Otto Erbersdobler

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Otto Erbersdobler

Otto Erbersdobler (born April 30, 1895 in Fürstenzell ; †  October 25, 1981 there ) was a German businessman and politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

Erbersdobler attended elementary school in Fürstenzell and secondary school in Passau . He then became an intern in the commercial and technical specialist - brickworks, granite works and agriculture - in his parents' and other companies.

From May 1915 to December 1918 Erbersdobler took part in the First World War as a member of the 15th Bavarian Infantry Regiment . During the war he was awarded the Iron Cross of Both Classes and the Bavarian Military Merit Cross. He resigned from military service as Vice Sergeant in the Reserve. After the war, he first worked in the field, then as an office manager in his parents' brick and stone quarry. Later he became managing director of the working group of the Bavarian paving stone industry GmbH in Passau.

There are contradicting information about the date Erbersdobler joined the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP): Erbersdobler is said to have joined the NSDAP in October 1923 shortly before the party was banned as a result of the Hitler putsch and as a local group leader of the substitute organization Völkischer Block in his home community during the ban have operated. According to the information in the Reichstag Handbuch, he joined the NSDAP in 1924. After the re-admission of the NSDAP he became a member of the party again on February 27, 1925 ( membership number 14.607). In the following years he led local groups in Fürstenzell and Bayreuth. In 1928 he received a mandate in the Passau District Assembly . From March 1929 to April 1932 Erbersdobler was Gauleiter for the Gau Niederbayern . Also in 1929 he was admitted as a Reich speaker.

Erbersdobler was editor-in-chief of the NSDAP newspapers Niederbayerische Rundschau (October 1930 to December 1931) and the Passauer Wacht (November 1932 to January 1933).

In July 1932 Erbersdobler was elected to the Reichstag as his party's candidate for constituency 25 (Lower Bavaria) . After the temporary loss of his mandate in the November 1932 elections , Erbersdobler was able to return to parliament in March 1933 , to which he subsequently belonged for the entire duration of the National Socialist rule until 1945. In March 1933 Erbersdobler voted for the Enabling Act .

From June 2, 1933 to March 31, 1943 Erbersdobler was President of the Passau Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Deputy President of the District Council of Lower Bavaria-Upper Palatinate. He also became a member of the banking and job creation committee of the working group of the chambers of industry and commerce in the Reich Chamber of Commerce in Berlin. Erbersdobler was also a member of the SA ; around 1935 he worked as a training officer for the SA Brigade 8. In December 1935, Erbersdobler moved from the SA to the National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK), where he rose to the NSKK standard leader in the motor group Bavarian Ostmark. He also held positions in the NSDAP- Gau Bayerische Ostmark in Bayreuth, among other things as Gauamtsleiter for local politics and as Gau trainer.

Little is known about Erbersdobler's life after the end of the war; around 1964 he lived in Gurlan near Fürstenzell.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform: the members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924 . Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 , p. 126 f .
  • Katharina Lübbe, Martin Schuhmacher (Hrsg.): MdR The Reichstag members of the Weimar Republic in the time of National Socialism. Political persecution, emigration and expatriation 1933 - 1945. A biographical documentation . 2nd unchanged edition. Droste, Düsseldorf 1992, ISBN 3-7700-5169-6 , ( publication of the Commission for the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties ), p. 334.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lilla, extras, p. 126f.
  2. Biography in the Reichstag Handbuch, 6th electoral period, p. 67