Ursula Maria Leipold was born in Frankfurt on 5 June 1930;[1] her father was a banker, and she grew up with two younger siblings.[2][3] She obtained the Abitur at a gymnasium for girls in Offenbach am Main.[1]
She married Helmut Lehr that year at age 19;[4] her husband worked for an Arbeitsgemeinschaft [de] of the CDU/CSU.[2] She began studies of German studies, art history and philosophy at the University of Frankfurt.[2] When Bonn became capital of West Germany, her husband's workplace moved there, and she continued her studies at the University of Bonn in 1950, now focused on psychology and German studies.[1] In 1954, she was promoted to the doctorate, with a dissertation "Beiträge zur Psychologie der Periodik im kindlichen Verhalten.", on psychological studies of children.[2]
Academic career
She began her academic career in 1955 as a research assistant at the University of Bonn. In a project of the German Research Foundation, she researched the capability of elder workers to work ("Leistungsfähigkeit älterer Arbeitnehmer"). She was habilitated by the faculty of philosophy in 1968, writing "Die Frau im Beruf – eine psychologische Analyse der weiblichen Berufsrolle" about the psychology of working women. In 1970, she was appointed professor. She also led the department of developmental psychology. She was called to the University of Cologne in 1972, in the faculty of pedagogy and pedagogic psychology, where she was also director of the pedagogical seminar.[2] That year, she wrote her seminal book, Psychologie des Alterns (Psychology of aging), based on the premise that aging is a process of lifelong learning and adaption. It made her a pioneer of gerontology.[2]
She returned to Bonn in 1976, to the new faculty of developmental psychology. She was an advisor to Lothar Späth, then minister-president of Baden-Württemberg, who initiated that she was called to the first chair of gerontology in Germany, at the University of Heidelberg. The institute began teaching gerontology in 1987.[2]
After leaving politics, Lehr returned to her teaching post. In 1995, she was the founder of the German centre for research on aging (DZFA [de]) of the University of Heidelberg,[6] and headed it until 1998. She also served as the chair of the German society of gerontology and geriatrics from 1997 to 1998. She was elected the head of the German National Association of Senior Citizens' Organizations (BAGSO) in 2009, was reelected to the post in 2012 for three more years, and served as vice-president for the following period. She was afterwards honorary president of the BAGSO.[8]
Private life
Lehr was married twice; both marriages ended with the death of her husband. She had two sons.[2]
Lehr died in Bonn on 25 April 2022 at age 91.[6][9]