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Archival description
Kreisarchiv Höxter, (C 2), Nr. 99 · File · 1936-1963
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Contains: above all: General provisions and decrees concerning health suitability for occupations, activities and uses; cures; colonial fitness; health certificates in general; certificates for visiting trips

Kreisarchiv Höxter, (A 0), Nr. 370 · File · 1937-1945
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Contains: among others: Wreath donations; collection for the "Hitler-Urlauberkameradschaften"; winter relief organization; victim book of the Gaues Westfalen-Nord; district professional competition; advertisement for books of Reichsorganisationsleiter Dr. Robert Ley; farewell gift for Landrat Dr. Reschke; wedding and anniversary gifts; spare time organization by the KDF; "colonial lecture" of the SS-Hauptsturmführer v. Amelunxen; Procurement of apples for married followers; Prohibition of listening to foreign radio stations; Operational appeal by a Wehrmacht speaker; Iron savings; Social security compensation for iron savings Darin: Rüge wegen des Kaufes einer Luftpumpe durch einen 12jährigen Jungen bei einem Juden (Complaint about the purchase of an air pump by a 12-year-old boy from a Jew)

human resources
Kreisarchiv Höxter, (A 0), Nr. 379 · File · 1937-1947
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Contains: above all: Search for stenotypists for the deployment in the Reichsgauen of the East; reservation of civil servants for colonial service; conscription to the Wehrmacht; civil servants removed from service in 1945; civil servants on duty in August 1945; monthly reports of personnel changes of the district and the municipalities to the military government 1945-1947 Darin: Flächen, Einwohnerzahlen und Bürgermeister der Gemeinden 1946

C 2 (inventory)
Kreisarchiv Höxter, C 2 · Fonds
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Introduction : C 2 - Warburg Health DepartmentWith the "Law on the Unification of the Health System" of 3 July 1934, the establishment of health departments was ordered in the city and county districts on the basis of the lower administrative authority on 1 April 1935. The health offices were entrusted with the following tasks: health police, hereditary and race care including marriage counselling, public health education, school health care, maternal and child counselling, care for tuberculosis, sexually ill persons, physically handicapped persons, infirmity and addicts. In addition, it was planned to involve doctors in measures to promote personal hygiene and physical exercise as well as in official, court and confidential medical activities. The health offices were state institutions run by a state medical officer. The state health department in Warburg began its service on 1 May 1935. Initially, until June 1935, Dr. Walter Czerwionka, a medical assessor employed as a district physician since 1 February 1934, took over the management. However, Dr. Carl Kirchner began his service as director on 5 June 1935. The seat of the health office became the district administration office (Kreishaus), in which rooms for preventive health care already existed and in which the health office moved into the rooms that were actually intended to be used as a district administration apartment. However, these rooms were completely inadequate for the new requirements. Thus the winter garden, which was difficult to heat, was used as a waiting room and, since the appointment of an assistant doctor in January 1937, as her consulting room with "unbearable cold in winter", whereby the hallway had to become a waiting room. In 1941 the district administrator's room came to the health department. A new building was considered for several years, but planning was discontinued in 1942 due to the war. In May 1945 rooms and inventory were heavily devastated by the occupation soldiers. In May 1945, the district officer of the British military government seized the premises of the health department. The Health Department found an - inadequate and expensive - alternative quarter in the Commerzbank building and from 1951 in its rear building, the former hall of a hotel divided by press fabric walls. In 1959 the health department moved into a new building next to the district hall. By a joint decree of the Minister of the Interior and the Minister of Finance of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia of 27 January 1947, it was ordered that the costs of the former state health offices for the accounting year 1947 be provided for in the district budgets. This also applied to the personnel costs of the medical officers. Until the end of the accounting year 1946 on 31 March 1947, the costs of the health offices were still borne by the State Treasury. By decree of 19 March 1947, the Minister of Social Affairs of North Rhine-Westphalia ordered the districts to take over the entire staff and inventory. Thus the State Health Office Warburg was transferred to the district. The legal regulation took place only later. On 30 April 1948, the State Parliament of North Rhine-Westphalia passed the "Law on the Integration of State Special Authorities of the District Stage into the District and City Administrations". The first state medical officer and head of the health department was Dr. med. Carl Kirchner (born September 21, 1889 in Merseburg), who retired on March 31, 1952 due to a serious illness. On August 1, 1952, Dr. Karl-Theodor Roeingh, Medical Councillor, took over the management of the health office. Horst Zeidler, MD, was the last senior medical officer of the Warburg district. The holdings contain the files as they were transferred from the Warburg branch to the district archives. A small collection of 56 numbers of splinters can be found in the Landesarchiv Nordrhein-Westfalen (department OWL) in Detmold as "D 102 Gesundheitsamt Warburg". According to information in No. 80 of the holdings in the district archives, "a large part of the files of the health department was destroyed by the effects of war in 1945". A considerable part of the files and processes contained in the holdings are subject to official medical secrecy and may therefore only be used within 60 years of the creation of the documents or the final year of the file under special consideration of § 7 Paragraph 6 of the Archivgesetz Nordrhein-Westfalen (ArchivG NRW) of 16 March 2010. In the case of personal archive records, the provisions of § 7 (1) No. 1-3 and § 7 (6) No. 1-4 ArchivG NRW must also be taken into account. Höxter, February 2013 (Horst-D. Krus) It is to be quoted: District Archives Höxter C 2 No. ....

