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Ferdinand Werner

Ferdinand Friedrich Karl Werner (27 October 1876 – 5 March 1961) was a German schoolteacher and long-serving politician who held offices during the German Empire, the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany. Throughout his career, he belonged to several far-right and antisemitic parties. He was a deputy in the Imperial Reichstag from 1911 to 1917, and again in the Republican Reichstag from 1924 to 1928. From 1921 to 1933, he served as a deputy of the Landtag of the People's State of Hesse. In the first year of Nazi Germany he was the first Nazi Party State President and, later, Minister-president of Hesse but was dismissed in a power struggle with Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governor) Jakob Sprenger. He then worked for the Association of German Mountain and Hiking Clubs and as a Hessian state historian.

Professor
Ferdinand Werner
Werner at the German Hiking Day in Stuttgart on 21 August 1938
Minister-President
People's State of Hesse
In office
15 May 1933 – 20 September 1933
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded byPhilipp Wilhelm Jung
State President
People's State of Hesse
In office
13 March 1933 – 15 May 1933
Preceded byBernhard Adelung
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Landtag President
People's State of Hesse
In office
8 December 1931 – 13 March 1933
Additional positions
1921–1933Hesse Landtag Deputy
1911–1917
1924–1928
Imperial Reichstag Deputy
Republican Reichstag Deputy
Personal details
Born27 October 1876
Gladenbach, Province of Hesse-Nassau, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Died5 March 1961 (aged 84)
Gießen, Hesse, West Germany
Political partyNazi Party
Other political
affiliations
German Social Party
Deutschvölkische Partei [de]
German National People's Party
Alma materUniversity of Gießen
ProfessionSchoolteacher
AwardsGolden Party Badge

Early life edit

Ferdinand Werner was born the son of a master locksmith in Weidenhausen, a section of Gladenbach. He attended the Realschule and the Gymnasium in Gießen. During his studies of history, and modern languages at the University of Gießen, he was a member of the German Student Association. After completion of his education, Werner entered the Hessian school service as a secondary school teacher in 1900. He became an Oberlehrer (senior teacher) in Gießen in 1905 and, after obtaining a doctorate in 1906, became an Oberlehrer in Worms. He often was transferred because of his open hostility to Jews until 1910, when he took a teaching post at the Weidigschule in Butzbach, where he taught until 1933. From 1914, he carried the title of Gymnasialprofessor [de].[1] During this time he campaigned in vain against the construction of the first Heinrich-Heine monument [de] in Germany at Frankfurt, which was eventually torn down in 1933 at his instigation.[2]

Entry into politics in the Wilhelmine Empire edit

Politically active from 1898, Werner's antisemitism was already evident when he joined the Pan-German League and became a member of its Jewish Committee. In 1908, Werner applied for a mandate in the Hessian state parliament for the far-right and antisemitic German Social Party (DSP) but withdrew his candidacy. In 1909, he was elected as the DSP chairman in Hesse.[3] In 1911, he was elected to the Reichstag for the Gießen constituency in a by-election, and was reelected in the Reichstag election of 1912. He was exempted from military service during the First World War due to extreme nearsightedness.[4] The DSP disbanded in 1914 and, from 1915, Werner was chairman of its successor organization, the Deutschvölkische Partei [de] (DvP), also an antisemitic and Völkisch entity. From July 1918, Werner briefly served as a member of the Second Chamber of the state parliament of the Grand Duchy of Hesse before its abolition following the overthrow of the House of Hesse at the end of the war. Shortly afterward, when the DvP dissolved and merged into the German National People's Party (DNVP) on 24 November 1918, Werner became a member of its six-member executive board.[1]

The Weimar Republic years edit

From 1919 to 1924, Werner was a member of the Butzbach Stadtrat (city council). He was elected the first chairman of the Deutschvölkischer Bund (German Völkisch League) on 30 March 1919. At the end of the year, it merged into the Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund, which would become the largest and most active antisemitic organization in Germany. Werner was involved in organizing its regional association in Hesse. In April 1920, he became a deputy chairman of the organization, serving until July 1922. At the Reichstag election of June 1920, he ran but failed to win a seat.[5]

