Joachim Meyer-Quade
Joachim Meyer-Quade was a German Nazi Party official and Sturmabteilung ''Obergruppenführer. He briefly served as the Gauleiter of Gau Schleswig-Holstein and was the Police President of Kiel. He entered the Wehrmacht'' at the beginning of the Second World War and was killed in action in the Polish Campaign.
Early life and education
Meyer-Quade attended elementary and secondary school. In 1914 he served an agricultural apprenticeship in Dülmen. During the First World War, he joined Field Artillery Regiment No. 84 on 21 January 1915 and was deployed in August to Ypres. On 1 November, he transferred to the 99th Infantry Regiment with which he fought in Flanders, Verdun and the Somme. He was decorated for bravery, earning the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class. He was promoted to Vizefeldwebel on 13 September 1916 but fell into French captivity on 1 November. After several attempts to escape, he was released from prisoner-of-war camp in January 1920.Career
Returning to Germany, Meyer-Quade worked again as an agricultural apprentice and then as an estate manager in North Schleswig. In 1923 he was expelled from the now Danish territory, following the Schleswig plebiscites. He found work in the Krupp factory in Kiel and then as a farm manager in Springe. From 1924 to 1925 he attended a higher education institution for practical farmers in Schleswig. He then worked as an agricultural inspector until 1926.Nazism
On 13 June 1925 Meyer-Quade became a member of the Nazi Party. Together with the Gauleiter of Gau Schleswig-Holstein, Hinrich Lohse, Meyer-Quade was soon one of the leading Nazis in the Gau. He was named the Acting Ortsgruppenleiter in Schleswig on 1 July 1925, serving until 23 August. In 1926 he became the editor of the North German Agricultural Newspaper. He joined the Sturmabteilung on 1 July 1927, becoming the local SA-Führer.In January 1929 Meyer-Quade again became the Schleswig Ortsgruppenleiter as well as the Kreisleiter of Schleswig Kreis. In March, he was named Bezirksleiter of Northeast Schleswig-Holstein, an area comprising three Kreise. In November 1929, he became a member of the District Council of Schleswig. On 14 September 1930 he was elected to the Reichstag from electoral constituency 13, Schleswig-Holstein. He served until 24 May 1932, when he was elected to the Landtag of Prussia. There he was chairman of the agriculture committee from May 1932 until October 1933. On 15 July 1932 Meyer-Quade was promoted to SA-Oberführer and assumed the leadership of the SA for all Schleswig. From 15 July to December 1932 he briefly served as Gauleiter of Gau Schleswig-Holstein, when Lohse was temporarily promoted to the new position of Landesinspekteur, overseeing several Gaue. However, by mid-December, this new position had been abolished and Lohse returned as Gauleiter.
After the National Socialists came to power in January 1933, Meyer-Quade took on various governmental offices. From 5 May 1933 he served as the Landrat of the Schleswig Kreis, leaving in December 1933 at his own request. In November 1933, 18 months after leaving the Reichstag, Meyer-Quade was again elected to the national parliament for Schleswig-Holstein, this time remaining a member until his death. Also in November 1933, he was named Acting SA-Führer of “SA-Gruppe Niedersachsen”, headquartered in Hanover. He served in that capacity until becoming SA-Führer of “SA-Gruppe Nordmark” based in Kiel on 1 February 1934; and on 12 April 1934 he was named Police President of Kiel. He would hold these two posts until his death. In July 1934 he was appointed to a five-year term on the People's Court. From 30 January 1935 to his death, he also sat on the Prussian Provincial Council of Schleswig-Holstein.