List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Wannsee

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Wannsee contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Wannsee in the Steglitz-Zehlendorf 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 30 stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Address and Coordinate ( Erioll world.svg) Laying date Life
Stolperstein Wernerstr 10 (Wanns) Mechel Beiser.jpg Mechel Beiser Werner Street 10 World icon March 2008 Mechel (Max Michael) Beiser was born on October 15, 1868 in Kolomea / Galicia to Efraim Chaim Ber Beiser and his wife Deborah Köslin. He had a brother Simon who was born in 1875. Mechel became a traveling salesman and married Rosalie Posner in Berlin on August 7, 1899, the marriage presumably remained childless. In 1930 he ran a furniture store at Kastanienallee 24, later with a branch at Frankfurter Allee, and under the company Gebrüder Kassner with Simon Beiser and Jakob Kreindler a furniture store with credit business at Bülowstrasse 6. Since 1929 the couple lived at Kurfürstendamm 71, Mechel Beiser and his brother were economically successful, they owned the property at Rigaer Strasse 71-73a, Mechel Beiser was also the owner of the property at Wernerstrasse 10 in Wannsee, on which the Jewish architect Hans Sigmund Jaretzki built a single-family house in the New Objectivity style in 1932. Mechel and Rosalie Beiser had lived there since 1934. The Kassner brothers had to be liquidated in 1938. On January 19, 1942, Mechel Beiser and his wife were deported from Wernerstrasse 10 to Riga; no date of death is known.
Stolperstein Wernerstr 10 (Wanns) Rosalie Beiser.jpg Rosalie Beiser Werner Street 10 World icon March 2008 Rosalie Posner was born on April 23, 1869 in Samter / Posen as the daughter of the grain dealer Heyman Posner and his wife Jeanette, née Tarnowska. She had an older brother Eduard (1854) and a younger brother Hermann. In 1899 she married the traveling salesman Mechel Beiser in Berlin, the marriage presumably remained childless. In 1930, her husband ran a furniture store on Kastanienallee, later on Lothringerstraße 7 and a branch on Frankfurter Allee. Under the company Gebrüder Kassner, he ran a furniture shop with a credit business at Bülowstrasse 6 with his brother Simon and Jakob Kreindler. The couple had lived at Kurfürstendamm 71 since 1929, Mechel Beiser and his brother were economically successful, so they owned the property at Rigaer Strasse 71– 73a, Mechel Beiser was also the owner of the property at Wernerstraße 10 in Wannsee, on which the Jewish architect Hans S. Jaretzki built a single-family house in the New Objectivity style in 1932. Mechel and Rosalie Beiser had lived there since 1934. The Kassner brothers had to be liquidated in 1938. On January 19, 1942, Rosalie Beiser and her husband were deported from Wernerstrasse 10 to Riga, no date of death is known.
Stolperstein Bernhard-Beyer-Str 12 (Wanns) Curt Bejach.jpg Curt Bejach Bernhard-Beyer-Strasse 12 Sep 12 2007
Stolperstein Wernerstr 7 (Wanns) Enoch Belgard.jpg Enoch Belgard Wernerstraße 7 0Apr 5, 2014 Martin Enoch Belgard was born on October 20, 1883 in Graudenz as the son of the Commerce Councilor and City Councilor Heinrich Belgard and his wife Sara, née Leiser. He studied at the University of Berlin, was awarded a Dr. phil is doing his doctorate and wrote a treatise on "Parceling and internal colonization in the 6 eastern provinces of Prussia 1875 - 1906". In 1911 he married Gertrud Tana Lane Weinstein. They lived in Graudenz at Börgenstrasse 39, where Martin Enoch Belgard and his father ran the Isaac Belgard, Bank and Grain Company, inherited from their grandfather, at Marienwerderstrasse 13. Martin Enoch Belgard called himself a banker and co-owner of the Isaac Belgard company, a bank, bills of exchange and grain business. Their son Hans Joachim was born on July 25, 1913. When Graudenz became Polish territory after the Second World War, he and his parents moved to Berlin in 1921. His father bought the property at Wernerstraße 7 in Wannsee, where the whole family lived. His mother died in 1921 and his father in 1927. Martin Enoch Belgard continued to live with his wife and son Hans Joachim at Wernerstraße 7 until the three of them were deported to Riga on October 19, 1942 and murdered on October 22, 1942.
