Wilhelm Dyckerhoff

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Wilhelm Hermann Dyckerhoff (born September 14, 1868 in Biebrich , † April 11, 1956 in Wiesbaden ) was a German administrative officer and parliamentarian.

Life

Dyckerhoff's father was Gustav Dyckerhoff, secret councilor and co-owner of the Portland cement factory Dyckerhoff & Sons. The mother was Luise Dyckerhoff born. Helmreich from Mannheim.

After graduating from high school in Wiesbaden in 1888 studied Wilhelm Dyckerhoff first at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-University Bonn Law . In 1889 he became a member of the Corps Franconia Munich and the Corps Hansea Bonn . In Bonn he also served as a one-year volunteer with the Hussar Regiment "King Wilhelm I." (1st Rheinisches) No. 7 . As an inactive he moved to the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin . In 1892 he became a lieutenant in the reserve.

At the beginning of 1892 he passed his legal traineeship in Kassel and in March of the same year he was awarded a Dr. iur. PhD. From 1892 to 1894 he was a trainee lawyer in Rüdesheim am Rhein , Wiesbaden and most recently at the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main . From 1894 to 1896 he completed the government traineeship with the government in Wiesbaden . In the summer of 1897 he passed the exam to become a government assessor .

After Dyckerhoff had undertaken extensive trips to England, East Asia and America, he came to the district office in Hagen in 1898 as a government assessor . In 1900 he became deputy chairman of the arbitration tribunal for workers' insurance at the Berlin police headquarters. In 1904 he was appointed district administrator for the Aurich district. He bought the Sandhorst estate at the gates of Aurich. During the First World War he fought as a cavalry master in the hussar regiment "King Humbert of Italy" (1st Kurhessisches) No. 13 from November 1914 until his complaint in September 1915 on the Eastern Front (Poland, Baltic region). He received the Iron Cross 1st Class and was characterized as a major in 1921 (in the Reichswehr ) .

In 1920 Dyckerhoff came to the government in Aurich as a senior councilor , where he was deputy to the regional presidents Theodor von Heppe and Jann Berghaus . In 1924 he received the title of Vice President of the Government. When it became public in early 1928 that he was a member of the Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten and the German People's Party (DVP), he asked for a leave of absence on February 12, 1928. He was given temporary retirement at the end of March. At the Dyckerhoff cement works in Amöneburg he was a member of the advisory board of the GmbH until 1930. After the company was converted into a stock corporation , he sat on the supervisory board .

From 1909 to 1920 he was a member of the district of Aurich in the provincial parliament of the province of Hanover , in which he was part of the civil working group . In the 1930s he was a member of the 66th and 67th provincial parliaments. From 1930 to around 1933 he was a member of the Prussian State Council .

In 1937 Dyckerhoff moved to his home in Wiesbaden. He was married to Elisabeth Pfarrius , who had given him five children. He died of a stroke at the age of 87 .

With his strong sense of family, he did family research. He presided over the clan association he founded for a generation. He was the first of 18 Dyckerhoffs with the Munich Franks, by far the largest Franconian family.

literature

  • Beatrix Herlemann , Helga Schatz: Biographical Lexicon of Lower Saxony Parliamentarians 1919–1945 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen. Volume 222). Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2004, ISBN 3-7752-6022-6 , p. 95.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Korpslisten 1910, 172 , 497; 22 , 312
  2. ^ District of Aurich administrative history and district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke)