Albertine Badenberg (29 December 1865 – 20 April 1958) was a teacher and a feminist activist. She later became involved with mainstream politics (Centre Party), sitting as a member of the Prussian parliament ("Landtag") between 1924 and its abolition in 1933.[1][2][3]

Albertine Badenberg
Born29 December 1865
Died20 April 1958
Occupation(s)teacher
politician
feminist activist
Political partyCentre Party
Parent(s)Albert Badenberg (1831-1888)
Auguste (1838-1922)

Life edit

Provenance and early years edit

Albertine Badenberg was born in Steele, at that time a manufacturing town outside Essen (into which it has subsequently been subsumed), at the heart of the rapidly industrialising Ruhr region. Albert Badenberg (1831–1888),[4] her father, was an architect and land surveyor.[1] Her mother, Auguste (1838–1922),[4] came from a family of Viennese minor aristocrats. Albertine left her girls' school when she was fifteen and spent the next two years in Belgium and England in order to learn French and English. She then attended a (single sex) teacher training college in Koblenz, passing her final exams in 1885, which qualified her to teach at middle and senior schools (for girls). In 1886 she accepted a teaching position locally in Steele and in 1887 she accepted the headship of the German School in Genoa. The sudden death of her father in March 1888 put an end to her career and travel plans, however, and she returned to Germany, finding herself at the age of 22 responsible not just for supporting herself, but also for her widowed (and thereby impoverished) mother and six younger siblings.[1]

Feminism in a Catholic context edit

Badenberg had already joined the recently formed Association of Catholic Women Teachers ("Verein katholischer deutscher Lehrerinnen" / VkdL), and on returning from Italy she engaged actively with it.[5] In 1894 she set up a job placement service and in 1896 a legal advice service for members. She campaigned for legal and financial equality with male teachers.[6] She joined the VkdL executive committee in 1898. Her proposal as to how the association could acquire a more prominent public profile resulted in the launch in 1900 of "Christliche Frau" ("Christian Woman"), a news-magazine and a mouth-piece of the Catholic women's movement.

In the teeth of opposition from other parts of the catholic mainstream, in 1906 Badenberg played an important part in the founding of the German Catholic Women's Association.[7] She became a member of its national executive and in 1909 founded a branch association in her home town, Steele. In 1910 she took over national responsibility for the KDFB's treasury function. In 1917 she absented herself from her teaching work in order to work full time for the KDFB as its General Secretary till 1921.[7] That year she returned to teaching, becoming a deputy school head in 1922.[1]

After the war edit

Naturally as a leading figure within the KDFB, Albertine Badenberg backed votes for women, but during the war years the topic was off the political agenda.[8] Another organisation with close connections to the Catholic Church in Germany was the Centre Party, within which there were strong opinions on both side of the enfranchisement argument: formally the party tended to remain silent on the topic.[7] However, in the aftermath of national military defeat and the emperor's abdication new constitutional arrangements became unavoidable in 1918, and the provisional government published a declaration that all future elections to public bodies would take place using a system of secret ballots and proportional representation, open to all persons aged at least 20, whether male or female. The "votes for women" debate thereby ended suddenly, and before there had been time for it to resurface.[8] The Centre Party immediately approached the KDFB, calling for co-operation. One upshot was that the KDFB took on responsibility for the "political education of women" on behalf of the party. More generally, in the feverish political year that followed, the two were closely co-ordinated in their campaigning.[8]

Prussian politics edit

At some stage Albertine Badenberg joined the Centre Party, becoming a member of the regional party executive, the district party executive and the local party executive. In December 1924 she was elected a member of the Prussian parliament ("Landtag"), representing the Düsseldorf-East electoral district, and taking a special interest in wages issues.[1] The Landtag had been dissolved, along with other democratic institutions, by the time Albertine Badenberg celebrated her 68th birthday in December 1933.[9]

Later years edit

There are suggestions that during the Hitler years Badenberg was in touch with opposition circles as the outreach of the Catholic associations became ever more constrained by the authorities. The Association of Catholic Women Teachers (VkdL) closed down in 1937 after the Gestapo confiscated its head office premises in Berlin-Steglitz. After 1945 she involved herself in helping to refound the VkdL, and remained engaged when in 1949 it was able to establish itself in a new head office in Essen.[10] 1949 was also the year in which she undertook a pilgrimage to Assisi.

Awards and honours edit

A street in Essen has been named in her honour.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Birgit Sack. "Die weiblichen Reichs -und Landtagsabgeordneten des Zentrums und der Bayerischen Volkspartei (1919-1933) Eine Kollektivbiographie" (PDF). Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V., Sankt Augustin. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  2. ^ Ernst Kienast (Ed.): Handbuch für den Preußischen Landtag. Ausgabe für die 3. Wahlperiode. R. v. Decker's Verlag (G. Schenck), Berlin 1928. p. 500.
  3. ^ Siegfried Heimann (2011). Der Preussische Landtag 1899-1947: eine politische Geschichte. Ch. Links Verlag. p. 412. ISBN 978-3-86153-648-2.
  4. ^ a b Barbara Kloubert (compiler). "Albert Badenberg". Memorial ID 183984305, Essen-Steele katholischer Friedhof Laurentiusweg. find-a-grave. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  5. ^ Pius XII (13 May 1955). "Lettera alla Signora Elisabetta Mleinek, nel LXX dell;Associazione delle Insegnanto Cattoliche Germania". Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  6. ^ Birgit Sack. Zwischen religiöser Bindung und moderner Gesellschaft. Waxmann Verlag. p. 411. ISBN 978-3-8309-5593-1.
  7. ^ a b c Gisela Breuer (1998). Chapter 2: end note 13. Campus Verlag. pp. 243–244. ISBN 978-3-593-35886-4. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ a b c Gisela Breuer (1998). Katholikinnen in Partei und Parlament: Die politische Umbruchphase 1918/19. Campus Verlag. pp. 212–216. ISBN 978-3-593-35886-4. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Reinhard Sturm (23 December 2011). "Zerstörung der Demokratie 1930-1933". Der Börsencrash läutet das Ende der Weimarer Republik ein. 1928 noch eine Splitterpartei, wandelt sich die NSDAP unter der Führung Adolf Hitlers zur Massenbewegung, die 1933 die Macht in Deutschland übernimmt und fortan jede demokratische Grundlage vernichtet. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung, Bonn. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  10. ^ Elisabeth Peerenboom (Pressemitteilung) (14 October 2009). "Seit 60 Jahren in Essen zu Hause" (PDF). Bundesgeschäftsstelle des Vereins katholischer deutscher Lehrerinnen setzt sich seit seiner Verbandsgründung für die Interessen der lehrenden Frauen ein. Christlicher Gewerkschaftsbund Deutschlands (Informationsdienst des CGB), Berlin. p. 2. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  11. ^ "Albertine-Badenberg-Weg in Essen". Das Straßenverzeichnis für Deutschland, Österreich und die Schweiz. Retrieved 25 January 2018.