Ernst Heilmann


Ernst Heilmann was a German jurist and politician of the Social Democratic Party of Germany.
Born in Berlin in what was then Prussia, Heilmann attended the University of Berlin, majoring in law and political science. In World War I, he was a proponent of the German party truce. Heilman gained a seat in the Reichstag in the 1928 German federal election. Not long after Hitler and the Nazi's seized power, Heilmann was arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned in the first of a series of concentration camps in which he was to spend nearly seven years. From February 1937 he was kept in Dachau concentration camp, being transferred in September 1938 to Buchenwald concentration camp, where he was executed in April 1940.