Otto Haeseler

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Heinrich Otto August Haeseler (born December 19, 1853 Esbeck ; † November 15, 1928 in Hanover ) was a German physicist, high school and university teacher.

Life

Otto Haeseler attended the Andreanum grammar school in Hildesheim from Easter 1865 to Easter 1873 . He then studied mathematics and natural sciences at the universities of Leipzig, Erlangen and Göttingen until the end of September 1876. In 1873 he became a member of the Corps Thuringia Leipzig . In March 1877 he passed the exam pro facultate docendi in Göttingen. In October 1877 he was first a trial candidate and in April 1878 a full teacher at the 2nd Hanover secondary school . Until 1919 he taught mathematics and physics as a senior teacher. One of his students was the Jewish writer Werner Kraft , whom he taught in mathematics and physics from lower secondary school to high school.

In addition to his schoolteaching activity, he also read physics for veterinarians at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover , which appointed him associate professor for physics. In 1929, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, from June 13th to 15th, 1928, he was honored with a necrology.

Awards

  • Appointment to the privy councilor
  • Awarded an honorary doctorate from a Dr. med. vet. hc from the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover

Fonts

  • Memorial speech for the deceased director of the Leibnizrealgymnasium, Dr. Karl Waldemar Meyer, held in the auditorium of the Leibnizrealgymnasium in Hanover on April 30, 1887 , 1888

literature

  • Franz Kössler: Haeseler, Otto Heinrich August . In: Personal lexicon of 19th century teachers - professional biographies from school year reports and school programs 1825–1918 with lists of publications , 2007, volume: Haack – Hyss, p. 42 ( digitized version )

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Otto August Haeseler at www.compgen.de
  2. a b Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 97 , 129
  3. Werner Kraft at the Leibniz School in Hanover at www.gwlb.de
  4. ^ A b Fritz Riggert, Otto Gervesmann: Geschichte des Corps Normannia Hannover, 1859, March 15, 1959, 1959, p. 141.
  5. ^ Friedrich Strobel: Address book of the living physicists, mathematicians and astronomers at home and abroad and the technical assistants , 1905, p. 62 ( digitized version )