Stolperstein Wernerstr 7 (Wanns) Hans Belgard.jpg Hans Belgard Wernerstraße 7 0Apr 5, 2014 Hans Joachim Belgard came to Graudenz on July 25, 1913 as the son of the banker Dr. Martin Enoch Belgard and his wife Gertrud Tana Lane born Weinstein. The family lived at Börgenstrasse 39, and his father, together with his grandfather Heinrich Belgard, owned the Isaac Belgard, Bank and Grain company, inherited from his great-grandfather Isaac. When Graudenz became Polish territory after the Second World War, Hans Joachim moved with his parents and paternal grandparents to Berlin in 1921 at Wernerstrasse 7.Hans Joachim studied from May 1931 to November 1933 at the Faculty of Philosophy at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin. On October 19, 1942, Hans Joachim and his parents were deported to Riga and murdered on October 22, 1942.
Stolperstein Wernerstr 7 (Wanns) Tana Belgard.jpg Tana Belgard Wernerstraße 7 0Apr 5, 2014 Gertrud Tana Lane Weinstein was born on November 19, 1887 in Eisenach as the daughter of Sussmann Weinstein and his wife Martha, née Herzfeld. She had a sister Elisabeth (1885) and a brother Hans. In 1911 she married the banker Dr. Martin Enoch Belgard from Graudenz, they lived in Graudenz at Börgenstrasse 39, where their son Hans Joachim was born on July 25, 1913. Her husband and his father owned his grandfather Isaac Belgard's company, banking, bills of exchange and grain business. When Graudenz became Polish territory after the Second World War, Tana Belgard moved with her husband and son and her husband's parents to Wernerstrasse 7 in Berlin in 1921, until Gertrud Tana Lane Belgard was deported with her husband and son to Riga on October 19, 1942 and was murdered on October 22, 1942.
Stolperstein Stölpchenweg 7 (Wanns) Else Berger.jpg Else Berger Stölpchenweg 7 World icon Sep 12 2007 Else Berger was born Else Juliane Solon on February 16, 1884 in Berlin . Her parents were the factory owner Franz Jakob Solon and his wife Selma nee Zander. In 1905 she married the businessman Bruno Martin Berger. Since 1913 she lived with her husband and two daughters at Stölpchenweg 7. Her husband died in 1929; the two daughters Alice and Edith managed to escape the Holocaust . It was initially planned that Else Berger would also flee, but she wanted to look after her mother Selma Solon, who now also lived in the house. After Selma Solon died on January 28, 1942, all attempts to help Else Berger escape failed. She was deported to Theresienstadt on November 4, 1942 with the 71st Alterstransport . From there she was taken to Auschwitz on January 23, 1943 , where she was murdered.
Stolperstein Wernerstr 6 (Wanns) Jacques Brock.jpg Jacques Brock Werner Street 6 Sep 12 2007 Jacques Jakob Brock was born on April 20, 1867 in Stettin to a Jewish family. He became a textile merchant and ran a women's coat factory with a shop in Berlin, first on Jerusalemer Strasse and later on Hausvogteiplatz. Presumably he remained single because he passed this company on to his nephew Martin Brock. Jacques Brock was wealthy and cosmopolitan, and lived between Berlin, Paris and the Riviera. Since the mid-1920s he lived in his own house in Wannsee, Wernerstraße 6. When he was already retired, he made the acquaintance of Joachim von Ribbentrop, Otto Henkell's son-in-law, the owner of the sparkling wine cellar. Jacques Brock became a representative in Greater Berlin for the Henkell company. Despite the protection of Joachim von Ribbentrop, Jacques Brock had to move out of his house at Wernerstraße 6 after 1939 and move to Hansaufer 8. On July 23, 1942, he was deported to Theresienstadt. There he took part in cultural events organized by Philipp Manes and at which he read from his own writings. On April 1, 1943, Jacques Brock was murdered in Theresienstadt. After the end of the war, Marion Hansen nee Brock, presumably a niece, made reparation claims.
