Rudolf Feick

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Rudolf Feick

Rudolf Feick (born April 2, 1900 in Elberfeld , † probably in early May 1945 on the Rhine meadows near Wesel ) was a member of the NSDAP as a member of the Reichstag in the German Reich .

Life

Origin and occupation

From 1906 Rudolf Feick attended school in Elberfeld, which was still independent at the time, and in 1918 he left the upper secondary school with the upper primary qualification. At the end of the First World War he was a soldier from June 22, 1918 to December 28, 1918, including with the Reserve Infantry Regiment 53. In 1919 he joined the Reich Finance Administration . First in Solingen , he was later transferred to the Opladen tax office , where he passed his exams as senior tax secretary in 1922. In this position he worked from December 1923 to May 1933 in Lennep , Remscheid and Wuppertal . In addition, from 1927 to May 1933 he was licensed as an official bookkeeper and operator in Remscheid and Wuppertal. He married at the end of the 1920s and had two children.

During the National Socialist era , Feick was transferred to the Grevenbroich tax office in 1939, meanwhile promoted to tax office . As a member of the government , he headed this tax office from November 1, 1940 to March 1, 1942. He then worked at the Düsseldorf-Süd tax office.

NSDAP politician

Feick joined the NSDAP on April 1, 1925 (membership number 77.908). Until October 1, 1932 he was the local group leader in Lennep, presumably from 1929 he was a city ​​councilor and parliamentary group leader of the NSDAP in the city council of Remscheid, before moving to Wuppertal in 1932. There he was district leader of the NSDAP until May 21, 1937 , and for a short time in 1933 he was also city councilor and faction leader of the NSDAP in the Wuppertal city parliament. In 1938 and 1939 he was commercial director of the Wuppertal municipal works , now WSW Wuppertaler Stadtwerke .

From March 5 to October 14, 1933 Feick was a member of the Prussian state parliament . On November 12, 1933, he was "elected" to the Reichstag . From May 21, 1937 to mid-1942, Feick was a district inspector of the NSDAP in the Düsseldorf district . On May 1, 1941, he took over the Gladbach - Rheydt district as deputy district leader of the NSDAP ; At the end of 1941 he briefly held the same function in the Krefeld-Kempen district. Feick also spoke on behalf of his party: from 1938 to 1940 as a so-called Gauredner, then until March 31, 1941 as a Reich speaker .

The Mönchengladbach regional court sentenced Feick to 15 months in prison for negligent homicide in a car accident on June 23, 1942. As a result of the conviction, Feick lost all party offices and his official status. While serving his sentence in Bautzen from March 2 to June 1, 1944, he also lost his seat in the Reichstag on April 22, 1944. After the end of his detention he was drafted into the armed forces . Feick was captured by American troops on April 26, 1945 and taken to the Rhine meadows near Wesel . Since then, Feick has been considered missing; a death in early May 1945 through suicide or the consequences of internment is likely . The district court of Wuppertal declared Feick dead on April 26, 1948 and set the time of death for May 9, 1945.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform. The members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the ethnic and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924. Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 .
  • Klaus Goebel (ed.): Wuppertal in the time of National Socialism. Wuppertal, Peter Hammer Verlag, 1984. ISBN 3-87294-251-4 .
  • Peter Klefisch (editor): The district leaders of the NSDAP in the districts of Cologne-Aachen, Düsseldorf and Essen. (= Publications of the state archives of North Rhine-Westphalia, Series C, Volume 45) North Rhine-Westphalian Main State Archive, Düsseldorf 2000, ISBN 3-9805419-2-4 .
  • Michael Rademacher: Handbook of the NSDAP Gaue 1928 - 1945: the officials of the NSDAP and their organizations at Gau and district level in Germany and Austria as well as in the Reichsgau Gdansk-West Prussia, Sudetenland and Wartheland. Vechta, Lingenbrink, 2000. ISBN 3-8311-0216-3 .

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