On 27 November 1921, Werner was elected as a DNVP deputy to the Landtag (state parliament) of the People's State of Hesse, where he would become the DNVP faction leader from 1924 to 1927. He would remain a Landtag deputy continuously until 1933. He was elected to the Reichstag on the DNVP party list in the elections of May and December 1924, and served until 1928.[6]

Nazi Party career edit

Werner left the DNVP in 1930 and joined the Nazi Party. Following the Hessian state election in November 1931, the Nazi Party became the largest party in the Landtag, though they lacked a majority of the seats. On 8 December, however, with the support of the Center Party deputies, Werner was elected as President of the Landtag.[7] After the Nazis seized power at the national level at the end of January 1933, they instituted a policy of Gleichschaltung (coordination) by which they sought to assert their control over all the German Länder.[8]

On 6 March 1933, armed members of the Nazi paramilitary Sturmabteilung (SA) and Schutzstaffel (SS) took control of the streets of the Hesse capital, Darmstadt. Isolated clashes with the local security police broke out as the paramilitaries raised the swastika flag over government buildings. One police squad was forcibly disarmed, and SA troops prevented the State President and the Interior Minister from leaving their homes or having any telephone communications with the outside. On 13 March 1933, the Landtag met and formally elected Werner as the State President of Hesse, replacing the Social Democrat Bernhard Adelung. At the same time, he also became Minister of Foreign Affairs and of Culture and Education. He was now at the height of his power. Hesse was one of only three states in March 1933, along with Hamburg and Württemberg, where a new Nazi government was formally and legally established by the legitimately elected parliament.[9]

However, following passage of the Second Law on the Coordination of the States with the Reich, the post of Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governor) was created by the central government to gain additional control over the states. On 5 May, Adolf Hitler filled this post with the Nazi Party Gauleiter of Hesse-Nassau, Jakob Sprenger.[10] On 15 May, to emphasize his primacy, Sprenger abolished the post of State President. He then appointed Werner to the subordinate position of Minister-president and, in a reduced administration, also gave him the leadership of the education, finance, interior and justice ministries. A power struggle ensued, with Werner resisting Sprenger's attempts to subordinate Hesse to Hesse-Nassau. After a dispute over the merger of their respective chambers of commerce, Sprenger dismissed Werner on 20 September 1933 and replaced him with Philipp Wilhelm Jung.[1]

In 1936, Werner was appointed by Oberpräsident Josef Wagner as a Regierungsdirektor (government director) in Breslau (today Wrocław), where he worked as acting head of the department for higher education for the Province of Lower Silesia until 1938. Werner also held the office of president of the Verband Deutscher Gebirgs- und Wandervereine (Association of German Mountain and Hiking Clubs), from 1933 to 1942.[11] In this position, he was a member of the Reich Leadership Council of German Sports. During Werner's tenure, he ordered the exclusion of all non-Aryans from the association's member organizations. Only Nazi Party members were permitted to be chairmen of the member clubs, and its youth groups were forcibly transferred to either the Hitler Youth or the League of German Girls.[12] When Werner retired as president of the association in 1942, he received a pension payment and, in 1943, the Golden Party Badge. He was succeeded by Heinrich Haake, the Landeshauptmann of Prussia's Rhine Province.

Post-war life edit

After the end of the Second World War, Werner underwent denazification proceedings in 1949 and was classified as Category III, a "lesser offender". On appeal in 1950, this was downgraded to Category IV, a "follower". Werner worked as a historian for the State of Hesse and remained a leading member of the Hessian Historical Commission in Darmstadt. He died in March 1961 at Gießen.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Werner, Ferdinand entry in the Hessen Landesgeschichtliches Informations System
  2. ^ Björn Wissenbach: Heine vor Ort. Geliebt und gehasst – Das Denkmal für Heinrich Heine in Frankfurt, herausgegeben von der Initiative 9. November e.V., Frankfurt 2023, S. 57
  3. ^ Lohalm 1970, pp. 19, 69.
  4. ^ Ferdinand Werner entry, pp. 523–524 in Das Deutsche Führerlexicon
  5. ^ Lohalm 1970, pp. 93, 97, 194, 270.
  6. ^ Ferdinand Werner entry in the Reichstag Database
  7. ^ "Tumult as 'Nazi Rule' Commences in Hesse". The New York Times. 9 December 1931. p. 12.
  8. ^ Childers 2017, p. 248.
  9. ^ Broszat 1981, pp. 101–102.
  10. ^ Miller & Schulz 2021, p. 285.
  11. ^ Deutscher Wanderverband (Hrsg.): (2008) "125 Jahre Wandern und mehr". Petersberg: Michael Imhof Verlag, ISBN 978-3-86568-221-5, S. 171
  12. ^ Deutscher Wanderverband (Hrsg.): (2008) "125 Jahre Wandern und mehr". Petersberg: Michael Imhof Verlag, ISBN 978-3-86568-221-5, S. 24

