Education
After graduating from the girls" middle school in Elberfeld, Helene Weber attended the teacher seminar in Aachen from 1897 to 1900. After several years teaching in Elberfeld she studied History, Philosophy and Romance Languages in Bonn and Grenoble.
Career
She had an instrumental role in founding modern German law. There, she joined the student union at Hilaritas. She went on to study as a School Counsellor and taught at the Lyceum in Bochum.
From 1918, she was Head of the Women"s Social School at Aachen.
In 1920, she became Ministerialrätin ("Ministerial Advisor") in the Prussian Ministry of Welfare, where she founded the "Social Education" department. After Nazi takeover, she was dismissed for political reasons on 30 June 1933 and worked in voluntary care.
After the Second World War she took over the chair of the National Association of Catholic Welfare in Rinnen, Germany and became again vice-chairman of the Catholic Women"s Federation. In the Weimar Republic Weber was a centrist.
In 1945 she helped found the Christian Democratic Union. In 1948 she co-founded the Women"s Association of the Christian Democratic Union / Christlich Soziale Union (Christian Social Union), a predecessor of today"s Women"s Union.
From 1951 to 1958 she was chair of the Women"s Association of the Christian Democratic Union and Christlich Soziale Union (Christian Social Union). From 1921 to 1924, she was also a Landtag deputy in Prussia. From May 1924 to 1933 she belonged to the Reichstag. In March 1933 she joined the former Reich Chancellor Heinrich Brüning among the minority of centre MPs who opposed Hitler"s Enabling Acting.
Ultimately, however, she bent to pressure from the Reichstag Group and agreed to the law, which was a decisive step along the road to power for the Nazis.
After the Second World War, she was nominated for both parliaments of North Rhine-Westphalia. In 1947/48 she belonged to the area council for the British occupation zone.
In 1948 in the Parliamentary Council, elected to serve as one of four women in the constitution for the Federal Republic of Germany project, she became member secretary of the Bureau. She is one of the "mothers" of the Basic Law.
Her parliamentary constituency was Aachen City.
She persistently urged German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer that at least one Ministry should be headed by a woman.
Politics
Christian Democratic Union, Centre Party.
Membership
She was a member of the Central Committee of the Catholic German Federation and first chair of the Association of Catholic social workers in Germany. As a member of the Weimar National Assembly in 1919-1920, she was involved in the development of the Weimar Constitution. From 1949 until her death she was a member of the German Bundestag representing the Christian Democratic Union. In the fourth legislature Helene Weber was third oldest member of the Bundestag after Konrad Adenauer and Robert Pferdmenges.
In 1950, she was also a member of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe.