Preliminary note The Senior Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas was established at the same time as the Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas (GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 180 C) with the law on the accommodation of indirect civil servants and teachers from the areas assigned by the Versailles Treaties (Accommodation Act) on 30 March 1920 (GS. p. 63). It was an appeal body to the welfare office for civil servants from the border areas and to the welfare office for teachers (stock not handed down). An appeal has been lodged against decisions concerning the termination of a post, the obligation of the Appointing Authority to notify a post, the right to register an applicant, the obligation for the applicant to accept an assigned post and the loss of the right to welfare of an applicant, the involvement of the Employers' Associations in the removal costs and the use of a post occupied contrary to the provisions of this Act. The law concerned indirect state officials who lost their office as a result of the assignment or occupation of Prussian parts of the country or gave up their office because, according to the circumstances, they could not be expected to continue their office under foreign rule. It also applied to the former Alsace-Lorraine indirect civil servants and teachers and to teachers who had had to give up their jobs in the foreign or colonial school service (the welfare office for teachers was responsible for this; its file stock is not handed down). The 1920 law was amended by the law of 21 May 1935 (p. 69). The Chief Welfare Office was under the auspices of the Ministry of Finance, but was affiliated to the Higher Administrative Court. It essentially consisted of members of the Higher Administrative Court appointed by the State Ministry; it was not received until 1945. The files listed here were transferred to the main archive in 1953 by the Higher Administrative Court in whose house, Berlin-Charlottenburg 2, Hardenbergstr. 31, was located. gez. Dr. Kober, May 2011 finding aids: database; finding guide, 1 vol.
Kolonialschuldienst
9 Archival description results for Kolonialschuldienst
including applicants for colonial school service; teacher and pupil exchanges
Contains among other things: Recruitment; swearing-in; salary and salary bonuses; removals; transfers; leave and exemption from duty; participation in NSLB training events; donations and fundraising campaigns; service obligations and wartime deployment; use of retired civil servants; secondment to occupied eastern territories; colonial school service; incorporation of Alsatian teachers into German civil service law; official duties; conduct in police matters Darin: 1. Requests for mercy for so-called "popular pests"; 2. lists of participants in Corpus Christi processions and the like.
Contains, among other things: Recruitment; swearing in; salary and salary allowances; relocations; transfers; holidays and leave of absence; participation in NSLB training events; donations and collection campaigns; service obligation and war deployment; use of retired civil servants; secondment to the occupied eastern territories; colonial school service; transfer of Alsatian teachers to German civil service law; official duties; behaviour in service police matters Included: 1. petitions for clemency for so-called. 'Volksschädlinge'; 2. lists of participants in Corpus Christi processions and the like
Contains, among other things: Recruitment; swearing in; salary and salary allowances; relocations; transfers; holidays and leave of absence; participation in NSLB training events; donations and collection campaigns; compulsory service and war deployment; use of retired civil servants; secondment to the occupied eastern territories; colonial school service; transfer of Alsatian teachers to German civil service law; official duties; behaviour in service police matters Included: 1. petitions for clemency for so-called 'Volksschädlinge'; 2. lists of participants in Corpus Christi processions and the like
among others overviews of suitable and unsuitable teacher applicants, more extensive personal documents (especially Heinrich Koegler from Obertraubling, Maria Aschenbrenner from Cham, Friedrich Kunte from Albrechtsried, Josef Zaengl from Eitlbrunn, Liselotte Göring from Steinmühle, Mathilde Mitlstrasser from Aufhausen, Ernst Armer from Kaltenthal)(old AZ: 3044b)
Contains among other things: Teachers for the hearing impaired and speech therapists; kindergarten teachers; youth leaders; vocational school teachers; auxiliary school teachers; teachers at Air Force schools Darin: 1. foreign and colonial school service; 2. special language skills of teachers
Contains: e.g. assignment in Alsace, preparation for colonial school service
Preliminary remarks History of the authorities The Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas was established at the same time as the Supreme Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas (GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 206) with the law on the accommodation of indirect civil servants and teachers from the areas ceded by the Versailles Treaties (Accommodation Act) on 30 March 1920 (GS. p. 63). The law concerned indirect state officials who lost their office as a result of the assignment or occupation of Prussian parts of the country or gave up their office because, according to the circumstances, they could not be expected to continue their work under foreign rule. It also applied to the former Alsace-Lorraine indirect civil servants and teachers and to teachers who had had to give up their jobs in the foreign or colonial school service (the welfare office for teachers was responsible for this; its file stock is not handed down). The Welfare Office was the decision-making authority of the Ministry of Finance. His court of appeal was the Supreme Welfare Office. The 1920 law was amended by the law of 21 May 1935 (p. 69). The president of the Prussian Building and Finance Directorate was also chairman of the "Welfare Office"; the main fund of the Building and Finance Directorate handled its cash transactions (see also the state handbooks). Inventory Six acts of the authority were transferred to the Secret State Archives in 1941 (Accession 68/1941) and the "I. HA Rep. 180 E" collection was set up for this purpose. These files were outsourced during the war and finally reached the German Central Archive in Merseburg after the war. The other files of the authority listed here were transferred from the building of the Prussian Building and Finance Directorate Berlin (Invalidenstraße 52) to the main archive of Berlin in 1947; the "I. HA Rep. 180 C" collection was formed from them - probably in ignorance of what had already been established earlier. After the merging of the two components, they were combined to form the "I. HA Rep. 180 C Welfare Office for Civil Servants from the Border Regions". The stock is in the magazine Dahlem. The files are to be ordered as: I. HA Rep. 180 C, No. ### The files are to be quoted as: I. HA Rep. 180 C Welfare Office for officials from border areas, No. ### The last number assigned is: signed. Dr. Kober, November 2013 finding aids: database; finding guide, 1 vol.