Lucie Neupert

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Lucie Neupert , née Fischer (born July 27, 1896 in Frankfurt am Main ; † May 6, 1978 in Gera ) was a German state politician active in Thuringia ( SPD / SED ).

Life

From 1914 to 1945

Lucie Fischer was the daughter of the shoemaker Oswald Fischer. In 1912 Oswald Fischer was one of the first three SPD members of the 23rd extraordinary state parliament for the Principality of Reuss older line . She attended eight classes of elementary school and did a commercial apprenticeship. She then worked as a travel agent and from 1911 to 1923 as an office clerk at the Reussische Volkszeitung in Greiz . At the age of 18, Fischer joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in 1914. From 1917 to 1921 she was a member of the Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD) before returning to the SPD. Together with her future husband Richard Neupert, she was active in Greiz during the revolutionary events of 1918. In 1919 she became a member of the Reuss People's Council and then from 1919 to 1922 in the joint state parliament of the two Free States of Reuss. In this 1919 four women met 32 ​​men. Fischer was the only representative there for Reuss-Greiz . On March 31, 1921 (after Stange not until 1922) she resigned due to the downsizing of the regional representation.

Reuss went up in 1920 in the state of Thuringia . Fischer, Neupert from 1930, was a member of the Thuringian state parliament from 1927 to 1932 . She entered the state parliament in the fourth electoral term through the state election proposal of the SPD, and in the fifth electoral term she was the representative of the second electoral district. Neupert was active in the budget committee and in the application committee.

From 1933 to 1949 she worked as a grocer .

From 1945 to 1978

When the Nazi rule was eliminated, Neupert became involved again in the SPD. In 1945 in Gera she became the representative of her party in the city commission for the expropriation of Nazi assets. In the first local elections on September 8, 1946, she stood for the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) and was elected to the city council. She was the only woman among the six aldermen .

From 1950 to 1952, she continued her parliamentary work in the second and, until 1990, last Thuringian Landtag . The deputies there were determined on the basis of a standard list of the National Front . There Neupert was chairman of the faction of the DFD and the consumer cooperatives . In 1952 the states and their representative bodies were dissolved.

Professionally, Neupert was from 1949 secretary and later managing director of the consumer cooperatives in Gera. She was a member of the FDGB , the Democratic Women's Association (DFD) and the Society for German-Soviet Friendship (DSF).

See also

literature

  • Heike Stange : Documentation. In: Thuringian Landtag (ed.) “Now finally women can become members of parliament!” Thuringian women parliamentarians and their politics. Hain, Weimar 2003, pp. 219f, ISBN 3-89807-039-5 .
  • Reyk Seela : Diets and regional representations in the Russian states 1848 / 67–1923. G. Fischer, Jena 1996. pp. 191-193. ISBN 3-437-35046-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. Directory of the members of the joint state parliament of the two Free States of Reuss in 1919.
  2. Heike Stange: Documentation. P. 219
  3. ^ Karl-Heinz Petzke: Antifascist Awakening and New Beginning in Gera 1945/1946 . Gera 1996, 2014. pp. 23f. (pdf, accessed December 10, 2018)
  4. ^ Karl-Heinz Petzke: Antifascist Awakening and New Beginning in Gera 1945/1946 . Gera 1996, 2014. pp. 33, 40. (pdf, accessed December 10, 2018)