List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Frohnau

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Frohnau contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Frohnau in the Reinickendorf 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 records a total of 29 stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Location Laying date Life
Stolperstein Hainbuchenstr 20 (Frohn) Wolfgang Besig.jpg Wolfgang Besig Hainbuchenstrasse 20 9 Nov 2019 Wolfgang Besig came to Frohnau with his family in 1914 at the age of six. On May 6, 1940 - his 32nd birthday - he was drafted into the Wehrmacht. Fifteen months later, he deserted and hid in the attic of his parents' house. After being betrayed by neighbors, he was arrested in 1942, convicted of desertion and executed on July 14, 1942.
Stolperstein Knappenpfad 7 (Frohn) Edith Anita Freund.jpg Edith Anita friend Knappenpfad 7 March 27, 2010
Stolperstein Knappenpfad 7 (Frohn) Else Freund.jpg Else friend Knappenpfad 7 March 27, 2010
Stolperstein Knappenpfad 7 (Frohn) Gerhard Freund.jpg Gerhard Freund Knappenpfad 7 Dec 12, 2007
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 22 (Frohn) Ellen Grün.jpg Ellen Green Markgrafenstrasse 22 Aug 5, 2011
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 22 (Frohn) Erna Grün.jpg Erna Green Markgrafenstrasse 22 Aug 5, 2011
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 22 (Frohn) Leo Grün.jpg Leo green Markgrafenstrasse 22 Aug 5, 2011
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 64 (Frohn) David Heimann.jpg David Heimann Markgrafenstrasse 64 July 16, 2007 David Heimann was born on March 13, 1864 in Festenberg, Silesia (today Twardogóra / Poland). David Heimann was a successful leather goods merchant. In 1904 he and his family moved to Berlin. During the First World War Heimann moved his residence to Frohnau. He was heavily involved in the Jewish community, u. a. as chairman of the synagogue community and member of the board of trustees of the youth, girls and old people's home in Berlin-Hermsdorf. In 1940 he had to sell his house below value and was evicted from the house. He was arrested on September 11, 1942, and three days later with the "62. Alterstransport “deported to Theresienstadt. David Heimann was presumably killed in the Minsk concentration camp.
Stumbling Stone Markgrafenstrasse 64 (Frohn) Rosa Heimann.jpg Rosa Heimann Markgrafenstrasse 64 July 16, 2007 Rosa Heimann, b. Arnfeld, used Scheer was born on February 12, 1870 in Bad Polzin in Pomerania (today: Połczyn-Zdrój / Poland). When her older sister Clara, wife of the businessman David Heimann, died in 1924 at the age of 57, she married her widowed brother-in-law for the second time. In 1940 they had to sell their house below value and were evicted from the house. Rosa Heimann died on January 1, 1942 and was buried next to her first husband in the Jewish cemetery in Weißensee.
Stolperstein Im Amseltal 29 (Frohn) Julius Herrmann.jpg Julius Herrmann In the Amseltal 29 Aug 5, 2011
Stolperstein Im Amseltal 29 (Frohn) Paula Herrmann.jpg Paula Herrmann In the Amseltal 29 Aug 5, 2011
Stumbling Stone Ludolfingerweg 42 (Frohn) Rudolf Herzfeld.jpg Rudolf Herzfeld Ludolfingerweg 42 March 17, 2011 Rudolf Herzfeld was born on August 7th, 1895 in Horn / Westphalia and had two brothers. He probably came to Berlin in 1915 and initially lived in Schöneberg. He worked as a manufacturer and, together with the manufacturer Siegmund Fendler, acquired the property at Franziskaner Weg 19–21 in Berlin-Frohnau, today Ludolfinger Weg 40–44. Rudolf Herzfeld ran a company for import, export and was active in the banking and financing business. Before his deportation, Rudolf Herzfeld lived in Charlottenburg. On November 17, 1941 Rudolf Herzfeld and 1005 other people from Berlin-Grunewald train station were given the “6. Osttransport “was deported to Kovno in Lithuania and shot there on November 25, 1941.
