops, he first became a department head at the district government in Düsseldorf , before he was also expelled from there. In 1921 Bachem therefore moved to the police headquarters in Berlin . In 1925 he moved to the upper presidium in Brandenburg and later to the police headquarters in Frankfurt am Main .

Between 1921 and 1932 Bachem sat for the DNVP in the Prussian state parliament . In addition to various people of oriental origin, including the founder Muhammad Nafi Tschelebi and the German Mohamed Hassan Walter Hoffmann and the orientalist Georg Kampffmeyer, he was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Islam Institute Berlin since 1927/28.

In May 1933 he was appointed Vice-President of the government in Münster by the National Socialist government . Probably for reasons of his career, Bachem had already joined the NSDAP in 1932 and demonstratively began his service as Vice President in SA uniform. Bachem's hope for the post of district president and a steep administrative career did not come true. Instead, he was transferred to the Prussian Higher Administrative Court in 1934 and a little later appointed curator of the University of Bonn . Bachem was judged by members of the university to be completely incompetent. He was retired in 1937. Bachem was reactivated once more during the Second World War . He was initially employed as a senior government councilor in Merseburg and in 1944/45 was entrusted with the administration of the district office in Breslau .

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Individual evidence

  1. ^ Forsbach, Medical Faculty of the University of Bonn during the Third Reich