Sources edit

  • Broszat, Martin (1981). The Hitler State: The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich. New York: Longman Inc. ISBN 978-0-582-48997-4.
  • Childers, Thomas (2017). The Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-45165-113-3.
  • Das Deutsche Führerlexikon 1934-1935. Berlin: Verlagsanftalt Otto Stollberg G. m. b. H. 1934.
  • Ferdinand Werner Biography in the Reichstag Database
  • Lohalm, Uwe (1970). Völkischer Radikalismus: Die Geschichte des Deutschvölkischen Schutz- und Trutz-Bundes. 1919–1923. Hamburg: Leibnitz-verlag. ISBN 978-3-874-73000-6.
  • Miller, Michael D.; Schulz, Andreas (2021). Gauleiter: The Regional Leaders of the Nazi Party and Their Deputies, 1925–1945. Vol. 3 (Fritz Sauckel - Hans Zimmermann). Fonthill Media. ISBN 978-1-781-55826-3.
  • Werner, Ferdinand entry in the Hessen Landesgeschichtliches Informations System

Additional reading edit

  • Jatho,J.P.: Dr. Ferdinand Werner. Eine biographische Skizze zur Verstrickung eines völkischen Antisemiten in den Nationalsozialismus, in: Wetterauer Geschichtsblätter 34. 1985, S. 181–224.

External links edit

  • Literature by and about Ferdinand Werner in the German National Library catalogue
  • Information about Ferdinand Werner in the Reichstag database
  • Deutschvölkische Partei (DvP) 1914-1918 in the Lebendiges Museum Online

