Otto Heinrich Greve

Otto Heinrich Greve (30 January 1908 in Rostock, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany 11 June 1968 in Ascona, Ticino, Switzerland) was a German lawyer by profession and a politician of the German Democratic Party (DDP) and its successor German State Party (DStP; 1926 to 1933, when the Nazis banned that party), the Free Democratic Party (F.D.P.; 1945 to 1947) and Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD; since 1948) and former member of the German Bundestag.[1]

Otto Heinrich Greve
Member of the Bundestag
In office
7 September 1949  15 October 1961
Personal details
Born(1908-01-30)30 January 1908
Rostock
Died11 June 1968(1968-06-11) (aged 60)
Ascona
NationalityGerman
Political partyDDP, DStP, F.D.P. and SPD

Life

Greve, born the only child to Rostock's politically active liberal chief postmaster Heinrich Greve (1868–1936), grew up in the liberal merchant circles of Rostock and developed a childhood friendship with Herbert Samuel (1907–1992), son of Max Samuel, a close friend of Greve's father Heinrich Greve. After finishing Rostock's Große Stadtschule grammar school he studied law at the universities of Munich, Nancy, Paris and Rostock.

In 1926 Otto Heinrich Greve joined the German Democratic Party and was elected a member of the German central board of the Young Democrats (DDP's youth wing)[2] and speaker of Rostock's General Students Committee.[3] He was also active in the Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold, a cross-party alliance of activists for developing and defending democracy. All this ended with the Nazis' government take-over when they banned democratic parties, their youth wings and other civil society activities.

As a graduate of law Greve joined the Mecklenburg state prosecution department, while his friend and fellow law-graduate Herbert Samuel was denied to practise at all as a lawyer because the new Nazi government banned him as a Jew from doing so. So Samuel prepared for emigration and left to Britain in 1934. The Nazis as dictators newly having access to every governmental authority suspiciously eyed Greve because he had exposed himself as a democrat before 1933.

Greve graduated with a doctorate in law on an unpolitical subject, published by him in 1936.[4] In September 1937 Greve visited Samuel in London,[5] delivering important company documents of Max Samuel's EMSA Werke company on the verge of relocating its production from Germany to Britain.

On 31 July 1938 Greve was dismissed as assessor from the public prosecution department after he had rejected the call of superiors to join the Nazi party.[2] His friends helped him to find a job, so on 1 September 1938 the EMSA-Werke company hired him as a clerk, but he had to leave again by the end of September 1939,[6] after 'Aryanisers' had taken over the company.

Greve then found a job as a general counsel with an industrial company in Middle Germany and married Helene Greve from Greiz. He left his work close before the German defeat to live with his parents-in-law. By the end of the Second World War the liberating US occupiers appointed Greve the first post-Nazi era county commissioner (Landrat) of the Greiz District in Thuringia, however, when in July 1945 the area was handed over to the Soviet occupation zone in Germany the new Soviet occupiers dismissed him as county commissioner and he, his wife and their three daughters, took refuge in Wagenfeld, meanwhile in the British occupation zone in Germany. Living in Wagenfeld he received the legal mandate of his exiled co-sister-in-law, member of the displaced Heilbrunn family of textile industrialists, to reclaim their assets there from the Aryanisers in which he succeeded already in 1945 – with ranks of German authorities still interspersed with more or less identifiable supporters and former members of the Nazi party.

He soon moved to Hanover, then capital of the new Lower Saxony, and opened a law office and stood up again as a democrat in Germany becoming a founding member of the DDP's successor party, the Free Democratic Party (F.D.P.), and being elected into its British zonal party executive board. However, he quit the F.D.P. by the end of 1947 when he remained without sufficient support among his fellow board members to take action against too lax a practice in admitting former Nazis as new party members. In 1948 he joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

Greve was a member of the state parliament of Lower Saxony from 1947 to 1951. He later, as a lawyer and Lower Saxon delegate to the Parliamentary Council, the West German constituent assembly, was thus one of the "parents of the Basic Law" who co-authored that West German constitution. He was then elected a member of the German Bundestag from the first post-World War Two general elections in 1949 to 1961.[7] He was always directly elected in the then constituency of Nienburg - Schaumburg-Lippe.

