Julius Lacher

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Julius Lacher (born June 28, 1845 in Karlsruhe , † December 12, 1919 ibid) was a lawyer and official member of the Baden civil service since 1871 , comparable to today's district administrator .

family

Julius Lacher was born as the son of Friedrich Lacher, controller of the amortization fund , and Maria née Eckert. Julius Lacher married Maria née Daferner (born April 16, 1851 in Gießen) on February 27, 1873, daughter of Martin Daferner and Sophia née Staudinger. Lacher's marriage resulted in three children: Friedrich (* April 23, 1874), Maria (* April 13, 1877) and Mathilde (* March 23, 1878).

Life

Lacher passed the school leaving examination at the Karlsruhe Lyceum in 1864 . From the winter semester of 1864/65 he studied law at the University of Heidelberg ; from the winter semester 1866/67 to the summer semester at the University of Berlin and then at the University of Freiburg .

From December 22, 1868 to 1870, he worked as a legal intern and volunteer at various administrative offices. He received his first job as a clerk at the district office of Emmendingen from May 1870 to January 1871. On May 4, 1871, he became an assistant at the district office in Lörrach . From November 15, 1871, he worked in the secretariat of the Ministry of the Interior and on December 18, 1872, he became an official at the Rastatt district office . On June 3, 1874, he moved to the Tauberbischofsheim district office as a bailiff .

On July 27, 1875 he was appointed head of the district office of Eppingen , and on June 7, 1876, he moved to the district office of Adelsheim , where on May 8, 1878 he became chief magistrate and head of the district. On April 17, 1879, he moved to the district office of Bretten as senior bailiff and board member , on April 9, 1884 to the district office of Müllheim and on June 9, 1888 to the district office of Wertheim .

On October 14, 1895, he became senior official and second official at the Mannheim district office . On June 13, 1899, he was appointed as a secret councilor and member of the administrative court in Karlsruhe, before he was appointed to the secret council of higher government on January 10, 1911 and was retired.

Awards

literature

  • Bernd Breitkopf: The old districts and their heads of office . The emergence of the districts and offices in what is today the district of Karlsruhe - biographies of the senior officials and district administrators from 1803 to 1997. Verlag Regionalkultur, Ubstadt-Weiher 1997, ISBN 3-929366-48-7 , p. 142-143 .