Stolperstein Am Eichenhain 37 (Frohn) Anna Hornik.jpg Anna Hornik Am Eichenhain 37 July 23, 2012 Anna Hornik was born as Anna Cohn in Berlin in 1889 . She was a trained seamstress and had founded a company for women's clothing at Reinickendorfer Strasse 95 in 1913 , the last address of which was Leipziger Strasse 67 in 1939 . After her marriage to Max Hornik, she first moved in with him at Lodystraße 41 , today Gollanczstraße 3. At the beginning of the 1930s, the family built a house on Am Eichenhain. Later Anna and Max Hornik were forcibly relocated to a Jewish house in GroߟŸen Frankfurter Straße before they were both deported on January 25, 1942 with the X. Osttransport to Riga , where they are missing.
Stolperstein Am Eichenhain 37 (Frohn) Heinz Hornik2014.jpg Heinz Hornik Am Eichenhain 37 Aug 8, 2014 Heinz Hornik was born on October 19, 1910 in Berlin . He suffered from epileptic seizures in childhood and was considered difficult to educate. At the age of 14 he left school and was treated in the asylum for Epileptic Wuhlgarten . In 1925, a provisional welfare education was ordered for him . On October 31, 1931, his father Max Hornik was officially appointed guardian after Heinz was incapacitated because of mental weakness; In 1934 he was forcibly sterilized . Heinz continued to live with his parents in Frohnau and trained as a gardener. He then found a permanent job in the construction and furniture joinery Wilhelm Albetzki in Spandau . However, he got into an argument with his employer that turned into a physical argument. Thereupon he was admitted to the Wittenau sanatorium on December 8, 1941 . On April 17, 1942, he was transferred to the state institution in Görden , and on November 2, 1944, he was to be transferred to a central care institution for Jews . Although there is evidence that the Gestapo carried out the evacuation of the patients, nothing is known about further details of the transport and the fate of the affected patients.
Stolperstein Am Eichenhain 37 (Frohn) Max Mayer Hornik.jpg Max Mayer Hornik Am Eichenhain 37 July 23, 2012 Max Mayer Hornik was born in Dynow on September 29, 1879 . The businessman married Serafine Kiesler, with whom he had a son, Hermann Eberhard Hornik. He studied medicine and emigrated to the USA in the 1930s . Max Hornik married a second time, this time Anna Cohn, who was ten years his junior and who first moved in with him at Lodystrasse 41 , now Gollanczstrasse 3. At the beginning of the 1930s, the family built a house on Am Eichenhain street. Later Anna and Max Hornik were forcibly relocated to a Jewish house in GroߟŸen Frankfurter Straße before they were both deported on January 25, 1942 with the X. Osttransport to Riga , where they are missing.
Stolperstein Kreuzritterstr 12a (Frohn) Artur Israel.jpg Artur Israel Kreuzritterstrasse 12a 22 Aug 2006
Stolperstein Kreuzritterstr 12a (Frohn) Herta Israel.jpg Herta Israel Kreuzritterstrasse 12a 22 Aug 2006
Stolperstein Kreuzritterstr 16 (Frohn) Gerhard Lazarus.jpg Gerhard Lazarus Kreuzritterstrasse 16 Aug 8, 2014 Dr. Gerhard Lazarus emigrated to Great Britain, but was in Belgium in May 1940 at the time of the attack by the Wehrmacht. He was imprisoned, deported to Auschwitz in 1942 and died there shortly afterwards.
Stolperstein Am Rosenanger 21 (Frohn) Max Levi.jpg Max Levi Am Rosenanger 21 Aug 8, 2014
Stolperstein Am Rosenanger 21 (Frohn) Olga Levi.jpg Olga Levi Am Rosenanger 21 Aug 8, 2014
Stolperstein Im Amseltal 29 (Frohn) Ingeborg Löbl.jpg Ingeborg Löbl In the Amseltal 29 Aug 5, 2011
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 64 (Frohn) Else Michaelis.jpg Else Michaelis Markgrafenstrasse 64 July 16, 2007
Stolperstein Markgrafenstrasse 64 (Frohn) Hans Michaelis.jpg Hans Michaelis Markgrafenstrasse 64 July 16, 2007
Stolperstein Zeltinger Str 65 (Frohn) Karl Neuhof.jpg Karl Neuhof Zeltinger Strasse 65 March 17, 2011 The Stolperstein was financed by the VVN-BdA Reinickendorf and the party Die Linke Reinickendorf.