Stolperstein Conradstr 5 (Wanns) Alice Cohn.jpg Alice Cohn Conradstrasse 5 0Apr 5, 2014 Alice Behrendt was born on July 29, 1876 in Berlin as the daughter of the reindeer Adolph Behrendt and his wife Cäcilie nee Meyer. She had a brother Walter (1885) and a brother Max. In 1899 she married the businessman Lesser Leo Cohn. Presumably the marriage remained childless. After the death of her parents, she and her brothers inherited the houses at Drakestrasse 59 and Bornemannstrasse 8 / Gottschedstrasse 7. Her husband died and Alice Cohn lived in Zehlendorf, Flensburger Strasse 10 (today Karl-Hofer-Strasse) from 1935, in 1933 and 1934 Conradstrasse 5 in Wannsee. On October 3rd, 1936 Alice Cohn fled to Holland, where she lived in Naarden. She was arrested after the German troops marched in and deported via the Westerbork assembly camp to Auschwitz, where she was murdered on November 13, 1942.
Stolperstein Grüner Weg 15 (Wanns) Else Ellendmann.jpg Else Ellendmann Green way 15 World icon 0Jul 3, 2010 Else Bial was born on May 5, 1915 in Bernstadt / Silesia to a Jewish family. In the mid-1930s she married the gardener Hermann Ellendmann, and on October 4, 1937, her son Peter Maye was born in Potsdam. In 1938 the family lived in Wannsee, Grüner Weg 15. Her husband also lived, at least for a time, in the Jewish children's and rural school home in Caputh. As a Polish citizen, Hermann Ellendmann was deported to Bentschen on October 28, 1938, along with thousands of Jewish men during the so-called Poland campaign . Although he managed to come back, he was imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp on September 13, 1939. From there he was deported to an unknown location and murdered. Else Ellendmann had to move to Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße 32 with her son Peter. From there she and her son Peter were deported to the Piaski ghetto on March 28, 1942 , and murdered at an unknown time.
Stolperstein Grüner Weg 15 (Wanns) Peter M Ellendmann.jpg Peter M. Ellendmann Green way 15 World icon 0Jul 3, 2010 Peter Mayer Ellendmann was born on October 4, 1937 in Potsdam as the son of the gardener Hermann Ellendmann and his wife Else nee Bial. In 1938 the family lived in Wannsee, Grüner Weg 15. The family had Polish citizenship, which is why his father Hermann was deported to Bentschen on October 28, 1938 during the so-called Poland campaign. Although he came back, he was imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp on September 13, 1939. From there he was deported to an unknown location and murdered. Peter and his mother had to move to Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse 32, from where he and his mother Else were deported to the Piaski ghetto on March 28, 1942 and murdered.
Stolperstein Petzower Str 13 (Wanns) Erna Friedmann.jpg Erna Friedmann Petzower Strasse 13 0Apr 5, 2014 Erna Grün was born on February 23, 1894 in Berlin as the daughter of the businessman Itzig Grün and his wife Charlotte nee Wittner. Her father died when Erna was three years old. Erna married Arthur Friedmann on August 6, 1919. They lived in Pankow at Berliner Straße 88 until their husband died in 1925. Erna Friedmann then lived at Prinzregentenstrasse 81, later at Petzower Strasse 13 in Wannsee. On 27./29. In October 1941 she was deported to Litzmannstadt and on May 4, 1942 to the Kulmhof extermination camp, where she was immediately murdered.
