Gerhard Schröder (CDU) explained

Gerhard Schröder
Office1:Minister of Foreign Affairs
(West Germany)
Chancellor1:Konrad Adenauer
Ludwig Erhard
Term Start1:14 November 1961
Term End1:30 November 1966
Predecessor1:Heinrich von Brentano
Successor1:Willy Brandt
Office:Minister of Defence
(West Germany)
Chancellor:Kurt Georg Kiesinger
Term Start:1 December 1966
Term End:21 October 1969
Predecessor:Kai-Uwe von Hassel
Successor:Helmut Schmidt
Office2:Minister of the Interior
(West Germany)
Chancellor2:Konrad Adenauer
Term Start2:20 October 1953
Term End2:13 November 1961
Predecessor2:Robert Lehr
Successor2:Hermann Höcherl
Office3:Deputy Chair of the CDU/CSU in the German Bundestag
Term Start3:24 June 1952
Term End3:20 October 1953
Office4:Member of the German Bundestag
Term Start4:7 September 1949
Term End4:4 November 1980
Birth Date:11 September 1910
Birth Place:Saarbrücken, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Death Place:Kampen (Sylt), West Germany
Alma Mater:University of Bonn
University of Edinburgh
Party:Nazi Party (1933–1941)
Christian Democratic Union (1945–1989)

Gerhard Schröder (11 September 1910 – 31 December 1989) was a West German politician and member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party. He served as Federal Minister of the Interior from 1953 to 1961, as Foreign Minister from 1961 to 1966, and as Minister of Defence from 1966 until 1969. In the 1969 election he ran for President of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) but was outpolled by Gustav Heinemann.

Life

The son of a railway official, Schröder was born in Saarbrücken, then part of the Prussian Rhine Province. Having passed his Abitur exams, he went on to study law at the University of Königsberg and two semesters abroad at the University of Edinburgh, where he, according to his own accounts, became familiar with a British way of life. In 1932 he finished his studies in Bonn he had committed himself to the university group of the national liberal German People's Party.

Schröder passed the first and second Staatsexamen in 1932 and 1936. Having obtained his doctorate in 1934 he worked as a consultant at the Kaiser Wilhelm Society in Berlin. Still as a referendary in Bonn, he had joined the Nazi Party on 1 April 1933 and also the SA. He continued his career as a law firm employee and in 1939 obtained an attorney's certificate and worked as a tax lawyer. He left the NSDAP in May 1941 (a rather rare occurrence). In the same month and perhaps in connection, he married his wife, Brigitte Schröder née Landsberg, needing - she was half-Jewish - with an extraordinary permission by his Armed Forces superiors.

He held federal office as Minister of the Interior (1953–1961) and as Minister of Foreign Affairs (1961–1966) in the cabinets of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and of Ludwig Erhard. From 1966 to 1969 he served as Minister of Defence under Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger.

In 1969 Gerhard Schröder ran for the Office of the Federal President (supported by CDU and NPD), but he was beaten by Gustav Heinemann, the nominee of the SPD (supported by FDP), at the third ballot with 49.4% to 48.8% of the votes of the Federal Assembly.

In the years following his active political activity, Schröder maintained a private discussion circle of former politicians, diplomats and economic officials who philosophized about the global problems of the new era but no longer intervened politically in day-to-day business. He supported the Reagan administration and endorsed the SDI program.

His last appearance in the Bundestag was on 17 June 1984, when he held the ceremonial address of the commemoration ceremony of the June 1953 bloody uprising.

Schröder died on 31 December 1989 in his house on Sylt. After his death, the German Bundestag honored him on 12 January 1990 with a state act in the plenary hall. Gerhard Schröder was buried in the cemetery of the island church of St. Severin in Keitum, Sylt.

Decorations and awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Reply to a parliamentary question . de . 133 . 22 December 2012 .