Julius Fengler

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Heinrich Julius Fengler (born September 1, 1881 in Northeim , † November 28, 1960 in Hanover ) was a German politician ( SPD ).

Career

Fengler trained as a printer and worked as a typesetter and typesetter for the Göttingen-Grubenhagschen Zeitung in Northeim. From 1914 to 1919 he did military service. In September 1915 he was seriously wounded by a shot in the back on the Eastern Front. After his recovery he worked in various POW camps and retired from service as a company sergeant in Courland.

He was chairman of the SPD local group Northeim. In 1920 he became head of the workers' secretariat and the Northeim legal information center. From 1920 to 1924 he was an honorary senator in Northeim and at the same time a member of the provincial parliament of the province of Hanover . He resigned in February 1924. Emil Reupke was the successor .

In 1924 he took over the post of professional community leader in Gleidingen and in the same year the post of community leader. At the same time he was a member of the district council and board member of the Hanoverian rural community association. From 1930 to October 1, 1932 he was District Administrator of the district Hanover before he was sent into temporary retirement. After the seizure of power by the Nazis in 1933, he was arrested for alleged embezzlement.

After the end of the Second World War, he was commissioned by the Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior to merge the Bückeburg and Stadthagen districts to form the Schaumburg-Lippe district and was appointed as the first senior district director. He remained in office until July 31, 1949.

Honors

literature

  • The protocols of the Prussian State Ministry 1817-1934 / 38: Vol. 12, April 4, 1925 to May 10, 1938 / rev. by Reinhold Zilch, with collabor. by Bärbel Holtz. Acta Borussica, new episode
  • Hubert Höing: From the corporate state to a free-democratic republic: Stages in Schaumburg , E. Knoth, 1995
  • Beatrix Herlemann , Helga Schatz: Biographical Lexicon of Lower Saxony Parliamentarians 1919–1945 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen. Volume 222). Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2004, ISBN 3-7752-6022-6 , p. 107.