Oskar Zschake-Papsdorf

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Oskar Zschake-Papsdorf

Oskar Zschake-Papsdorf (born January 12, 1902 in Leipzig ; † missing since July 23, 1944 near Rascaeti near Tiraspol ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

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After attending elementary school and middle school, Zschake-Papsdorf completed an apprenticeship as a community official in small, medium-sized and large town administrations.

According to his own information in the Reichstag Handbuch, Zschake-Papsdorf joined the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) for the first time in 1922 . After the re-establishment of the party in 1925, he joined her again. He also became a member of their combat formation, the Sturmabteilung (SA). In the party he successively took positions as local group leader, district leader in Oschatz and organizational leader of the NSDAP district administration in Saxony .

In November 1933, Zschake-Papsdorf entered the Reichstag as a member of the NSDAP for constituency 29 (Leipzig) , to which he was probably a nominal member until the end of Nazi rule in 1945.

From 1933 to 1936 Zschake-Papsdorf served as district leader of the NSDAP district Oschatz in the Gau Sachsen, then briefly organizational head of the Gau Saxony and then from 1937 to 1942 as district leader of Chemnitz, most recently with the rank of senior division manager. During his war mission he was represented by Hans Schöne as district leader.

In May 1940, Zschake-Papsdorf joined the Wehrmacht in May 1940. He has been missing since July 1944.

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Individual evidence

  1. Silke Schumann: Cooperation and Efficiency in the Service of the War of Conquest: The Organization of Labor, Recruiting and Forced Labor in the Chemnitz Region 1939 to 1945 , Göttingen 2016, p. 52. Citing a communication from the personnel department of the Gauschatzamt Saxony to the central personnel office at the Reich Treasurer the NSDAP of September 21, 1944 for continued payment of remuneration to missing full-time employees.