List of stumbling blocks in Dresden

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Stumbling blocks for the Blumenkranz family, 2018

The list of stumbling blocks in Dresden contains all the stumbling blocks that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Dresden as part of the art project of the same name .

background

Gunter Demnig during the laying of the Stolperstein for Gertrud Hille in 2012
Memorial event on the occasion of the laying of the Stolperstein in the Dresden Zwinger on December 2, 2019

The first public discussions about stumbling blocks in Dresden took place in Dresden in 2009. The Stolpersteine ​​für Dresden association , founded in the same year, actively campaigned for the first stones to be laid in memory of victims of National Socialism in front of the people's last freely chosen places of residence. The implementation of the plans turned out to be difficult for potential stone sponsors, as the Dresden city administration not only wanted to charge an administrative fee for the process, but also wanted to transfer responsibility for road safety to the sponsors. By 2009 there were already 120 stumbling blocks in Leipzighad been laid, the first five stones were laid in Dresden "after a long struggle" in November 2009. At that time there were stumbling blocks in 480 other German cities.

As part of the first relocation in Dresden, Gunter Demnig took part in a memorial event in the Dresden synagogue . Another 19 stones were laid in June 2011, followed by 12 stumbling blocks in October 2012. In 2012 Demnig was awarded the Erich Kästner Prize of the Dresden Press Club for the Stolpersteine project . He accepted the prize, endowed with 10,000 euros, on November 25, 2012. On this day and on November 26, 2012, 29 more stumbling blocks were laid in Dresden; 28 more stones followed on September 24, 2013. Since the laying of 18 stumbling blocks on December 5, 2013, Dresden has more than 100 stumbling blocks. Two different stumbling blocks - one in front of the workplace and one in front of the place of residence - are reminiscent of textile merchant Joseph Fränkel. On September 28 and 29, 2015, another 36 stumbling blocks were laid by Gunter Demnig in Dresden (as of March 2016: 177 stumbling blocks, plus two new ones because of vandalism and two because of misspellings).

At the end of 2017 there were 200 stumbling blocks. On March 15, 2018, Gunter Demnig laid another 25 Stolpersteine, on December 2, 2019 another 30 stones at 13 locations and on 21/22. July 2021 33 more in front of 18 houses in Dresden. The total number increased to 288 stumbling blocks.

List of stumbling blocks in Dresden

Combined addresses indicate that several stumbling blocks have been moved in one location. The table is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the address. The Person, Inscription column is sorted alphabetically by the person's name.

image address district Laying
date
Person, inscription Brief CV
Michael Blitzblau Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Alaunstrasse 11
(location)
Outer new town Oct 26, 2012
Michael Blitzblau,
born in 1892, lived here,
Poland Action 1938,
Łodz
murdered March 17th, 1942
Michael Blitzblau was born on January 16, 1892 in Łódź , his wife Rifka Blitzblau was born on September 7, 1888. The marriage had four children, including the youngest son Siegfried, born on March 1 or 10, 1927. The family came to Germany in 1914; Michael became a miner in Senftenberg . From 1921 the family lived in Dresden, where Blitzblau worked, among other things, as a fruit dealer. In 1933 he was arrested for allegedly smuggling food and deported to Poland in 1938 (" Polenaktion "). The family lived in the Łódź ghetto , where Michael died in 1942. Rifka was deported in 1942 and murdered in a camp. Siegfried lived in the Łódź ghetto in 1943 and died in a camp after being deported.
Rifka Blitzblau Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Here lived
Rifka Blitzblau
born burner
Jg. 1888
Poland Action 1938
Łodz
murdered
Siegfried Blitzblau Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Siegfried
Blitzblau,

