Traffic bar

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At the end of the 19th century and in the first decades of the 20th century , traffic bars were restaurants whose regular customers could be assigned to a specific organization. Membership or other close ties between the hosts and the respective organization were common. The term “ Verkehrslokal” of the organized workforce describes these connections as an example.

The following organizations and associations provided traffic facilities :

The Café Imperial post in Leipzig described himself in 1898, according to one postcard as International traffic local .

See also

literature

  • Regina Hübner, Manfred Hübner: Drink, little brothers, drink. Illustrated cultural and social history of German drinking habits , pp. 194 ff., Leipzig - Ed. Leipzig, 2004, ISBN 3361005752 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bonner Geschichtswerkstatt: "Traffic bar for class-conscious workers": The Heisterbacherhof restoration
  2. Keller's stories: In front of the Gasthaus zur Post ("Verkehrslokal der Organized Arbeiterschaft") there was a racket against German National Socialists in 1938 , which went through the press. In: Golden badge of honor . Off: strings. Eastern Switzerland culture magazine . No. 223, May 2013.
  3. ^ Postcard around 1904: Greetings from Hanover. Club house "Solidarity". Langestrasse 2nd owner Heinr. Cooper. Traffic office for bricklayers, metal, factory, transport, tobacco and leather workers .
  4. Grossenhain : Börners Restaurant, Radeburger Straße 4, public transport facility for organized workers, refreshment point of the Workers' Cyclists Association “Solidarity” , approx. 1911, SLUB Dresden digital: Grossenhain i. S. and surroundings in words and pictures , p. 45
  5. eBay offers: Bredeney Gasthaus Zur Waldecke: owner Carl Real Verkehrslokal of the German Cyclists Association and Bredeney Gasthaus zur Waldecke , 1922.
  6. Johannes Gerlach (Ed.): Rheinisch Westfälischer Kurier . No. 5 . Düsseldorf February 1928, p. 4 .
  7. In: Georg Kellermann (trade unionist) : Schaarthor 7 developed into a "traffic bar " for German dock workers and a well-known synonym for organized Hamburg quay workers.
  8. ^ Bonner Geschichtswerkstatt: "Traffic location for the class-conscious workers" - The Heisterbacherhof restoration
  9. ^ " Köpenicker Blutwoche " - When the Nazis smashed the workers' movement in Berlin . In: Der Tagesspiegel , 2013.
  10. see: Royal Bavarian 2nd Uhlan Regiment "König" .
  11. ^ SLUB Dresden / Deutsche Fotothek: Advertisement for “The fight for freedom… .the most popular daily newspaper in Saxony” (advertisement from mid-1932), Bode fur workshop and Seetor restaurant, National Socialists' pub. Inside front cover of the program booklet Sächsische Staatstheater, Schauspielhaus Dresden. 09/14/1933.
  12. Pol-Inspektion Linden January 9, 1930, directory of the traffic offices of the KPD and NSDAP, in: Landesarchiv Berlin A Pr. Br. Rep. 30, Tit. 90, No. 7491, files of the police headquarters in Berlin, quoted from: Christian Saehrendt , Anti-Semitism and political violence at the Berlin Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität 1918–1933 , created: January 19, 2010, updated: July 6, 2017.
  13. ^ SLUB Dresden digital: Sachsenbuch , 1949 , p. 729.
  14. see: Singers Arion-Altpreußen , Heidelberger Senioren-Convent , Corps Brunsviga Göttingen .
  15. oldthing.de: Product information on lithography Leipzig, Café Reichspost, various views, intern. Traffic shop, used 1898 .