Nordhäuser Newspaper
The Nordhäuser Zeitung was founded in 1848 under the name Nordhäuser Intellektivenblatt as an organ of the liberal democrats in Nordhausen and banned in 1943.
history
From 1889 the Nordhäuser Zeitung was in the sole possession of members of the Nebelung family, who continued to run the newspaper under the company “Th. Müller ” published.
In 1937 the publishing house was in Nordhausen at Königshof 22 to 24, with Curt Nebelung acting as the publishing director. The circulation this year was 16,460 copies. The newspaper appeared six days a week and the length was 12 pages and there were supplements for women, children, agriculture, the Nordhauser family papers , entertainment, the film mirror , the literary mirror and the Hitler Youth . The travel supplement was printed in the months from May to September.
In 1943 the editor for politics, Dr. Johannes Rathje (1879–1956), who had worked there since 1931, was deposed. As a result, the newspaper was banned on April 1, 1943.
Organization of the newspaper (1937)
- Chief editor and head of the features section: Dr. Theodor Nebelung
- Editor for politics and economics: Dr. Johannes Rathje
- Local: Erich Traumann
- Sport and home: Helmut Döltz
- General: Fritz Daniel
- Advertising manager: Rudolf Grentz
Permanent staff and correspondents:
- Gustav Schüren
- Albert Klapproth
- Dr. August Stolberg
- Privy Councilor of Justice R. Kossina
- Jakob Peschken
- Dr. Ella Runge
- Private lecturer Dr. Hermann Stoeckius
- in Berlin:
- Karl Brammer
- Heinz Pauck
- Joachim Haupt
- Gerhard Wiedemeyer
- In Blankenburg: Otmar Schultheiß
- in Holungen: A. Thraen
- in Weimar: Bauer
credentials
- Institute for Newspaper Studies at the University of Berlin, Handbook of the German Daily Press , Leipzig 1937
- Johanna Jantsch, Martin Rade, Adolf "from" Harnack, The correspondence between Adolf von Harnack and Martin Rade: Theologie on the public market , 1996
Individual evidence
- ^ Hans Walkhoff: The newspaper system of the Harz region. Verlag Risse, 1934. p. 60