B 1 (inventory)
Kreisarchiv Höxter, B 1 · Fonds
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Introduction : The holdings at hand comprise files of the Höxter district administration from the years 1824 to 1972, including the Brakel district, which was affiliated to the Höxter district in 1832. It is a remnant, to which other older files disparately found in the Kreishaus Höxter were also assigned. The focus of the collection is on files from the late 19th century and the first half of the 20th century. Since the Prussian district administrator was a state official and the district administration was a state administration until its communalisation on 1 April 1946, the state archives claim the files of the district administrations. For this reason, in a total of ten deliveries from 1939 to 1951, the files of the rural administration - including numerous files of the municipal administration (district committee) that had already existed since 1884 - were handed over to the Münster State Archives. After the establishment of the Detmold State Archive with the administrative district of Detmold as the archive sprinkler, the files initially handed over to Münster came to Detmold. Therefore the majority of the files from the Prussian district time today form the holdings M 2 Höxter in the state archives North Rhine-Westphalia - department East Westphalia-Lippe - in Detmold (before the state archives Detmold). In the main, the archives recorded in this finding aid book are files from the wide area of public safety and order. However, files from the areas of social affairs, construction, trade and industry, housing, agriculture and forestry are also assigned. Höxter, signed in October 2010. Horst-D. Krus Nachtrag:In June 2015/March 2016, for the publication of the online finding aid, the individual units of registration were provided with protection period notes in accordance with the Landesarchivgesetz NRW (State Archives Act of North Rhine-Westphalia). Kreie, Höxter, 14 March 2016Kreisarchiv Höxter B 1 Nr.

A 5 (inventory)
Kreisarchiv Höxter, A 5 · Fonds
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Introduction : The ¿Law of 3 July 1934 on the Unification of the Health Sector¿ ordered the creation of health offices in urban and rural districts on 1 April 1935, in accordance with the lower administrative authority. The Health Offices were entrusted with the following tasks: health police, hereditary and race care including marriage counselling, public health education, school health care, maternal and child counselling, care for tuberculosis, sexually ill persons, physically handicapped persons, infirmity and addicts. In addition, it was planned to involve doctors in measures to promote personal hygiene and physical exercise as well as in official, court and confidential medical activities. The health offices were state institutions run by a state medical officer. The state health department in Höxter began its service on 1 May 1935. In practice, it continued the work of the district physician, who was appointed official physician and head of the state health department for the Höxter district by decree of 17 April 1935. The seat of the health office became the district hall, in which rooms for health care already existed. The official physician, who had the official rooms in his apartment as a district physician, had to perform his duties from now on in the rooms of the health office. A part of the district house was rebuilt for the health department. Before the law to unify the health care system came into force, the district physician was alone. The district employed only three caregivers, two of whom were taken over by the State Health Office. After the law came into force, the health office employed an assistant doctor, four health care nurses, an office clerk, a health supervisor, three office employees and a technical assistant in addition to the official doctor. In Beverungen, Brakel, Bad Driburg, Steinheim, Lügde and Vörden, the health authorities set up examination centres. By a joint decree of the Minister of the Interior and the Minister of Finance of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia of 27 January 1947, it was ordered that the costs of the former state health offices for the accounting year 1947 be provided for in the district budgets. This also applied to the personnel costs of the medical officers. Until the end of the accounting year 1946 on 31 March 1947, the costs of the health offices were still borne by the State Treasury. By decree of 19 March 1947, the Minister of Social Affairs of North Rhine-Westphalia ordered the districts to take over the inventory. Thus the State Health Office Höxter was transferred to the district on April 1, 1947. On 21 August 1947, the inventory was formally handed over to District Inspector Otten by the official physician Dr. Larverseder. The legal regulation took place only later. On 30 April 1948, the State Parliament of North Rhine-Westphalia passed the "Act on the Integration of Special State Authorities of the District Stage into the District and City Administrations". The first state medical officer and head of the health department was Dr. Bruno Rathe (born 17 September 1879 in Rastede/Oldenburg). Adolf Tomfohrde (born January 24, 1887), who began his service in Höxter on December 1, 1935. His successor became Dr. med. Karl Larverseder (born May 19, 1899 in Fürstenzell/Lower Bavaria) on September 1, 1942. He retired early at the end of 1958 and died in December 1959. Corresponding holdings: Kreisarchiv Höxter, A 0 (mainly on personnel, organisation and premises of the health office); Kreisarchiv Höxter, B 1 (mainly on the classification point "Health Care"); Landesarchiv NRW (OWL department), D 102 Höxter; Landesarchiv NRW (OWL department). OWL), M 2 Höxter (Classification Point "Health and Veterinary Affairs") Following the retroconversion of the finding aid book produced in March 2000, in July 2015 the data records were provided with blocking notes in accordance with the Archives Act of North Rhine-Westphalia in the version of 16 September 2014 with a view to publication as an online finding aid book. Two data sets have not (yet) been published (as of 20.07.2015). Usability: A considerable part of the files and processes contained in the holdings are subject to official medical secrecy and may therefore only be used within 60 years of the creation of the documents or the final year of the file, in particular with regard to § 7 para. 6 of the Archivgesetz Nordrhein-Westfalen (ArchivG NRW) i.d.F.v. 16.09.2014. In the case of personal archive records, the provisions of § 7 (1) No. 1-3 and § 7 (6) No. 1-4 ArchivG NRW must also be taken into account. Höxter, signed in March 2000/July 2015. Horst-D. Krus/ Ralf-Oliver KreieKreisarchiv Höxter A 5 No. ..........