born in 1927, lived here .
Poland Action 1938
Łodz
Fate unknown
Berthold Wronkow Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Albertstrasse 29
(location)
Inner New Town Dec 5, 2013
Berthold Wronkow,
born in 1865, lived here .
Humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead January 8th, 1937
Berthold Wronkow was born on September 10, 1865. He was married to Berta Wronkow; the marriage was born to son Hans. After the death of her husband, Berta and Hans had to leave the country. Both fled to Australia in 1937 .
Elise Berta Wronkow Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Elise Berta
Wronkow,
born in 1881, lived here,
escaped 1937, survived
Australia
Hans Wronkow Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Hans Wronkow,
born in 1907, lived here,
escaped 1937, survived
Australia
Stumbling block for Otto Degenkolb, Alte Moritzburger Strasse 43, Dresden.JPG Alte Moritzburger Strasse 43
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Otto and Kurt Degenkolb, Alte Moritzburger Strasse 43, Dresden.JPG
Weixdorf 28 Sep 2015
Otto Degenkolb,
born in 1896, lived here,
Jehovah's Witness
arrested in 1943,
refused military service,
executed February 11, 1944
Halle / Saale
Degenkolb was born on August 20, 1896 in Weixdorf. He served in the First World War and after the end of the war he worked for a shipping company. He was arrested for desertion in 1939 and sentenced to life in prison; the sentence was suspended. He was a soldier on the Eastern Front, was wounded and, as a Jehovah's Witness, finally refused to continue fighting for reasons of faith, whereupon he was sentenced to death.
Stumbling block for Kurt Degenkolb, Alte Moritzburger Strasse 43, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Kurt Degenkolb
Jg. 1924
Jehovah's Witnesses
arrested in 1943
conscientious denied
executed 20.07.1943
Brandenburg-Gorden
Kurt Degenkolb was the son of Otto Degenkolb. Born on April 15, 1924, he was also a Jehovah's Witness. He became an electrical mechanic and refused military service for reasons of faith, which is why he was executed.
Elisabeth Pick Stolperstein Dresden 2.JPG Altenzeller Strasse 26
(location)
Südvorstadt June 11, 2011 Here lived
Elisabeth pick
born Markus
Jg. 1871
before deportation
flight into death
27/11/1942
Elisabeth Pick was born on April 7, 1871 in Mainz . Her husband Franz Pick († 1932) was a co-owner of the Niedersedlitz malt factory ; the marriage had three children. Pick lived her last years in the " Judenhaus " at Caspar-David-Friedrich-Strasse 16b; After receiving the order to be deported to Theresienstadt , she committed suicide in 1942.
Stumbling block for Erich Max Isakowitz.jpg Andreas-Schubert-Strasse 42
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Erich Max
Isakowitz,
born in 1891, lived here .
Escape 1936
England
Erich Max Isakowitz was born in Königsberg and worked as a dentist after studying in Königsberg and Munich. He took part in the First World War as a soldier and eventually married Sofie Berlowitz from Eydtkuhnen. With their daughter Hannelore, who was born in Tilsit, the family moved to Dresden in 1924. The family here belonged to Victor Klemperer's circle of friends and moved in circles of artists. The family managed to flee to England in 1936, where Erich worked as a dentist. Sofie died in 1951, Erich in 1979 and Hannelore in 1986.
Stumbling block for Hannelore Isakowitz.jpg
Hannelore "Lore"
Isakowitz married lived here
. Petzal
born in 1915,
escaped
England in 1936
Stumbling block for Sofie Isakowitz.jpg Here lived
Sofie Isakowitz
born Berlowitz
Jg. 1893
Escape 1936
England
Stumbling block for Martin Joachim Reichenbach.jpg Andreas-Schubert-Strasse 44
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015 Here lived
Martin Joachim
Reichenbach
Jg. 1879
"protective custody" in 1938
Buchwald
deported 1,943
Auschwitz
murdered 03/03/1943
Martin Joachim Reichenbach was born on March 8, 1879 in Oederan. He worked as a lawyer and notary in Dresden. In 1933 his license to practice as a lawyer was revoked. He worked as an emigration advisor for the Jewish community in Dresden. He was deported to Dachau in 1938, but released seriously injured. He and his wife Lotte had to move into the so-called Judenhaus at Strehlener Strasse 52, from where they were deported to the Hellerberg camp in November 1942, where they had to do forced labor. In March 1943 both were deported to Auschwitz, where they were presumably murdered shortly after their arrival.

Daughter Ursula Eva, born in Dresden on July 24, 1912, and her brother Claus Peter, born in Dresden on April 20, 1920, managed to escape to England. Ursula died in 1992, her brother in June 2015; he initiated the laying of the stumbling blocks.

All four stumbling blocks were stolen on the night of October 15-16, 2015.

Stumbling block for Lotte Reichenbach.jpg
Lotte
Reichenbach,
née Reichenbach,
born in 1887
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Stumbling block for Ursula Eva Reichenbach.jpg
Ursula Eva
Reichenbach,
born in 1912, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
Stumbling block for Claus Peter Reichenbach.jpg
Claus Peter
Reichenbach,
Peter C. Rickenback,
born in 1920, lived here .
Escape 1936
Sweden, France,
Holland, England
Stumbling block for Abraham Adolf Wermuth, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden.JPG Andreas-Schubert-Strasse / corner of Strehlener Strasse
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Wermuth family, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden (1) .JPG
Südvorstadt Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Abraham Adolf
Wermuth

