Wilhelm Beyer
Wilhelm Beyer was a German soldier and civil servant who became a politician and official of the Nazi Party. He was also an SA-Oberführer in the Nazi Sturmabteilung. He was killed in the final month of the Second World War in Europe.
Early life
Beyer was born in Hohenmölsen and attended Volksschule there to the age of 14, after which he worked as an apprentice in various industrial companies until he was 17. In 1902, he joined the 96th Infantry Regiment in Naumburg. He then joined the royal police service in Kiel. In 1919, he joined the Reichspost as a postal assistant. After passing the administrative examinations, he was promoted to postal secretary and senior postal secretary. On 1 October 1931, he left the postal service due to illness.Nazi Party career
Beyer joined the Nazi Party on 15 February 1926. From 1926, he served as treasurer of the Party's Ortsgruppe in Essen. From 1 August 1928, he held the post of Gau treasurer in Gau Essen. On 29 November 1930, he was elected to the Essen city council.After the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933, he was elected to a seat in the Reichstag from electoral constituency 23 at the November 1933 parliamentary election and retained this seat until his death. A member of the Nazi paramilitary, the Sturmabteilung, Beyer was promoted to SA-Standartenführer on 30 January 30, 1937, and to SA-Oberführer in SA-Gruppe Niederrhein on 9 November 1942. He carried the ranks of Hauptamtsleiter and Hauptbereichsleiter in the Party bureaucracy. Beyer died while in route to a business trip to Hamburg during combat operations in Schermcke during the final phase of the Second World War.