Stolperstein Hohenzollernstr 6 (Wanns) Alfred Hahn.jpg Alfred Hahn Hohenzollernstrasse 6 World icon Oct. 2004 Alfred Hahn was born on November 11, 1873 in Berlin as the son of the businessman Salomon Hahn and his wife Charlotte, née Rappaport. He had five brothers: Felix, Ernst, Hans, Kurt and Adolph and a sister Margarete. Alfred Hahn became a businessman, and on December 15, 1900, he married Clara Angress. The only child, daughter Else, was born on September 24, 1901. Alfred Hahn made a career in banking, in the early 1930s he was director of Dresdner Bank. Since 1928 the family lived in a house built especially for them at Hohenzollernstrasse 5-6, owned by Alfred Hahn. In 1935 their daughter Else married Alfred Werthan and lived with him at Münchener Straße 29. Alfred and Clara Hahn had to move again on October 16, 1939 to Hohenzollerndamm 28, from where they were deported to Theresienstadt on July 20, 1942. On the deportation list, Alfred Hahn is named as a helper. Alfred Hahn only survived Theresienstadt by about a month and was murdered on August 22, 1942. His wife was deported to Treblinka, where she was murdered.
Stumbling Stone Hohenzollernstrasse 6 (Wanns) Clara Hahn.jpg Clara Hahn Hohenzollernstrasse 6 World icon Oct. 2004 Clara Angress was born on March 17, 1872 in Berlin as the daughter of the master bookbinder Bernhard Angress and his wife Adelheid, née Aber. She had three sisters: Helene, Adele Margarete and Marianne and three brothers: Albert, Carl Joseph and Max. On December 15, 1900, she married the bank clerk Alfred Hahn, their daughter Else was born on September 24, 1901. Her husband made a career in banking, in the early 1930s he was director of Dresdner Bank. Since 1928 the family lived in a house built especially for them at Hohenzollernstrasse 5-6, owned by Alfred Hahn. In 1935 their daughter Else married Alfred Werthan and lived with him at Münchener Straße 29. Alfred and Clara Hahn had to move again on October 16, 1939 to Hohenzollerndamm 28, from where they were deported to Theresienstadt on July 20, 1942. On the deportation list, Alfred Hahn is named as a helper. Alfred Hahn only survived for about a month in Theresienstadt, and was murdered on August 22, 1942. Clara Angress was deported from Theresienstadt to the Treblinka extermination camp on September 19, 1942, where she was immediately murdered. Her daughter Else was deported to Auschwitz on March 12, 1943, her husband Alfred on March 1, 1943.
Stolperstein Alsenstr 28 (Wanns) Wolff Joseph.jpg Wolff Joseph Alsenstrasse 28 World icon Sep 12 2007 Wolff Joseph was born on March 29, 1869 in Pleschen / Posen to a Jewish family. Presumably he remained single. At the census of 1939 he was living in Wannsee, Alsenstrasse 28, probably as a subtenant. He was still living there when he was deported to Theresienstadt on September 10, 1942. He was further deported on September 29, 1942 to the Treblinka extermination camp. The date of his death is unknown.
Stolperstein Petzower Str 13 (Wanns) Bertha Kopinsky.jpg Bertha Kopinsky Petzower Strasse 13 0Apr 5, 2014 Bertha Rothschild was born on March 9, 1865 in Ziegenhain / Oberaula / Schwalm-Eder Kreis as the daughter of Meier Rothschild and his wife Lina, born Levi. She had seven sisters: Henriette, Ida, Bella, Johanna, Paula, Selma and Caroline and two brothers: David and Leopold. She married the businessman Wolf Wilhelm Kopinsky (i) and lived with him in Frankfurt / Main. On July 11, 1886, their daughter Regina was born. In 1912 she married the lawyer Dr. Wolff Arthur Donig from Berlin. Her son Curt Günther was born on July 5, 1913 in Berlin-Schöneberg. Berta's husband died in Frankfurt / Main in 1919, she moved to Berlin to live with her married daughter Regina. In 1931 she lived in Schöneberg, Am Park 15, with her daughter's family. Her son-in-law, who was now also a notary, had bought a house in Wannsee, Parkstrasse 15 (later Petzower Strasse), and the family moved there in 1931. Her daughter was able to emigrate to Buenos Aires, Argentina, with her husband and child in 1939. Bertha Kopinsky had to move again to the old people's home at Altonaer Strasse 4, from where she was deported to Theresienstadt on June 14, 1942. On December 7, 1942, she allegedly died of enteritis, intestinal catarrh.