Jg. 1878
'Poland action' 1938
Massenerschiessung
Bloody Sunday
12.10.1941 Stanislau
Wermuth family
Stumbling stone for Rosa Wermuth, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Rosa Wermuth
Born Hillebrandt
Jg. 1887
'Poland action' 1938
Massenerschiessung
Bloody Sunday
12.10.1941 Stanislau
Stumbling block for Berta Ryster, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden.JPG
Berta 'Gerda'
Ryster
née Wermuth

born in 1909 lived here .
Denounced
Arrested 1944
Bergen-Belsen
Murdered January 16, 1945
Stumbling block for Karl-Heinz Wermuth, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden.JPG
Karl-Heinz
Wermuth,

born in 1922, lived here .
'Polenaktion' 1938
Escape 1939
Palestine
Stumbling block for Erika Wermuth, Andreas-Schubert-Strasse-Strehlener Strasse, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Erika Wermuth
born 1,924th
'Poland action' 1938
Massenerschiessung
Bloody Sunday
12.10.1941 Stanislau
Dorothea Rothholz Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Anton-Graff-Straße 17
(location)
Striesen Sep 11 2014 Here lived
Dorothea Rothholz
born Rothholz
Jg. 1867
Escape 1939
England
Dorothea Rothholz was born on April 5, 1867. She lived in Poznan with her husband, the grain dealer Jakob; the marriage had six children. The couple moved to Dresden after the First World War, Jakob died in 1932. The family managed to escape to England in 1938/1939, where Dorothea died in 1940.
Lina Marie Schöbel Stolperstein Dresden 2.JPG On the disc 11
(position)
Briesnitz Nov 4, 2009
Lina Marie
Schöbel,

born in 1900, lived here .
1942
“Heilanstalt”
Großschweidnitz,
murdered in 1942
Lina Marie Schöbel was born on March 28, 1900 in Neugersdorf . She worked in Dresden as a telephone operator for the Reichspost, gave birth to her daughter out of wedlock in 1920 and then lost her job. When she was diagnosed with schizophrenia , she was admitted to the Arnsdorf psychiatry in 1928 , followed by systematic starvation from 1939; 1940 relocation to Hochweitzschen , 1942 to Großschweidnitz ; there killing with Luminal .
Stumbling stone dresden rosa conradi.JPG Bautzner Strasse 20
(location)
Outer new town Nov 4, 2009
Rosa Conradi,
born in 1911
, lived here . Deported November 2nd, 1939
Ravensbrück
murdered May 29th, 1942 in the
"Heilanstalt" Bernburg
Rosa Conradi was born on June 11 or 14, 1911 in Dresden. Your daughter survived the Holocaust. Conradi was deported to Ravensbrück for " racial disgrace " , interrogated in Dresden in 1940 and, after being deported again in 1940 to Ravensbrück, murdered in the Bernburg killing center .
Martha Schmoll Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Bautzner Strasse 27
(location)
Outer new town Nov 26, 2012
Martha Schmoll,
née Oppenheim,
born in 1873
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered 6.9.1943
Martha Schmoll was born on March 14, 1873 in Frankfurt am Main . Her husband Simon died in 1941. She had to move to the “Judenhaus” at Altenzeller Strasse 41 and was deported to Theresienstadt in 1942, where she perished the following year.
Julie Salinger Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Bayreuther Strasse 14
(location)
Südvorstadt Nov 26, 2012
Julie Salinger,
née Braun,
born in 1863
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered September 16 , 1942
For a detailed biography see Julie Salinger .
Stumbling block for Robert Kronenthal, Behrischstrasse 7, Dresden (2) .JPG Behrischstrasse 7
(location)
Striesen 15th March 2018 Here lived
Robert
Kronenthal

