Julius Schellin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julius Schellin (born March 12, 1880 in Soest ; † May 3, 1962 in Berlin ) was a German politician ( CSP , DVP , CDU ).

Julius Schellin was the son of a bailiff and attended high school . After Obersekundareife he made a business education and was merchant's assistant in the metallurgical plant in the Westphalian steelworks in Bochum . In 1900 he joined the German National Trade Aid Association (DHV) and became a full-time functionary there in 1904. Schellin became managing director of DHV in Frankfurt am Main in 1907 and joined the Christian Social Party (CSP) the following year . He was drafted in 1915 during the First World War .

In 1918 Schellin joined the German People's Party (DVP) and was elected to the city ​​council in Frankfurt am Main the following year . In 1925 he moved to Hamburg , where he became a board member of the occupational health insurance fund for clerks. In 1932 he became Reich Auditor of the DHV. After the " seizure of power " by the National Socialists , he was dismissed in 1933 for political reasons. In 1935 he became an employee of the Deutsche Bau Sparkasse Darmstadt .

After the Second World War , Schellin joined the CDU in 1945 and in the following year became a board member of the Association of Commercial and Office Workers at the Free German Trade Union Federation (FDGB) in the Soviet zone of occupation . In the first Berlin election in 1946 , Schellin was elected to the city ​​council of Greater Berlin and remained a member of the Berlin House of Representatives until the end of 1958 .

literature