A 0 (inventory)
Kreisarchiv Höxter, A 0 · Fonds
Part of District Archive Höxter (Archive Tectonics)

Introduction : A 0 - Hauptabteilung/HauptamtThe present collection mainly comprises the files of the Hauptabteilung and Hauptamt of the Kreisverwaltung Höxter as they were closed until 1968. It contains with few previous files (from 1924) and some older documents in younger files (from 1893) the files with terms between 1937 and 1968. A few later additions were classified into the inventory. These border years are not caused by legal requirements or changes in the organisation of the authorities or the allocation of responsibilities. Rather, the cut of the registry is conditioned in each case by a change in the form of document filing. Until 1937 a recumbent registry was kept. This year Paul Kölsch, the Kassel representative of the Regis-Gesellschaft in Duisburg, worked out a new file plan for the municipal department. With the new file plan, the conversion of the filing system to a standing file with four-hole mechanism according to the Regis system was carried out. The new registry was put into operation on 11 November 1937. The standing file register was in use until 1968, when it was replaced by a hanging file. The closed standing files were put away as old registry and finally taken over into the district archives. The files before 1937 are in the Detmold State Archives as holdings M 2 Höxter, which also contains a small number of files with terms up to 1944. The file plan was used as a basis for the order of the present inventory. As a rule, it was also possible to keep the order specified by the file numbers when filing the archive records in the magazine. Until 1945, the main department bore the designation A, from 1945 to 1955 Ib and from 1956 0 (zero), which is indicated in each case in the search book under the file numbers. The files of the National Socialist era have not been fully archived, because shortly before the American troops marched into Höxter, part of the files (¿secret files¿) were burned (see no. 762). References to the type of documents destroyed can be found in the lists in No. 1274. The district administrator as head of the district administration was a civil servant, the district a state administrative district since 1933. There was no district assembly during the National Socialist era. The conquest of the town of Höxter by the Allied troops on 7 April 1945 brought the work of the district administration to a standstill for the time being. The occupying power then appointed Hoffmeister as provisional district administrator. On 25 May 1945 Wilhelm Kronsbein, former mayor of the town of Höxter, was appointed district administrator. However, the British military government, which was represented by a district officer (British Resident) in Höxter from May 1945 to May 1951, had the final decision-making authority in all matters. The military government established a municipal administrative structure with the separation of administration and political leadership. From 1946, the head of administration was the head of the Oberkreisdirektor. On 15 January 1946, the first district assembly (appointed by the military government) met with a district administrator at the head. From 1 April 1946, the district administration was no longer a state authority, but a purely municipal administration. On 1 November 1948, the remaining state authorities - the Cadastral, Road Traffic, Health, Veterinary and Nutrition Office and the Government Treasury - were incorporated into the District Administration. On 13 October 1946, a district assembly was elected in a free election. He met for his constituent meeting on 23 October 1946 and elected the district administrator from his ranks. On 24 June 1946, Oberkreisdirektor Kronsbein was replaced by Oberkreisdirektor Buss, who held this position until 1968. Höxter, January 1997 signed Krus Nachtrag v. 06.07.2015:Following the retroconversion of the typewritten finding aid in the first half of 2015, individual data records were marked with blocking notices in accordance with the Archive Act of North Rhine-Westphalia in the version of 16.09.2014 with a view to publication as an online finding aid in the first half of the year and were not (yet) published subsequently. signed KreieKreisarchiv Höxter A 0 No.