Wilhelm Schindele

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Wilhelm Jakob Julius Schindele (born December 31, 1879 in Mannheim , † December 24, 1963 in Kork or Oppenau ) was a German administrative lawyer.

Career

Wilhelm Schindele, son of a businessman, began studying law in 1897 after attending the Grand Ducal Badisches Gymnasium in Mannheim (1888), which he pursued in Heidelberg, Lausanne, Munich, Berlin and Kiel. After the first state examination in law and a position as a legal intern in 1902, he passed the second state examination in 1906 and received his doctorate in the same year. In 1907 he joined the Baden internal administration, in 1914 he became a bailiff at the Mannheim district office and in 1919 a senior bailiff. In 1920 he moved to Kehl as a district official . In 1926 the official title was changed to District Administrator. In 1937 Schindele joined the NSDAP . From 1940 to 1944 Schindele was a senior war administrator on the western front and in the western operational area (most recently in Nuremberg). In 1941 he received the War Merit Cross . On September 20, 1944, he resumed official business in Kehl. In 1946, as part of the political purification process, it was temporarily suspended and finally in 1950.

Honors

literature

  • Wolfram Angerbauer (Red.): The heads of the upper offices, district offices and district offices in Baden-Württemberg from 1810 to 1972 . Published by the working group of the district archives at the Baden-Württemberg district assembly. Theiss, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-8062-1213-9 , pp. 496 .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Rainer Bookhagen: The Protestant child care and the inner mission in the time of National Socialism . Volume 1: 1933 to 1937: Mobilization of the communities . Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, Göttingen 1998, p. 601.