Stolperstein Hohenzollernstr 24 (Wanns) Amalie Lindemann.jpg Amalie Lindemann Hohenzollernstrasse 24 World icon March 2009 Amalie Levy was born on October 9, 1872 in Zachan / Pomerania as the daughter of Wolf Levy and his wife Bertha, born Philippsohn, she also had a sister Frieda. In 1895 she married the businessman and manufacturer Paul Lindemann in Berlin. The daughter Erna Ida was born on July 29, 1896. Her husband was first authorized signatory of a company R. Blume, art and building metalworking company, at Schillerstraße 97, then its owner, in 1930 the company was converted to a GmbH, Paul Lindemann was managing director, his son-in-law Dr. Friedrich Neumann and Hans Loewald. In 1928 her husband bought the properties at Hohenzollernstrasse 24 and 25 in Wannsee and built two summer houses on them. Her daughter lived there with her husband and son from 1929, and Amalie Lindemann moved there with her husband in 1932. Her son-in-law emigrated to England with his son before 1939. In 1938 and 1939, Amalie and Paul Lindemann again had an apartment in the city: Darmstädter Straße 24. Amalie Lindemann and her husband concluded so-called home purchase contracts to secure accommodation in Theresienstadt. On January 13, 1943, Amalie Lindemann and her husband were deported from Hohenzollernstrasse to Theresienstadt. Her husband died in March 1943, Amalie on April 1, 1943.
Stumbling Stone Hohenzollernstr 24 (Wanns) Paul Lindemann.jpg Paul Lindemann Hohenzollernstrasse 24 World icon March 2009 Paul Lindemann was born on July 14, 1868 in Saalfeld / East Prussia as the son of the horse dealer Josef Lindemann and his wife Sara née Eyelh (?). He married Amalie Levy in Berlin in 1895. The couple lived at Holzmarktstrasse 45, where their daughter Erna Ida was born on July 29, 1896. Paul Lindemann was first authorized signatory of a company R. Blume, art and building metalworking company, at Schillerstraße 97, then its owner, in 1930 the company was converted to a GmbH, Paul Lindemann was managing director, and his son-in-law Dr. Friedrich Neumann and Hans Loewald. In 1928 Paul Lindemann bought the properties at Hohenzollernstrasse 24 and 25 in Wannsee and built two summer houses on them. From 1929 his daughter lived there with her husband and son, Paul Lindemann and his wife moved there in 1932. His son-in-law emigrated to England with his son before 1939. In 1938 and 1939 Paul and Amalie Lindemann again had an apartment in the city: Darmstädter Straße 24. Paul Lindemann and his wife concluded so-called home purchase contracts to secure accommodation in Theresienstadt. On January 13, 1943, Paul Lindemann and his wife Amalie were deported from Hohenzollernstrasse to Theresienstadt. Paul Lindemann died in March 1943, Amalie on April 1, 1943.
Stolperstein Straße zum Löwen 19 (Wanns) Ellen Meyer.jpg Ellen Meyer Road to the Lion 19 World icon March 2009 Ellen Meyer was born on June 2, 1900 in Berlin as the daughter of the banker Georg Meyer and his wife Gertrud nee Liebermann. Her mother was a niece of Max Liebermann . Her siblings were Frieda (1891), Gabriele (1893), Marie Luise (1896) and Rudolf (1898). The family had lived in Wannsee, Straße zum Löwen 19, since the 1920s. Ellen Meyer became a painter and remained single. Her father Georg died in 1934, Ellen and her siblings Marie Luise and Rudolf continued to live with their mother until they all had to move out. Ellen, Marie Luise and Rudolf had to move into the Judenhaus at Sybelstrasse 66. From there, Ellen and her brother Rudolf were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on February 19, 1943. The date of her death is unknown.
