On the
Hainfeld Party Convention of 1888/1889, Jakob Reumann was designated first secretary of the newly founded Social Democratic Party, which then united social democrats of the whole multinational Austrian part of Austria-Hungary. From 1900, he has been elected member of Vienna's
Gemeinderat (city parliament), from 1907 member of the Austrian
Reichsrat (parliament). In 1917 city councillor, in 1918 vice-mayor, he was elected mayor on 21 May 1919, the first social democratic mayor in the history of Vienna. 1918/1919 he was also a member of the Provisional National Council of German Austria (
Provisorische Nationalversammlung für Deutschösterreich). In 1922, as mayor he became
Landeshauptmann (governor) of the new State of Vienna. The same year saw the opening of
Feuerhalle Simmering, the first crematorium in Austria. Reumann had to defend this decision at the
Constitutional Court as he had granted building permission for the crematorium against the order of a federal minister from the
Christian Social Party. He was the president of the
Federal Council of Austria in 1920s. In 1923, the
Gemeinderat concluded on the first large housing programme to build 25,000 flats within five years. On 13 November 1923 Jakob Reumann stepped down as mayor and was made honorary citizen of Vienna. His ashes are buried at
Feuerhalle Simmering in Vienna. A few weeks after his death in 1925, in the tenth district, Favoriten, a workers' district where Reumann had his personal roots, a square was named
Reumannplatz. Today it is the
namesake station of the underground line no. 1 and the site of attractive
Amalienbad (Amalia Spa). ==See also==