Wilhelm Heinzelmann

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Wilhelm Heinzelmann (born September 3, 1892 in Rottweil ; † February 8, 1968 in Stuttgart ) was a German politician ( German community , German party ).

Life and work

Heinzelmann came to Stuttgart as a pupil from Rottweil as early as 1904, where he passed the Matura at the Karlsgymnasium. He then studied law in Tübingen and Berlin . In Tübingen he joined the Igel Academic Association of Tübingen . After passing the first state examination, he took part in the First World War from 1914 to 1918 . After returning from the war, he completed his legal traineeship in Stuttgart and worked there as a lawyer from 1921 after the second state examination . In 1928 he switched to the judicial service and was promoted to regional court director in 1943 through the posts of district judge and district judge. From 1939 to 1945 he took part in World War II and was taken prisoner of war shortly before the end of the war in 1945. He was released from this at the end of 1945. After returning to Stuttgart, Heinzelmann first took up an agricultural degree at the Hohenheim Agricultural University until he was back as a district judge in February 1949.

politics

After the Second World War , Heinzelmann initially joined the Wuerttemberg-Baden emergency community and, since it had not received a license, ran as a formally independent candidate in the Stuttgart I constituency in the 1949 federal election . He later joined the German community and was elected to the state parliament of Württemberg-Baden in 1950 on the community list of the DG with the BHE . On April 18, 1952, shortly before the end of the electoral term, he resigned his mandate because an incompatibility between judge and state parliament mandate had been resolved in the meantime. However, since this did not apply to municipal parliaments, he remained for the DG in the Stuttgart City Council, to which he was elected in 1950 as the only DG MP. Before the Bundestag election in 1953 , he joined the German party , for which he ran unsuccessfully in the Stuttgart I constituency. From 1953 to 1956 he formed a parliamentary group with the three city councilors of the Independent Citizens' List .

literature

Web links

  • Heinzelmann, Wilhelm . In: Martin Schumacher (Ed.): MdB - The People's Representation 1946–1972. - [Haack to Huys] (=  KGParl online publications ). Commission for the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties e. V., Berlin 2006, ISBN 978-3-00-020703-7 , pp. 466 , urn : nbn: de: 101: 1-2014070812574 ( kgparl.de [PDF; 507 kB ; accessed on June 19, 2017]).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hubert Steimle, Inge Behr, Jürgen Zeeb: 50 years of free voters Stuttgart. Stuttgart 2003, p. 8 f.