Greve was strongly advocating West German Wiedergutmachung in parliamentary legislation and practice as a lawyer.[8] He also helped many clients getting recompense by way of West Germany's Lastenausgleich for assets expropriated and/or withheld in German territory under communist rule (the Soviet sector of Berlin, the Soviet zone in Middle Germany and the Polish- and Soviet-annexed Eastern Germany) for undeniable foregoing the use of those assets, else – as maintained by the West German legal situation – to be restituted once communism would be over.

Literature

  • Herbst, Ludolf; Jahn, Bruno (2002). Vierhaus, Rudolf (ed.). Biographisches Handbuch der Mitglieder des Deutschen Bundestages. 1949–2002 [Biographical Handbook of the Members of the German Bundestag. 1949–2002] (in German). München: De Gruyter - De Gruyter Saur. p. 1715. ISBN 978-3-11-184511-1.
  • Heiko Holste, „Im Profil: Wider den Geist der Rosenburg – Vor 50 Jahren starb der Rechtsanwalt und Rechtspolitiker Otto Heinrich Greve“, in: Neue Juristische Wochenschrift, Beilage 'NJW-aktuell', No. 51 (2017), pp. 18seq.
  • Heiko Holste, „Jurist im Porträt: Otto Heinrich Greve (1908–1968): Anwalt für die Wiedergutmachung und gegen die Renazifizierung der Nachkriegsjustiz“, in: Recht und Politik, No. 2 (vol. 54, 2018), pp. 220-231.

References

  1. "Die Mitglieder des Deutschen Bundestages - 1.-13. Wahlperiode: Alphabetisches Gesamtverzeichnis; Stand: 28. Februar 1998" [The members of the German Bundestag - 1st - 13th term of office: Alphabetical complete index] (PDF). webarchiv.bundestag.de (in German). Deutscher Bundestag, Wissenschaftliche Dienste des Bundestages (WD 3/ZI 5). 1998-02-28. Retrieved 2020-05-21.
  2. Heiko Holste, „Im Profil: Wider den Geist der Rosenburg – Vor 50 Jahren starb der Rechtsanwalt und Rechtspolitiker Otto Heinrich Greve“, in: Neue Juristische Wochenschrift, Beilage 'NJW-aktuell', No. 51 (2017), pp. 18seq., here p. 18.
  3. Heiko Holste, „Jurist im Porträt: Otto Heinrich Greve (1908–1968): Anwalt für die Wiedergutmachung und gegen die Renazifizierung der Nachkriegsjustiz“, in: Recht und Politik, No. 2 (vol. 54, 2018), pp. 220-231, here p. 221.
  4. Cf. Otto Heinrich Greve, Vermutung und öffentlicher Glaube des Anerbenscheins (i.e. about 'Presumption and public belief of a certificate of impartible inheritance'), Rostock: Beckmann, 1936, simultaneously Rostock University, Diss., 1936.
  5. Herbert Samuel, Eidesstattliche Versicherung on Otto Heinrich Greve's career in Mecklenburg's judicial service (affidavit), Liverpool: German consulate typescript, 2 March 1961; Max-Samuel-Haus archive sign. GREV 19610302 EV.
  6. Otto Heinrich Greve, Lebenslauf, 1967/1968. Max-Samuel-Haus archive sign. GREV 19670900-19680800.
  7. Heiko Holste, „Jurist im Porträt: Otto Heinrich Greve (1908–1968): Anwalt für die Wiedergutmachung und gegen die Renazifizierung der Nachkriegsjustiz“, in: Recht und Politik, No. 2 (vol. 54, 2018), pp. 220-231, here p. 224.
  8. Heiko Holste, „Jurist im Porträt: Otto Heinrich Greve (1908–1968): Anwalt für die Wiedergutmachung und gegen die Renazifizierung der Nachkriegsjustiz“, in: Recht und Politik, No. 2 (vol. 54, 2018), pp. 220-231, here pp. 225 and 229.
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