Jg. 1896
'protective custody' in 1938
Buchwald
deported
Auschwitz
murdered 11/01/1943
Elfriede Maria Scholz Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Bergstrasse 42
(location)
Südvorstadt Sep 24 2013 Here lived
Elfriede Maria
Scholz
born Remark
Jg. 1903
in the resistance
arrested in 1943
, military morale '
Women's Prison Berlin
executed 12.16.1943
Berlin-Plötzensee
For a detailed biography see Elfriede Scholz .
Edgar Hahnewald Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Bergstrasse 63
(location)
Räcknitz /
Zschertnitz
May 26, 2015 Here lived
Edgar William
Hahnewald
Jg. 1884
in resistance / SPD
flight 1933
Czechoslovakia /
Sweden
Edgar Hahnewald was born on August 21, 1884 in Wilschdorf near Dresden. He worked as a writer, editor and illustrator. Since the beginning of the 20th century he was a member of the SPD and a. active in the workers' committee; he was artistically engaged against the growing NSDAP. In 1922 he married Anna Brehme, who worked as a metal and tobacco worker. Both fled to Sweden via the ČSR in 1933. Anna died in 1949, Edgar on January 6, 1961.
Anna Hahnewald Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Here lived
Anna Hahnewald
born Brehme
Jg. 1891
in resistance / SPD
flight 1933
Czechoslovakia /
Sweden
Erich Schapira Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Bernhardstrasse 37
(location)
Südvorstadt Nov 26, 2012
Erich Schapira,
born in 1883
, lived here . Deported 1942
Ghetto Warsaw
murdered in
Auschwitz
Erich Salomon Schapira was born on July 2, 1883 in Hanover . He was director of the PRITEC telephone company and moved to Dresden in 1912 for professional reasons. He had married Toni Schapira as early as 1910, and the marriage had two children. After 1933 he was fired from the company. From 1934 Schapira was head of the Jewish community in Dresden. His wife committed suicide in 1942, and Schapira had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Fürstenstrasse 2 and do forced labor. He was deported to Warsaw in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp .
Toni Schapira Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Toni Schapira,
née Hoffmann,
born in 1886, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised.
Escape to death
1.5.1942
Toni Schapira was born on August 27, 1886 in Essen . In 1910 she married Erich Schapira, the marriage had two children who emigrated in 1935 and 1938. After her daughter fell seriously ill, Toni Schapira was allowed to visit her in France. She was threatened with arresting her husband if she did not return. Schapira committed suicide on May 1, 1942.
Richard Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Bernhardstrasse 39
(location)
Südvorstadt Sep 24 2013
Richard Steinhart,
born in 1873
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered July 15, 1943
Richard Steinhart was born on May 26, 1873 in Merseburg . He was married to Bertha Steinhart; the marriage had three children, including Kurt Steinhart. He was the owner of the Steinhart department store on Kesselsdorfer Strasse. Although the escape to Panama had already been organized, the couple stayed in Germany and were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942, where Richard Steinhart perished.
Bertha Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Sep 24 2013
Bertha Steinhart,
née Auerbach,
born in 1875
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
1944,
murdered by Auschwitz
Bertha Steinhart was born on September 1, 1875 in Tauchau. She was married to Richard Steinhart; the marriage had three children. She and her husband were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944, where they were murdered.
Kurt Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Sep 24 2013
Kurt Steinhart,
born in 1903
, lived here in 'protective custody' 1938
Buchenwald
Escape 1939 Interned in France
Drancy
deported 1942
Auschwitz
murdered June 23 , 1942
Kurt Steinhart was born on December 29, 1903 in Dresden. He was the owner of the Steinhart department store on Kesselsdorfer Strasse, which he had to forcibly sell. He was married to Sonja Steinhart; the couple had two children. He was deported to Buchenwald in 1938. The release was made on condition that he had to leave Germany. He was active in the Resistance in Paris and was arrested, deported and murdered in Auschwitz in 1942.
Sonja Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG June 11, 2011
Sonja Steinhart,
née Goldschmidt,
born in 1910
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported and
murdered in
Auschwitz
Sonja Steinhart was born on November 18, 1910 in Braunschweig . The marriage with department store owner Kurt Steinhart had two children. She worked as a saleswoman, had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Strehlener Strasse 52 and was deported to Auschwitz via the " Judenlager Hellerberg " (1942) with her children.
Gert Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Sep 24 2013
Gert Steinhart,
born in 1937
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Gert Steinhart was born on October 3, 1937 in Dresden. His parents were Kurt and Sonja Steinhart. He had to move to the “Judenhaus” on Strehlener Strasse with his sister and mother and was deported with them to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and to the Auschwitz concentration camp a year later, where he was murdered.
Marion Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Sep 24 2013
Marion Steinhart,
born in 1931
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Marion Steinhart was born on July 26, 1931 in Dresden. Her parents were Kurt and Sonja Steinhart. She had to move to the “Judenhaus” on Strehlener Strasse with her brother and mother and was deported with them in 1942 to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and a year later to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she was murdered.
Stumbling stone for Bertha Kirschbaum, Bodelschwinghstrasse 1, Dresden.JPG Bodelschwinghstrasse 1
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Bertha and Ruth Kirschbaum, Bodelschwinghstrasse 1, Dresden.JPG
Friedrichstadt 15th March 2018
Bertha Kirschbaum lived here, married
. Levy
born in 1896 admitted
1941 Sanatorium
Arnsdorf
'relocated' 7.1.1942
Institution Großschweidnitz
murdered April 26th, 1942
Stumbling block for Ruth Kirschbaum, Bodelschwinghstrasse 1, Dresden.JPG
Ruth Kirschbaum,
born in 1934, lived here,
Löbtauer Str.
'Relocated' 18.6.1941
Institution Großschweidnitz
'children's department'
Leipzig-
Dosen murdered 21.11.1941
Stumbling Stone Bramschstrasse 2 - 01.jpg Bramschstrasse 2
(location)
Löbtau July 22, 2021
Arthur Leuschner,
born in 1894
, lived here . Arrested 1943
Forced labor
deported 1942
Gross-Rosen
1945 Mauthausen
murdered 13.3.1945
Stumbling stone for Max Goldschläger, Brühlscher Garten 1, Dresden.JPG Brühlscher Garten 1
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Goldschläger family, Brühlscher Garten 1, Dresden.JPG
Inner old town 15th March 2018
Max
Goldschläger,