Stolperstein Straße zum Löwen 19 (Wanns) Gertrud Meyer.jpg Gertrud Meyer Road to the Lion 19 World icon March 2009 Gertrud Marianne Liebermann was born on October 14, 1865 in Berlin as the daughter of the businessman Martin Liebermann, a brother of the painter Max Liebermann, and his wife Anna nee Liebermann. In 1889 she married the banker Georg Heinrich Meyer, the children were born: Frieda on December 4, 1891, Elisabeth Philippine Gabriele on March 2, 1893, Marie Luise on March 10, 1896, Rudolf on October 29, 1898 and Ellen on June 2 1900. From the 1920s the family lived in Wannsee, Straße zum Löwen 19 in their own house. Georg Meyer died in 1934. In 1938 Gertrud Meyer lived with the three youngest children in the Straße zum Löwen. Gabriele managed to escape to Switzerland; Frieda also survived. Gertrud Meyer still had to move out and move to Petzower Straße 8 in Wannsee. From there she was deported to Theresienstadt on September 10, 1942 and murdered on November 7, 1942.
Stolperstein Straße zum Löwen 19 (Wanns) Marie Luise Meyer.jpg Marie Luise Meyer Road to the Lion 19 World icon March 2009 Marie Luise Meyer was born on March 10, 1896 in Berlin as the daughter of the banker Georg Meyer and his wife Gertrud nee Liebermann. Her mother was a niece of Max Liebermann. Her siblings were Frieda (1891), Gabriele (1893), Ellen (1900) and Rudolf (1898). The family had lived in Wannsee, Straße zum Löwen 19, since the 1920s. Her father Georg died in 1934, Marie Luise and her siblings Ellen and Rudolf continued to live with their mother. However, she and her siblings had to move to Sybelstrasse 66, from where she was deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942. She is referred to as a nurse on the transport list. On February 19, 1944, she was further deported to Auschwitz and murdered there.
Stolperstein Straße zum Löwen 19 (Wanns) Rudolf Meyer.jpg Rudolf Meyer Road to the Lion 19 World icon March 2009 Rudolf Meyer was born on October 29, 1898 in Berlin, the son of the banker Georg Meyer and his wife Gertrud nee Liebermann. His siblings were Frieda (1891), Gabriele (1893), Marie Luise (1896) and Ellen (1900). The family had lived in Wannsee at Straße zum Löwen 19 since the 1920s. His father Georg died in 1934, Rudolf continued to live with his mother and sisters Ellen and Marie Luise in Wannsee until he and his sisters moved to a Jewish house at 66 Sybelstraße had to pull. Presumably he had to do forced labor. He and his sister Ellen were deported from Sybelstrasse to the Auschwitz concentration camp on February 19, 1943 and murdered.
Stolperstein Ulricistr 32 (Wanns) Eva Meyer.jpg Eva Meyer Ulricistraße 32 World icon March 2009 Eva Ilse Wilhelmine Meyer was born on December 4, 1886 in Berlin to a Jewish family. She remained single and attended the Royal Provincial School College of the Province of Brandenburg, which she graduated in 1905. Since April 1906 she was employed as an auxiliary school teacher for the State of Berlin and worked at a school in Niederschönhausen. At first she lived at Kaiserweg 12, from 1927 she was the owner of a small house in Niederschönhausen, Moltkestrasse 17, today Wilhelm-Wolff-Strasse, she had a teacher as a subtenant. In 1935 she sold the house and moved to Rolandstraße in Niederschönhausen, in 1938 she lived in Wannsee at Ulricistraße 32, in the address book she referred to herself as an assistant teacher. D. She still had to move to the Judenhaus at Wullenweberstrasse 3 in Tiergarten, from where she was deported to Riga on January 13, 1942. The date of her death is unknown.
Stolperstein Hugo-Vogel-Str 40 (Wanns) Edith Nathan.jpg Edith Nathan Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 40 World icon Sep 12 2007 Edith Nathan was born on February 23, 1884 in Thorn as the daughter of the pharmacy owner Julius Nathan and his wife Natalia née Herrnberg. She was the oldest of three sisters, followed by Käthe (1885) and then Olga (1887). The sisters remained single and from 1930 to 1938 Edith and Käthe lived together in Berlin-Steglitz, Wilseder Straße 11. Her sister Olga lived at Blankenbergstraße 3. Then Edith and Käthe had to move out to Wannsee at Hugo-Vogel-Straße 38 –42, Olga also moved in. The owner of the house was lawyer Dr. Hans Fritz Abraham, who fled to the USA. This is probably why the sisters were sent there. However, they had to move again, Edith and Käthe moved to Knesebeckstraße 28 at Freundlich's, Olga moved to Friedrich Nathan, an advertising manager at Emser Straße 19-20. Edith and Käthe Nathan were deported to Auschwitz on January 12, 1943, their sister Olga a day later, on January 13, 1942, to Riga.
