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Wilhelm Beyer (22 March 1885 in Hohenmölsen – 11 April 1945 in Schermcke) was a German politician and functionary of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). [1]
Beyer grew up in Hohenmölsen, where he attended elementary school[ when?], and later[ when?] worked in various industries as an apprentice. In 1902 he joined the 7. Thuringian Infantry Regiment No. 96 in Naumburg. As a military trainee, he went[ when?] to the Royal Police in Kiel. In 1919 he was called as a Post assistant to the postal service. He was promoted[ when?] to secretary and later[ when?] chief post secretary. On 1 October 1931, he left the postal service because of illness.
Beyer joined the Nazi party in 1925. On 29 November 1930 he was given mandate as a city councilor in Essen.
After the National Socialist seizure[ when?] he received in November 1933 in the constituency 23 (Düsseldorf West) a mandate in the Reichstag where he served until 1945. Beyer died on a business trip to Hamburg in combat in the final phase of the Second World War[ when?].