Wilhelm Friedrich Wiegmann

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Wilhelm Friedrich Wiegmann (born December 2, 1864 in Eversen , † November 18, 1929 in Bückeburg ) was a German teacher and politician.

Wiegmann was the son of a teacher. He attended the Adolphinum grammar school and the teachers' seminar in Bückeburg. In 1885 he became a private tutor at Gutow near Grevesmühlen in Mecklenburg. From 1885 to 1887 he was an assistant teacher at the Aueschule in Finkenwerder near Hamburg and then in Scheie. In 1897 he became the second teacher in Großenheidorn and in 1893 in Steinhude. In 1895 he was the only teacher at the five-class school in Nienstädt . After the school expanded, he was appointed the main teacher and remained so until his retirement in 1929. He worked as a local researcher.

The November Revolution of 1918 led to the overthrow of Prince Adolf II von Schaumburg-Lippe . Wiegmann was loyal to the prince and rejected the new republic. He ran as an independent candidate and was a member of the state parliament of the Free State of Schaumburg-Lippe from 1918 to 1922 .

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