Stolperstein Hugo-Vogel-Str 40 (Wanns) Käthe Nathan.jpg Käthe Nathan Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 40 World icon Sep 12 2007 Käthe Nathan was born on November 26, 1885 in Thorn as the daughter of the pharmacist Julius Nathan and his wife Natalia née Herrnberg. Her older sister was Edith (1884), the younger Olga (1887). The three sisters moved to Berlin, Käthe and Edith lived from 1930 to 1938 in Steglitz at Wilseder Strasse 11 and Olga at Blankenbergstrasse 3. In 1939 they had to move out there and move to Wannsee at Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 38-42. The owner of the house, lawyer Dr. Hans Fritz Abraham fled to the USA. Her sister Olga also moved in with them in Wannsee. Käthe and Edith Nathan had to move again to Freundlich's 28 Knesebeckstraße, their sister Olga moved to Friedrich Nathan in 19-20 Emser Straße. Käthe and Edith Nathan were deported to Auschwitz on January 12, 1943, their sister Olga a day later, on January 13, 1942, to Riga.
Stolperstein Hugo-Vogel-Str 40 (Wanns) Olga Nathan.jpg Olga Nathan Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 40 World icon Sep 12 2007 Olga Nathan was born on January 8, 1887 in Wartenburg as the daughter of the pharmacist Julius Nathan and his wife Natalia née Herrnberg. Her older sisters were Edith (1884) and Käthe (1885). The sisters moved to Berlin, Olga became the office manager and lived in Steglitz at Blankenbergstrasse 3, her sisters at Wilseder Strasse 11. They had to move in 1939, all three of them moved to Wannsee at Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 38-42, into a house which the lawyer Dr. Hans Fritz Abraham belonged and who fled to the USA with his wife. Olga's sisters still had to move to Knesebeckstrasse 28, Olga herself to see Friedrich Nathan at Emser Strasse 19-20. On January 13, 1942, Olga Nathan was deported to Riga, her sisters to Auschwitz a day earlier.
Stumbling Stone Hohenzollernstr 24 (Wanns) Erna Neumann.jpg Erna Neumann Hohenzollernstrasse 24 World icon March 2009 Erna Lindemann was born on July 29, 1896 in Berlin as the daughter of the factory owner Paul Lindemann and his wife Amalie nee Levy. In 1919 in Berlin-Wilmersdorf she married the graduate engineer Dr. Friedrich Neumann. The son Heinz Peter was born on July 29, 1922. The family lived at Württembergische Strasse 30 until they moved into the summer house built by their father at Hohenzollernstrasse 24 in Wannsee. Her husband and Heinz Peter emigrated to England via Holland before 1939. Erna was deported from Hohenzollernstrasse to Auschwitz on January 12, 1943, her parents to Theresienstadt a day later.
