Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Alfred Meyer

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Preceded by
  
Hans-Joachim Riecke

Name
  
Alfred Meyer

Preceded by
  
None

Education
  
University of Bonn


Preceded by
  
None

Party
  
Nazi Party

Preceded by
  
None

Succeeded by
  
Rudolf Amelunxen

Alfred Meyer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Preceded by
  
Ferdinand Freiherr von Luninck

Died
  
April 11, 1945, Hessisch Oldendorf, Germany

Mr alfred meyer physicians for social responsibility


Gustav Alfred Julius Meyer (5 October 1891 in Göttingen – 11 April 1945 in Hessisch Oldendorf) was a Nazi official. He joined the Nazi party in 1928 and was the Gauleiter of North Westphalia from 1930 to 1945 and the Reichsstatthalter in Lippe and Schaumburg-Lippe from 1933 to 1945.

Contents

Alfred Meyer httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcomoriginals04

By the time of his death at the end of World War II in Europe, he was a State Secretary and Deputy Reichsminister in the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories (Reichministerium für die Besetzten Ostgebiete or Ostministerium). He represented the ministry with Georg Leibbrandt in the Wannsee Conference.

Alfred Meyer Alfred Meyer Wikipedia

Meyer committed suicide in April 1945.

Alfred Meyer Alfred Meyer NSDAP Wikiwand

Early life

Alfred Meyer Alfred G Meyer Faculty History Project

Meyer was born in Göttingen, the son of a Prussian civil servant who was stationed in Göttingen due to his official duties. The middle class family was originally from Essen. He was educated at the Gymnasium in Soest, graduating in 1911.

Alfred Meyer Meyer Alfred Mmoires de Guerre

In 1912 he became a Fahnenjunker (cadet officer) with Infanterieregiment 68 (Koblenz), passing his officer exam in 1913 and being promoted to lieutenant. During World War I he fought with Infanterieregiment 363 on the Western Front, earning the Iron Cross First and Second Class and the Wound Badge. In 1917 he was injured and captured by the French. This experience, according to Meyer, was especially traumatic and left him with a hatred against France. Released from captivity in March 1920, the downsized Reichswehr had no use for him and he left the army with the rank of Hauptmann (Captain).

After the war, Meyer studied jurisprudence and political science at the Universities of Bonn and then Würzburg. He graduated with a Ph.D. in 1922 and joined the legal department of a Gelsenkirchen mining firm. In 1924, he joined the local Masonic lodge. Meyer was also the chairman of the local Kyffhäuserbund unit. He married Dorothee Capell in 1925 and had five daughters with her.

Third Reich

In April 1928, Meyer joined the Nazi Party. The party was still extremely weak in Westphalia during the late 1920s, and had only circa three hundred members in the city of Gelsenkirchen during this period. In less than a year Meyer rose to the position of Ortsgruppenleiter ("local group leader") and in November 1929 he was promoted to Bezirksleiter ("district leader") of the Emscher-Lippe district within Westphalia. In November 1929, he was also elected as the only Nazi party representative to the Gelsenkirchen city council.

In September 1930 he became a member of the Reichstag and in January 1931 NSDAP Gauleiter in north Westphalia. Following the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Alfred Meyer was appointed Reichsstatthalter (deputy governor) of Lippe und Schaumburg-Lippe in May 1933 and he was made Staatsminister (governor) of the federal government for Lippe und Schaumburg-Lippe in August 1936.

In 1939, Meyer was made Chef der Zivilverwaltung and in 1941 he became deputy to Alfred Rosenberg in the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories. Meyer was responsible for the departments of politics, administration and economics. In his role in the East, he used workers that were mainly Jewish for slave labor towards a variety of works.

Meyer attended the Wannsee Conference in January 1942 as a representative for Rosenberg. In November that year, he was also made Reichsverteidigungskommissar (Reich Defence Commissioner) of Defence District VI (northern Westphalia).

Death

Meyer was found dead on 11 April 1945, by the River Weser. The cause of death was suicide, most likely prompted by Germany's impending defeat in the war.

Fictional portrayals

In the 2001 HBO film Conspiracy, Meyer was played by Brian Pettifer.

References

Alfred Meyer Wikipedia