ferdinand, werner, ferdinand, friedrich, karl, werner, october, 1876, march, 1961, german, schoolteacher, long, serving, politician, held, offices, during, german, empire, weimar, republic, nazi, germany, throughout, career, belonged, several, right, antisemit. Ferdinand Friedrich Karl Werner 27 October 1876 5 March 1961 was a German schoolteacher and long serving politician who held offices during the German Empire the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany Throughout his career he belonged to several far right and antisemitic parties He was a deputy in the Imperial Reichstag from 1911 to 1917 and again in the Republican Reichstag from 1924 to 1928 From 1921 to 1933 he served as a deputy of the Landtag of the People s State of Hesse In the first year of Nazi Germany he was the first Nazi Party State President and later Minister president of Hesse but was dismissed in a power struggle with Reichsstatthalter Reich Governor Jakob Sprenger He then worked for the Association of German Mountain and Hiking Clubs and as a Hessian state historian ProfessorFerdinand WernerWerner at the German Hiking Day in Stuttgart on 21 August 1938Minister PresidentPeople s State of HesseIn office 15 May 1933 20 September 1933Preceded byPosition createdSucceeded byPhilipp Wilhelm JungState PresidentPeople s State of HesseIn office 13 March 1933 15 May 1933Preceded byBernhard AdelungSucceeded byPosition abolishedLandtag PresidentPeople s State of HesseIn office 8 December 1931 13 March 1933Additional positions1921 1933Hesse Landtag Deputy1911 19171924 1928Imperial Reichstag DeputyRepublican Reichstag DeputyPersonal detailsBorn27 October 1876Gladenbach Province of Hesse Nassau Kingdom of Prussia German EmpireDied5 March 1961 aged 84 Giessen Hesse West GermanyPolitical partyNazi PartyOther politicalaffiliationsGerman Social PartyDeutschvolkische Partei de German National People s PartyAlma materUniversity of GiessenProfessionSchoolteacherAwardsGolden Party Badge Contents 1 Early life 2 Entry into politics in the Wilhelmine Empire 3 The Weimar Republic years 4 Nazi Party career 5 Post war life 6 References 7 Sources 8 Additional reading 9 External linksEarly life editFerdinand Werner was born the son of a master locksmith in Weidenhausen a section of Gladenbach He attended the Realschule and the Gymnasium in Giessen During his studies of history and modern languages at the University of Giessen he was a member of the German Student Association After completion of his education Werner entered the Hessian school service as a secondary school teacher in 1900 He became an Oberlehrer senior teacher in Giessen in 1905 and after obtaining a doctorate in 1906 became an Oberlehrer in Worms He often was transferred because of his open hostility to Jews until 1910 when he took a teaching post at the Weidigschule in Butzbach where he taught until 1933 From 1914 he carried the title of Gymnasialprofessor de 1 During this time he campaigned in vain against the construction of the first Heinrich Heine monument de in Germany at Frankfurt which was eventually torn down in 1933 at his instigation 2 Entry into politics in the Wilhelmine Empire editPolitically active from 1898 Werner s antisemitism was already evident when he joined the Pan German League and became a member of its Jewish Committee In 1908 Werner applied for a mandate in the Hessian state parliament for the far right and antisemitic German Social Party DSP but withdrew his candidacy In 1909 he was elected as the DSP chairman in Hesse 3 In 1911 he was elected to the Reichstag for the Giessen constituency in a by election and was reelected in the Reichstag election of 1912 He was exempted from military service during the First World War due to extreme nearsightedness 4 The DSP disbanded in 1914 and from 1915 Werner was chairman of its successor organization the Deutschvolkische Partei de DvP also an antisemitic and Volkisch entity From July 1918 Werner briefly served as a member of the Second Chamber of the state parliament of the Grand Duchy of Hesse before its abolition following the overthrow of the House of Hesse at the end of the war Shortly afterward when the DvP dissolved and merged into the German National People s Party DNVP on 24 November 1918 Werner became a member of its six member executive board 1 The Weimar Republic years editFrom 1919 to 1924 Werner was a member of the Butzbach Stadtrat city council He was elected the first chairman of the Deutschvolkischer Bund German Volkisch League on 30 March 1919 At the end of the year it merged into the Deutschvolkischer Schutz und Trutzbund which would become the largest and most active antisemitic organization in Germany Werner was involved in organizing its regional association in Hesse In April 1920 he became a deputy chairman of the organization serving until July 1922 At the Reichstag election of June 1920 he ran but failed to win a seat 5 On 27 November 1921 Werner was elected as a DNVP deputy to the Landtag state parliament of the People s State of Hesse where he would become the DNVP faction leader from 1924 to 1927 He would remain a Landtag deputy continuously until 1933 He was elected to the Reichstag on the DNVP party list in the elections of May and December 1924 and served until 1928 6 Nazi Party career editWerner left the DNVP in 1930 and joined the Nazi Party Following the Hessian state election in November 1931 the Nazi Party became the largest party in the Landtag though they lacked a majority of the seats On 8 December however with the support of the Center Party deputies Werner was elected as President of the Landtag 7 After the Nazis seized power at the national level at the end of January 1933 they instituted a policy of Gleichschaltung coordination by which they sought to assert their control over all the German Lander 8 On 6 March 1933 armed members of the Nazi paramilitary Sturmabteilung SA and Schutzstaffel SS took control of the streets of the Hesse capital Darmstadt Isolated clashes with the local security police broke out as the paramilitaries raised the swastika flag over government buildings One police squad was forcibly disarmed and SA troops prevented the State President and the Interior Minister from leaving their homes or having any telephone communications with the outside On 13 March 1933 the Landtag met and formally elected Werner as the State President of Hesse replacing the Social Democrat Bernhard Adelung At the same time he also became Minister of Foreign Affairs and of Culture and Education He was now at the height of his power Hesse was one of only three states in March 1933 along with Hamburg and Wurttemberg where a new Nazi government was formally and legally established by the legitimately elected parliament 9 However following passage of the Second Law on the Coordination of the States with the Reich the post of Reichsstatthalter Reich Governor was created by the central government to gain additional control over the states On 5 May Adolf Hitler filled this post with the Nazi Party Gauleiter of Hesse Nassau Jakob Sprenger 10 On 15 May to emphasize his primacy Sprenger abolished the post of State President He then appointed Werner to the subordinate position of Minister president and in a reduced administration also gave him the leadership of the education finance interior and justice ministries A power struggle ensued with Werner resisting Sprenger s attempts to subordinate Hesse to Hesse Nassau After a dispute over the merger of their respective chambers of commerce Sprenger dismissed Werner on 20 September 1933 and replaced him with Philipp Wilhelm Jung 1 In 1936 Werner was appointed by Oberprasident Josef Wagner as a Regierungsdirektor government director in Breslau today Wroclaw where he worked as acting head of the department for higher education for the Province of Lower Silesia until 1938 Werner also held the office of president of the Verband Deutscher Gebirgs und Wandervereine Association of German Mountain and Hiking Clubs from 1933 to 1942 11 In this position he was a member of the Reich Leadership Council of German Sports During Werner s tenure he ordered the exclusion of all non Aryans from the association s member organizations Only Nazi Party members were permitted to be chairmen of the member clubs and its youth groups were forcibly transferred to either the Hitler Youth or the League of German Girls 12 When Werner retired as president of the association in 1942 he received a pension payment and in 1943 the Golden Party Badge He was succeeded by Heinrich Haake the Landeshauptmann of Prussia s Rhine Province Post war life editAfter the end of the Second World War Werner underwent denazification proceedings in 1949 and was classified as Category III a lesser offender On appeal in 1950 this was downgraded to Category IV a follower Werner worked as a historian for the State of Hesse and remained a leading member of the Hessian Historical Commission in Darmstadt He died in March 1961 at Giessen 1 References edit a b c d Werner Ferdinand entry in the Hessen Landesgeschichtliches Informations System Bjorn Wissenbach Heine vor Ort Geliebt und gehasst Das Denkmal fur Heinrich Heine in Frankfurt herausgegeben von der Initiative 9 November e V Frankfurt 2023 S 57 Lohalm 1970 pp 19 69 Ferdinand Werner entry pp 523 524 in Das Deutsche Fuhrerlexicon Lohalm 1970 pp 93 97 194 270 Ferdinand Werner entry in the Reichstag Database Tumult as Nazi Rule Commences in Hesse The New York Times 9 December 1931 p 12 Childers 2017 p 248 Broszat 1981 pp 101 102 Miller amp Schulz 2021 p 285 Deutscher Wanderverband Hrsg 2008 125 Jahre Wandern und mehr Petersberg Michael Imhof Verlag ISBN 978 3 86568 221 5 S 171 Deutscher Wanderverband Hrsg 2008 125 Jahre Wandern und mehr Petersberg Michael Imhof Verlag ISBN 978 3 86568 221 5 S 24Sources editBroszat Martin 1981 The Hitler State The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich New York Longman Inc ISBN 978 0 582 48997 4 Childers Thomas 2017 The Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 45165 113 3 Das Deutsche Fuhrerlexikon 1934 1935 Berlin Verlagsanftalt Otto Stollberg G m b H 1934 Ferdinand Werner Biography in the Reichstag Database Lohalm Uwe 1970 Volkischer Radikalismus Die Geschichte des Deutschvolkischen Schutz und Trutz Bundes 1919 1923 Hamburg Leibnitz verlag ISBN 978 3 874 73000 6 Miller Michael D Schulz Andreas 2021 Gauleiter The Regional Leaders of the Nazi Party and Their Deputies 1925 1945 Vol 3 Fritz Sauckel Hans Zimmermann Fonthill Media ISBN 978 1 781 55826 3 Werner Ferdinand entry in the Hessen Landesgeschichtliches Informations SystemAdditional reading editJatho J P Dr Ferdinand Werner Eine biographische Skizze zur Verstrickung eines volkischen Antisemiten in den Nationalsozialismus in Wetterauer Geschichtsblatter 34 1985 S 181 224 External links editLiterature by and about Ferdinand Werner in the German National Library catalogue Information about Ferdinand Werner in the Reichstag database Deutschvolkische Partei DvP 1914 1918 in the Lebendiges Museum Online nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ferdinand Werner politician Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand Werner amp oldid 1218858353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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