born in 1898, lived here .
Escape 1933
Romania
Palestine
Stumbling stone for Sofia Goldschläger, Brühlscher Garten 1, Dresden.JPG
Sofia Goldschläger,
née Wind,
born in 1891, lived here .
Escape 1933
Romania
Palestine
Stumbling stone for Anna Goldschläger, Brühlscher Garten 1, Dresden.JPG
Anna Goldschläger,
born in 1919, lived here .
Escape 1933
Romania
Palestine
Stumbling stone for Sabina Goldschläger, Brühlscher Garten 1, Dresden.JPG
Sofia Goldschläger,
born in 1922, lived here .
Escape 1933
Romania
Palestine
Else Auguste Seifert Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Budapester Strasse 69
(location)
Südvorstadt Oct 26, 2012 Here lived
Else Auguste
Seifert

Jg. 1902
since 1928 patient
in different
hospitals and nursing homes
, laid '1940
Pirna-Sonnenstein
murdered 08/28/1940
Action T4
Else Auguste Seifert was born on September 6, 1902 in Hamburg . She completed an apprenticeship as an art and craft teacher and from 1927 worked as a drawing teacher in Szczecin . In 1928 she suffered a breakdown and was admitted to the Dresden mental hospital by the family living in Dresden and was later placed in the Arnsdorf psychiatry, among other places . She was forcibly sterilized . In 1940 she was deported to the Pirna-Sonnenstein killing center , where she was murdered in the same year (see Action T4 ).
Ernst Kreidl Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Caspar-David-Friedrich-Strasse 15b
(location)
Zschertnitz Oct 26, 2012
Ernst Kreidl,
born in 1878
, lived here, arrested 1941
1942 Buchenwald
murdered May 21, 1942
Ernst Kreidl was born on May 11, 1878 in Wittingau . The house at Caspar-David-Friedrich-Strasse 15b was in his possession when the state took possession of it in 1940 and declared it a “Jewish house”. Victor Klemperer was one of the forced residents . Kreidl was arrested in 1941 and deported to Buchenwald concentration camp in 1942.
Stumbling block for Heinz Max Wenk, Chauseehausstrasse 8, Dresden.JPG Chauseehausstrasse 8
(location)
Löbtau 29 Sep 2015
Heinz Max Wenk,
born in 1920, lived here,
Jehovah's Witness
refused,
executed October 11, 1943
Halle / Saale
Wenk was born on October 25, 1920 and refused military service as a Jehovah's Witness, which is why he was sentenced to death in Torgau in August 1943 and executed two months later.
Arthur Anton Zinn Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Chemnitzer Strasse 119
(location)
Plauen Sep 24 2013
Arthur Anton Zinn,
born in 1899, lived here .
1916
Arnsdorf sanatorium
, relocated July 31, 1940
Pirna-Sonnenstein
murdered July 31, 1940
Action T4
Arthur Zinn was born in 1899 with an intellectual disability. From August 24, 1908 to March 8, 1909, he visited the Chemnitz-Altendorf State Institution, then lived with his family again and was a patient in the psychiatric department in the Löbtauer Straße hospital in Dresden from 1911 to 1916. He then lived in the Arnsdorf State Institute until the summer of 1940 . On July 31, 1940, he was deported to the Pirna-Sonnenstein killing center and probably murdered on the same day. See also: video
Stumbling Stone Comeniusstraße 46 - 01.jpg Comeniusstrasse 46
(location)
Striesen July 21, 2021
Hans Friedrich Lewy
born in 1886 lived here .
Escape 1935 Interned in
France
Drancy
deported in 1942
Auschwitz
murdered November 30 , 1942
For a detailed biography see Hans Lewy .
Stumbling block for Karl Blochwitz, Dresdner Strasse 125, Dresden.JPG Dresdner Strasse 125
(location)
Gohlis 29 Sep 2015
Karl Blochwitz,
born in 1899, lived here .
Jehovah's Witness
arrested in 1940
refused military service
executed on April 3rd , 1940 in
Bienitz near Leipzig
Karl Blochwitz was born on April 12, 1899 and worked as a cook after the First World War, but lost his job in 1933. He was arrested several times until 1939 and his wife was supposed to divorce him. In 1940 he was drafted for military service, but refused military service and was sentenced to death and executed.
Josef Altbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Dürerstraße 10
(location)
Pirnaische suburb Oct 26, 2012
Josef Altbach,
born in 1886, lived here .
Polenaktion,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Josef Altbach was born on October 28, 1886 in Wyszków . He came to Dresden in 1926 and worked as a tobacco dealer. Sarah Altbach, née Fischer, was born on July 5, 1882 in Spas. She married Josef Altbach, the marriage had two children. In 1938 the couple were deported to Poland and lived in Beuthen and Lemberg. Her further fate is unknown.
Sarah Altbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Here lived
Sarah Altbach
born Langer
Jg. 1882
Poland Action 1938
murdered in
occupied Poland
Ernst Schindler Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Fetscherstraße 34
(location)
Striesen Sep 24 2013
Ernst Schindler,
born in 1855, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead November 5, 1941
Ernst Schindler was born on December 20, 1855 in Stanislau. In 1884 he married Thekla Bermann, who was born in Gliwice on March 21, 1861, and they had three children. With his wife, he ran an agency for the textile industry. He died in 1941. After the death of her husband, she was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942, where she was murdered.
Thekla Schindler Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Thekla Schindler,
née Berman,
born in 1861
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered October 3rd , 1942
Stumbling stone for Eva Stein, Elsasser Straße 5, Dresden.JPG Elsasser Strasse 5
(location)
Johannstadt Dec 2, 2019
Eva Stein
née Wollheim,
born in 1883, lived here,
escaped from
Palestine in 1940
Stolperstein Förstereistraße 42 - 01.jpg Förstereistraße 42
(location)
Outer new town Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Alfred Leupold
Jg. 1894
trained 1,938
hospital
Pirna-Sonnenstein
'transferred' 21.4.1941
hospital Wiesengrund
murdered 14/05/1942
Alfred Leupold
Stumbling stone for Samuel Husch.jpg Franklinstrasse 20
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Samuel Husch,
born in 1868, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead 4 July 1942
Samuel Husch was born on February 1, 1868 in Pudewitz and worked as a grain wholesaler until 1936. He lived in Dresden and in 1942 came to the Henriettenstift old people's home, which was known as the “Jewish home”. Husch escaped a deportation scheduled at the beginning of July 1942; on July 4, 1942, he was found hanged in his apartment.
Stumbling block for Julius Ferdinand Wollf, Franz-Liszt-Strasse at the corner of Wiener Strasse, Dresden.JPG Franz-Liszt-Strasse at the corner of Wiener Strasse
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Wollf family, Franz-Liszt-Strasse at the corner of Wiener Strasse, Dresden.JPG
Chasing Sep 21 2016
Julius Ferdinand
Wollf,

