The New International Encyclopædia/Beckerath, Hermann von

BECKERATH, bĕk ' e-rät, (1801-70). A Prussian statesman. He was born at Krefeld, in Rhenish Prussia, and after acquiring a considerable fortune in banking he turned his attention to politics. He served in the Diet of his province and in the Prussian Diet of 1847, and went as a deputy to the Frankfort Parliament of 1848, where he was an unswerving advocate of German unity and political liberty. His eloquence exercised considerable influence on this assembly. He was appointed Minister of Finance in the Ministry constituted for Germany under the auspices of the Parliament, and presently was called to Berlin to construct a Cabinet. He declined the task, because the King of Prussia would not give him a free hand in his scheme for the unification of Germany. When the reactionary movement set in, he resigned the posts he held under the Government, but continued, as a member of the Prussian Second Chamber, a vigorous opposition to the Manteuffel Ministry, which had deserted the cause of German unity. He withdrew from politics in 1852. After the return of Manteuffel to power in 1858, Beckerath was again elected a member of the Prussian Second Chamber, but was obliged to decline the honor on account of failing health. He devoted his later years to the affairs of Krefeld, his native town. Consult Kopstadt, Hermann von Beckerath (Brunswick, 1875).