Friedrich Ackermann

Friedrich Ackermann (25 December 1866 – 9 April 1931) was a politician and jurist, who from 1907 to 1931, was the high mayor of Szczecin, Poland (then part of Germany).

[1] He was taught by private tutors, and later attended upper classes a gymnasium in Jelenia Góra, from which he graduated in 1885.

[1] On 1 April 1907 he became the high mayor of Szczecin, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire (now part of Poland).

There, from 1910 to 1920 he was a representative of the city of Szczecin, and following the change in the electoral law in 1921, he was a member from the list of the German People's Party.

[5] A part of the modern neighbourhood of Łękno, which was developed under his administration, was in the past called Ackermannshöhe (from German: Ackermann Hill).

The Chrobry Embankment and the building of the Szczecin National Museum , opened in 1912 and 1913, under the administration of Friedrich Ackermann.
The Ackermann Square in Szczecin, in 2009