born in 1871, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised.
Escape to death on
February 27, 1942
Julius Ferdinand Wollf was born on May 22nd, 1871 in Koblenz. There he studied philosophy, history, economics and the history of art and literature. He then worked as a dramaturge in Karlsruhe. In 1899 he went to Munich and worked for the "Münchner Zeitung". The editor Dr. August Huck as managing director of the Dresden branch that published the “Dresdner Latest News” (DNN). The theater critic Wollf soon took over the editor-in-chief. For almost 30 years, Julius Ferdinand Wollf was chief editor and co-editor of the DNN. The Saxon King Friedrich August III. awarded him the title of professor in 1916, and in 1918 he received the Saxon War Merit Cross. Wollf was a member of the Association of Saxon Industrialists and the Association of German Newspaper Publishers. Karl August Lingner and Gustav Stresemann were among his circle of friends and acquaintances. He was also significantly involved in the establishment of the German Hygiene Museum and the implementation of the first World Hygiene Exhibition in 1911. After the National Socialists came to power in 1933, Wolff was increasingly subjected to reprisals and humiliation and finally, on March 31, 1933, he was forced out of his position as editor-in-chief of the DNN and from the board of directors of the Hygiene Museum. Julius Wollf and his wife Johanna decided to flee to death by means of poison. He died on February 27, 1942. Further stumbling blocks for Julius Wollf and his siblings Rosalie, Frieda, Klara and Max were moved in 2007 in his hometown Koblenz. (See: List of stumbling blocks in Koblenz )
Stumbling stone for Johanna Sophie Wollf, Franz-Liszt-Strasse at the corner of Wiener Strasse, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Johanna Sophie
Wollf

