List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Adlershof
The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Adlershof contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Adlershof in the Treptow-Köpenick district , which remind of the fate of the people who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide under National Socialism. The columns in the table are self-explanatory. The table covers a total of eight stumbling blocks and can be partially sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.
image | Surname | Location | Laying date | Life | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marta Baerwald |
Dörpfeldstrasse 23 (formerly Bismarckstrasse 6) |
location | June 7, 2005 | Marta Baerwald was born Margarethe Grünwald on March 23, 1871 in Grünberg (Silesia) . She and her husband Wilhelm Baerwald were deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, on the 2nd Large Age Transport , and murdered there on March 6, 1943. The false name Margarethe is noted on the stumbling block. | |
Wilhelm Baerwald |
Dörpfeldstrasse 23 (formerly Bismarckstrasse 6) |
location | June 7, 2005 | Wilhelm Baerwald was born in Nakel on March 23, 1867 ; he had lived here with his wife Margarethe since 1896; the two ran a haberdashery and white goods and men's articles shop until 1934. He and his wife Marta Baerwald were deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, on the 2nd Large Age Transport , and murdered there on May 30, 1943. The last known address was Sybelstrasse 12 in Berlin-Charlottenburg . | |
Clara Fichtmann |
Albert-Einstein-Straße 15 (former colony at the Wiesen 237) |
location | 2005 | Clara Fichtmann was born as Clara Fuchs on April 6, 1877 in Neudorf . Since November 1928 she lived with her husband Leo in an arbor in Adlershof. She was on June 5, 1942 with the "special transport" to Theresienstadt . On May 18, 1944, she was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp , where she is considered missing. | |
Leo Fichtmann |
Albert-Einstein-Straße 15 (former colony at the Wiesen 237) |
location | 2005 | Leo Fichtmann was born on August 16, 1873 in Elbing . The trained stonemason was disabled at the time of his imprisonment . From November 1928 he lived with his wife Clara in an arbor in Adlershof. After the Baum group attacked the propaganda exhibition The Soviet Paradise on May 27, 1942, he was arrested in a "reprisal" with 500 Berlin Jewish men and taken to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp , where he was shot on May 28, 1942. | |
Franz Kirsch |
Wassermannstrasse 69 (formerly Kronprinzenstrasse 69) |
location | 22 Aug 2006 | Franz Kirsch, b. on March 8, 1901 in Berlin, was a works council at the Schering company in Berlin-Adlershof, where he took part in the illegal work of the KPD. He was arrested in 1939 and sentenced to twelve years in prison by the People's Court in early 1941 . After more than four years in prison in Brandenburg , he died on February 3, 1944 of tuberculosis . | |
Fritz Kirsch |
Wassermannstrasse 69 (formerly Kronprinzenstrasse 69) |
location | 22 Aug 2006 | Fritz Kirsch, b. on March 5, 1903 in Berlin, was a member of the KPD and works council in the Oberspree transformer factory as well as a district councilor in Treptow . In June 1933 he was arrested by the SA and taken to the notorious "Brown House" on Friedrichstrasse (today Winckelmannstrasse) in Berlin-Johannisthal and tortured. In 1939 he was arrested again and sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp , where he was murdered on April 30, 1940. The Fritz-Kirsch line in Berlin-Oberschöneweide was named in his honor. | |
Bernhard Wolff | Freystadter Weg 66 | March 16, 2018 | |||
Bertha Wolff | Freystadter Weg 66 | March 16, 2018 |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Adlershof - Collection of images
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Stolpersteine in Berlin Treptow-Köpenick. (PDF; 6.7 MB) a documentation about 30 places of remembrance among us. Association of Antifascists Treptow e. V. and association of those persecuted by the Nazi regime - Bund der Antifaschisten Köpenick e. V., July 2008, p. 36 , accessed on February 2, 2013 .
- ↑ a b List of deportations of the 2nd large age transport - sheet 1. In: statistik-des-holocaust.de. Retrieved February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ A-F . In: Bundesarchiv (Hrsg.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape 4 . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( online [accessed on February 4, 2013]).
- ↑ a b Stolpersteine in Berlin Treptow-Köpenick. (PDF; 6.7 MB) a documentation about 30 places of remembrance among us. Association of Antifascists Treptow e. V. and association of those persecuted by the Nazi regime - Bund der Antifaschisten Köpenick e. V., July 2008, pp. 46–50 , accessed on February 2, 2013 .
- ↑ Deportation list of the special transport - sheet 5. In: statistik-des-holocaust.de. Retrieved February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ A-F . In: Bundesarchiv (Hrsg.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape 4 . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( online [accessed on February 4, 2013]).
- ↑ Franz Kirsch. Persecuted and resistance fighters. Association of Antifascists - Koepenick, accessed on February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ Stolpersteine in Berlin Treptow-Köpenick. (PDF; 6.7 MB) a documentation about 30 places of remembrance among us. Association of Antifascists Treptow e. V. and association of those persecuted by the Nazi regime - Bund der Antifaschisten Köpenick e. V., July 2008, p. 40 , accessed on February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ Stolpersteine inaugurated in Berlin. In: indymedia.org. August 23, 2006, accessed February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ Fritz Kirsch. Persecuted and resistance fighters. Association of Antifascists - Koepenick, accessed on February 4, 2013 .