Wolfgang Schettler

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Wolfgang Alexander Sylvester Schettler (born December 31, 1880 in Dresden , † after 1943) was a German administrative officer and politician.

Life

Schettler studied law . He later worked as a senior councilor in the Saxon Ministry of Economics. From 1921 to 1923 he was Amtshauptmann the Amtshauptmannschaft Flöha . He then moved to the Saxon Higher Administrative Court in Dresden as a senior administrative judge. In 1927 he became Ministerialrat in the Saxon State Chancellery and rose to its head in 1929. In this capacity he was also deputy authorized representative of Saxony in the Reichsrat from 1929 to 1933 . From 1929 until at least 1932 Schettler was chairman of the Dresden local association of the German People's Party . In 1931 he was promoted to Ministerial Director. On March 10, 1933, the day of the seizure of power in Saxony by the Reich Commissioner and SA Obergruppenführer Manfred von Killinger , Schettler was as Acting District Chief of Kreishauptmannschaft Dresden-Bautzen appointed. On September 30, 1933, he retired. Later he was still active as the Reich Commissioner for the surveillance agency for tobacco products. From 1939 he was (not authorized to represent) co-owner of the Liepsch & Reichardt company , the Dresdner Nachrichten publishing house , which was family-owned.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla : The Reichsrat. Representation of the German states in the legislation and administration of the Reich 1919–1934. A biographical manual. With the involvement of the Federal Council November 1918 – February 1919 and the State Committee February – August 1919. (Series of Handbooks on the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties. Volume 14), Droste, Düsseldorf 2006, ISBN 978-3-7700-5279-0 , p 267 (short biography).

Individual evidence

  1. Schettler was last mentioned in the Dresden address book in 1943/44. In 1957 he was pronounced dead on December 31, 1950; see Schettler, Wolfgang (Alexander Sylvester). In: Edition files of the Reich Chancellery. Weimar Republic of the Federal Archives. On-line
  2. Thomas Klein : Outline of German Administrative History 1815-1945. Row B: Central Germany. Tape. 14: Saxony. Johann Gottfried Herder Institute, Marburg / Lahn 1982, ISBN 3-87969-129-0 , p. 304.
  3. ^ Christoph Jestaedt: The Saxon Higher Administrative Court from 1901 to 1941 and its five presidents . In: Claus Meissner (ed.): The Saxon Higher Administrative Court - Administrative jurisdiction in Saxony 1901–1993 . (= Saxon Justice History Volume 1). Saxon State Ministry of Justice, Dresden 1994, pp. 14–21, here pp. 17 and 21.
  4. ^ Dresden address books 1929 to 1932.
  5. Erich Stockhorst: Five thousand heads. Who was what in the Third Reich . Arndt , Kiel 1998 (reprint), p. 378.
  6. ^ Address book of the state capital Dresden 1940. Fourth part: Commercial register, p. 25 .