born Gutmann
Jg. 1877
humiliated / Disenfranchised
escape into death
27/02/1942
Johanna Sophie Wollf, née Gutmann, was born in Mannheim on October 18, 1877. In view of the increasing reprisals and humiliation of the National Socialists, she and her husband decided to take their own life with poison on February 27, 1942. She later died in a hospital in Dresden.
Stolperstein Freiberger Straße 43 - 02.jpg Freiberger Strasse 43
(location)
Old town July 21, 2021
Margarete Schreiber,
born in 1886
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Stumbling block for Fritz Aron Meinhardt, Fritz-Meinhardt-Strasse 22, Dresden.JPG Fritz-Meinhardt-Strasse 22
(location)
Prohlis 29 Sep 2015
Fritz Aron
Meinhardt,
born in 1899, lived here . He was
arrested several times.
Forced labor,
murdered April 23, 1943,
police prison
For a detailed biography see Fritz Meinhardt .
Stumbling block for Hans Otto, Frühlingstrasse 12, Dresden (1) .JPG Fruehlingstrasse 12
(location)
Outer new town Sep 21 2016 Here lived
Hans Otto
Jg. 1900
in resistance / KPD
trade unionists
arrested 14/11/1933
Gestapo headquarters in Berlin
Tortured
Murdered 24/11/1933
For a detailed biography see Hans Otto .
Leo Fantl Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Georg-Nerlich-Strasse 2
(location)
Johannstadt June 11, 2011 This is where
Dr. Leo Fantl
born 1885
deported 1943
Auschwitz
murdered March 8, 1944
Leo Fantl was born on February 25, 1885 in Prague . The doctor of German studies, musician and Judaism worked for the Dresdner Neuesten Nachrichten , published lively and was musically active in the Jewish community of Dresden. After his release in 1933 he moved to Liberec and in 1938 to Prague. He was deported to Auschwitz via Theresienstadt in 1943.
Helene Fantl Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Helene Fantl,
née Stier-Somlo,
born in 1902, lived,
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 8, 1944
Helene Fantl was born on January 25, 1901 and married Leo Fantl. She was active in the resistance and moved to Liberec and in 1938 to Prague. She was deported to Auschwitz via Theresienstadt in 1943.
Bedrich Fantl Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Bedřich Fantl,
born in 1928
, lived here, deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 8, 1944
Bedřich Fantl was born on March 14, 1928 in Dresden. He was the son of Leo and Helene Fantl.
Brigitte Fantl Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Brigitte Fantl,
born in 1931
, lived here, deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 8, 1944
Brigitte Fantl was born on October 10, 1931 in Dresden. She was the daughter of Leo and Helene Fantl.
Harry Herbert Hirschel Meyer Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Georg-Nerlich-Strasse 4
(location)
Johannstadt June 11, 2011
Harry Herbert
Hirschel Meyer,

