Walter Rheinhold

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Walter Rheinhold (born May 20, 1897 in Hanover ; † November 27, 1973 ibid) was a German politician ( FDP ), member of the Appointed Lower Saxony State Parliament and member of the Appointed Hanover State Parliament .

Life

Walter Rheinhold received his Abitur in 1915 at the Städtisches Realgymnasium . He did military service and began studying agriculture in Bonn and Halle at the beginning of 1919 and studying economics in Halle and Hamburg , which he obtained in Hamburg in 1923 as a doctor of law and political science through his dissertation entitled “The German heat and cold protection industry below, esp. of their entrepreneurial organizations ”. He became a co-owner of his father's S. Rheinhold and F. Ludolff , a kieselgurwerk in Wiechel near Unterlüß and independently managed an agricultural business in Lutterloh near Unterlüß.

During the time of National Socialism , Rheinhold, persecuted as a Jew, got into financial and personal difficulties, which led to the dissolution of his company. As a result, he was employed as a worker in a company in Hanover from 1940. After the war he became the sole owner of his company again. He was active in various honorary offices and industrial bodies. From 1946 he took over the chairmanship of the district association of the FDP in Hanover.

From August 23, 1946 to October 29, 1946 he was a member of the appointed Hanover State Parliament and also worked there as an assessor. From December 9, 1946 to March 28, 1947 was also a member of the appointed Lower Saxony state parliament and its assessor.

He was married and had three children.

literature

  • Barbara Simon : Member of Parliament in Lower Saxony 1946–1994. Biographical manual. Edited by the President of the Lower Saxony State Parliament. Lower Saxony State Parliament, Hanover 1996, p. 309.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rainer Schulze: Entrepreneurial self-administration and politics: the role of the chambers of industry and commerce in Lower Saxony and Bremen as representatives of entrepreneurial interests after the end of the Second World War. Volume 38, part 3, Verlag A. Lax, 1988, page 47. ISBN 3-7848-3053-6