Stolperstein Hugo-Vogel-Str 12 (Wanns) Friedrich Nothmann.jpg Friedrich Nothmann Hugo-Vogel-Strasse 12 Apr. 27, 2013 Friedrich Fritz Nothmann was born on October 18, 1887 in Gleiwitz / Silesia, the son of Adolf Nothmann and his wife Alwine, née Lustig. He attended the Royal Wilhelms-Gymnasium and studied law in Berlin, in 1914 he was a Prussian court assessor. He took part in the Second World War and married Charlotte Antonie Schneider in 1916, their daughter Hildegard Beate was born in 1920. In 1921 he became a district judge. His wife died in 1923 and he married Gertrud Bernhard in 1926. The sons were born: Karl Andreas on November 11, 1926 and Georg Albrecht Leonhart on January 30, 1932. The family lived in Wannsee at Moltkestraße 10 (later Hugo-Vogel-Straße 12) in the house of Gertrud Nothmann's parents. In 1929 he was a member of the Chamber Court and on July 13, 1933, he was dismissed as a judge. His father-in-law died in 1937, after the Reichspogromnacht Friedrich Nothmann was imprisoned in the Buchenwald concentration camp, because the family managed to leave for the Netherlands in January 1939, he was released in December 1938. He fled to Holland, his wife, two sons and his mother-in-law followed him. His mother-in-law died in exile in 1941. After the invasion of the Wehrmacht, the family was arrested in early May 1943 and taken to the Westerbork assembly camp via the Vught concentration camp. On September 4, 1943 they were deported to Theresienstadt and on October 16, 1944 to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where Friedrich Nothmann was murdered on October 18, 1944. Only his daughter Hildegard from his first marriage was able to save herself to England.

A second stumbling block is in Elßholzstrasse at the Supreme Court.

Stumbling Stone Hohenzollernstrasse 21 (Wanns) Adolf Reichwein.jpg Adolf Reichwein Hohenzollernstrasse 21 World icon March 2009 Another stumbling block for Adolf Reichwein is in Vitte on the island of Hiddensee .
Stolperstein Straße zum Löwen 12 (Wanns) Fritz Springer.jpg Fritz Springer Road to the Lion 12 World icon March 18, 2011

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1042824
  2. The house at Wernerstraße 10
  3. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT9-3.jpg
  4. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1042803
  5. ^ Gebrüder Kassner furniture and credit business Jewish businesses in Berlin 1930–1945
  6. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT9-3.jpg
  7. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1042839
  8. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT21-6.jpg
  9. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1042726
  10. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT21-45.jpg
  11. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1042856
  12. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT21-6.jpg
  13. 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 1 . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( online [accessed April 19, 2013]).
  14. Solon, Selma index card Reichsvereinigun der Juden on digitalcollections.its-arolsen.org
  15. ^ Hannelore Bolte: Commemorative event “Stumbling blocks in Wannsee”. on March 15, 2009. In: Kulturverein-wannsee.de. Retrieved April 19, 2013 .
  16. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1027984
  17. Philipp Manes: As if it were a life. Factual report Theresienstadt 1942 to 1944. Edited by Ben Barkow and Klaus Leist, Ullstein Verlag, Berlin 2005, 544 pages, bound, ISBN 3-550-07610-X
  18. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1028632
  19. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1037105
  20. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT11-36.jpg
  21. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1036911
  22. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT11-36.jpg
  23. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1009845
  24. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1063876
  25. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/AT25-3.jpg
  26. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1064039
  27. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/AT25-3.jpg
  28. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1083996
  29. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/AT61-1.jpg
  30. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1062603
  31. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/AT21-3.jpg
  32. Kopinsky Bertha: Death display Theresienstadt ghetto on holocaust.cz
  33. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1108221
  34. ^ R. Blume Metallbaugesellschaft mbH Jewish commercial enterprises in Berlin 1930–1945
  35. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1108274
  36. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1119600
  37. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT29-23.jpg
  38. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1119841
  39. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/AT61-4.jpg
  40. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1120240
  41. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/GAT2-43.jpg
  42. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1120381
  43. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT29-23.jpg
  44. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1119657
  45. http://www.statistik-des-holocaust.de/OT8-60.jpg
  46. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1125608
  47. StA Thorn No. 5/1887
  48. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1125627
  49. StA Wartenburg No. 5/1887
  50. . https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1125649
  51. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1127005
  52. https://www.bundesarchiv.de/gedenkbuch/directory.html.de?id=1133192
  53. Friedrich Nothmann in Ghetto Theresienstadt index on collections.arolsen-archives.org
  54. Biographical compilation based on: Hans Bergemann, Simone Ladwig-Winters: Judges and prosecutors of Jewish origin in Prussia under National Socialism. A factual investigation. A documentation. (= Legal fact research ). Bundesanzeiger-Verlag, Cologne 2004, ISBN 3-89817-352-6 , p. 269.