Stolperstein Markgrafenstrasse 64 (Frohn) Bertha Nördlinger.jpg Bertha Nördlinger Markgrafenstrasse 64 July 16, 2007
Stolperstein Ludolfingerweg 35 (Frohn) Johanna Rudolphson.jpg Johanna Rudolphson Ludolfingerweg 35 Aug 8, 2014 Johanna Rudolphson's family was one of the first residents of Frohnau. Johanna Rudolphson had to sell her house in order to be able to pay the atonement tax imposed after the pogrom night in 1938. She was deported to Theresienstadt in 1943 and murdered in Auschwitz in 1944.
Stolperstein Ludolfingerweg 35 (Frohn) Margarete Rudolphson.jpg Margarete Rudolphson Ludolfingerweg 35 Aug 8, 2014 Margarete Rudolphson is the daughter of Johanna Rudolphson. She fled abroad after the pogroms and committed suicide in London in 1941.
Stolperstein Oranienburger Chaussee 53 (Frohn) Annemarie Wolff.jpg Annemarie Wolff Oranienburger Chaussee 53 Aug 8, 2014 Annemarie Wolf (née Richter) trained as an X-ray assistant in Berlin. Here she met the neurologist Fritz Künkel and trained as an individual psychologist and curative teacher. At the age of 26, Annemarie Wolf opened her first 'children's home for difficult-to-educate girls and boys'. Healthy and mentally ill children were accepted mostly from broken families (often as a result of unemployment and financial hardship). The first arrest took place in March 1933 and Annemarie Wolff was banned from working. She then continued to run her home covertly at various locations until she was arrested in 1937. After fleeing to Croatia, she was able to continue to run a children's home until the German Wehrmacht occupied Croatia in 1941. In the summer of 1944, Annemarie Wolff was tracked down by the Gestapo, taken to the Jasenovac concentration camp and murdered there in early 1945.
Stolperstein Markgrafenstr 22 (Frohn) Röschen Woyde.jpg Roses Woyde Markgrafenstrasse 22 Aug 5, 2011

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Relocation of the Stolperstein on November 9th . In: CDU Frohnau (ed.): Our Frohnau . No. 95 , December 2019, p. 6 .
  2. Edith Anita Freund. stolpersteine-berlin.de
  3. Else Freund (née Hirschfeld) , on stolpersteine-berlin.de
  4. Gerhard Freund , on stolpersteine-berlin.de
  5. a b c d e f g Stolperstein laying on August 5th, 2011 for the resistance fighters Hans and Hilde Coppi in the presence of their son Hans Coppi and State Secretary for Culture André Schmitz. Reinickendorf district office of Berlin, August 2, 2011, accessed on November 22, 2012 .
  6. Stolpersteine ​​in Berlin David Heimann , on www.stolpersteine-berlin.de
  7. David Heimann, 1934: Jeroschalajim ( Memento of August 18, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  8. ^ Klaus Pegler: Stolpersteine ​​in Markgrafenstrasse. In: klauspegler.de. Retrieved January 31, 2013 .
  9. Stolpersteine ​​in Berlin Rosa Heimann (née Amfeld) , on www.stolpersteine-berlin.de
  10. Rudolf Herzfeld on stolpersteine-berlin.de
  11. a b c 127 signs against forgetting . In: The North Berliner . July 26, 2012, ISSN 0949-5495 ( nord-berliner.de at http://web.archive.org/ [accessed on November 22, 2012]).  
  12. a b c Gordon Huhn: Further stumbling blocks moved in Frohnau . In: CDU Frohnau (ed.): Our Frohnau . September 2014, p. 4 .
  13. A stumbling block for Karl Neuhof. Die Linke Bezirksverband Reinickendorf, March 17, 2011, accessed on January 31, 2013 .
  14. Annemarie Wolff (née Richter) , on stolpersteine-berlin.de