born in 1891
, lived here, deported in 1942, Murdered in 1944,
Riga
in
Dachau
Harry Meyer was born on April 9, 1891 in Beuthen . In Dresden he ran a toy store (Spielwaren-Meyer) on Wilsdruffer Strasse , which had to be closed in 1936. Meyer was a violinist and director of the Jewish Youth Orchestra in Dresden. Deported to Riga in 1942, he was initially a slave laborer at Wolf & Döring ; 1944 Deportation via the Kauen ghetto to Dachau .
Johanne Meyer Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Johanne Meyer,
nee Stifter,
born in 1893
, lived here, deported in 1942,
murdered in 1943 in
Riga
Johanne Meyer, née Schifter [sic!], Was born on December 30, 1893 in Potschappel . She married Harry Meyer and was deported to the Riga ghetto in January 1942 , where she died.
Heinz Meyer Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Heinz Meyer
born in 1923 lived here,
interned 1942
Hellerberge
deported
Auschwitz
Buchenwald
liberated / survived
Heinz Wolfgang Meyer (born June 29, 1923 in Dresden; † December 18, 2006 in Cincinnati, Ohio) was the son of Johanne and Harry Meyer. He received violin lessons from Jan Dahmen and studied music in Prague from 1937. In 1938 he was a prisoner of Buchenwald concentration camp for six weeks, performed forced labor in Dresden and lived in the "Judenhaus" Güntzstrasse 24. In 1942 he was an inmate of the Hellerberg camp, and in 1943 he was deported to Auschwitz, where he had to play in the camp orchestra . After a death march to Buchenwald, inmate of the Ohrdruf camp ; from there successful escape.
Fritz Meyer Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Fritz Meyer,
born in 1925
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported,
murdered in
Auschwitz in 1943
Fritz Joachim Meyer was born on May 28, 1925 in Dresden as the son of Johanne and Harry Meyer. He played the piano, took lessons from Margarete Anschel and Arthur Chitz and gave concerts with his brother in Dresden. In 1942 he was deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" and from there in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where he died of typhus .
Stumbling stone for Alfred Schwarz, Georgplatz, Dresden (1) .JPG Georgplatz
(location)
Inner old town Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Alfred Schwarz
Vol. 1892
Forced Labor
shelter Prohibition
Dead air strike
13/02/1945
Stumbling stone for Siegfried Sonnenschein, Gerhart-Hauptmann-Strasse 1, Dresden.JPG Gerhart-Hauptmann-Strasse 1
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Siegfried Sonnenschein,
born in 1909, lived here .
Escape 1939
Shanghai
USA
Siegfried Sonnenschein was born in Dresden. He studied at the Conservatory of Music, worked as a composer and became known in 1932 with the hit Auf der Terrasse vom Romanesque Café . He fled to Shanghai in 1939 and went to the USA in 1947, lived again in Germany for some time in the 1960s and finally died in the USA in 1980.
Irma Wolff Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Gmünder Strasse 7
(location)
Leuben Dec 5, 2013
Irma Wolff,
née Gellner,
born in 1872
, lived here, deported 1944
Theresienstadt
liberated / survived
Irma Wolff was born on December 31, 1872 in Brüx. She was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp in January 1944. She survived.
Stumbling blocks Goetheallee 14b - 04.jpg Goetheallee 14b
(location)
Stumbling Stones Goetheallee 14b - 01.jpg
Blowjoke July 22, 2021 Here lived
Jenny Jacoby
Born Loewald
Jg. 1856
deported in 1942
Theresienstadt
murdered 27/09/1942
Stumbling Stones Goetheallee 14b - 05.jpg
Johann Jacoby, born in 1879
, lived here, deported in 1942, murdered in
Riga
in 1942
Richard Hepner Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Goetheallee 26
(location)
Blowjoke Sep 11 2014 Here lived
Richard Hepner
Jg. 1880
several times "protective custody"
Sachsenhausen
freed / survived
Richard Hepner was first arrested in the course of the November pogroms in 1938; He was arrested again in mid-1943 and deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp in October 1944. He survived and died in Dresden in 1950. After Richard's death, his wife Johanna and their son Peter first moved to West Germany and later to the USA.
Johanna Hepner Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Johanna Hepner,
née Berlet,
born in 1900, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
survived
Peter Hepner Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Peter Hepner,
born in 1928, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised and
survived
Stumbling block for Helga Margot Grünewald, Großenhainer Strasse 194, Dresden.JPG Großenhainer Strasse 194
(location)
Stumbling blocks Großenhainer Straße 194 (02) .jpg
Wild man 28 Sep 2015 Here lived
Helga Margot
Grünewald
married. Weinberg
Born 1924
Escape Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Sobibor
murdered July 23 , 1943
She was born on November 9, 1924 in Dresden. She lost her father at an early age, the mother remarried and died in 1936. From this time on, Helga lived in the family of her stepfather Arthur Rosenbaum, who remarried. The family fled to Palestine in 1938, Helga had to stay behind due to missing papers. She fled to Arnhem; in 1942 she married Hans Weinberg. The couple were imprisoned in Westerborg and deported from here to Sobibor in 1943, where they were murdered in July 1943.
Stumbling blocks Großenhainer Straße 194 (04) .jpg July 21, 2021
Heinz Grunewald,
born in 1920, lived here,
escaped from
Ecuador in 1939
Heinz Grunewald was the older brother of Helga Margot Grünewald.
Stumbling block for Simon Sigismund Jonas.jpg Gutzkowstraße 32
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Simon Sigismund
Jonas
born in 1866 lived here .
Escape 1938 Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Sobibor
murdered July 23 , 1943
Simon Sigismund Jonas and Laura Jonas, née Loewenthal, were the parents of the photographer Genja Jonas . From 1921 they lived with their children in Dresden. They were initially able to emigrate to the Netherlands. Both were arrested in Rotterdam in March 1943 and deported to the Westerbork concentration camp and from there to the Sobibor extermination camp. Here they were murdered on July 23, 1943.
Stumbling block for Laura Jonas.jpg
Laura Jonas,
née Loewenthal,
born in 1867, lived here .
Escape 1938 Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Sobibor
murdered July 23 , 1943
Aron Höxter Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Hans-Böheim-Strasse 2
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Höxter family, Hans-Böheim-Strasse 2, Dresden.JPG
Striesen Sep 24 2013 and September 21, 2016
Aron Höxter,
born in 1892
, lived here, deported 1942
Riga
1944 Stutthof / Burggrafen
murdered February 1945
Aron Höxter was born on November 18, 1892 in Treysa. He was married to Paula Höxter; the marriage had two children. He worked as a teacher at the Jewish school in Dresden. The family had to move into "Jewish houses" in Dresden. Aron and Paula Höxter were deported to Riga in 1942, where Aron Höxter had to do forced labor. Presumably he was deported to the Stutthof concentration camp in 1944 and murdered not far from Danzig in 1945.
Paula Höxter Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Paula Höxter,
born Sachs,
born in 1894
, lived here, deported in 1942, murdered in
Riga on
October 1st, 1944
Stutthof
Paula Höxter was born on June 15, 1894 in Bibra. She was married to Aron Höxter; the marriage had two children. She and her husband had to move into various “Jewish houses” in Dresden and in 1942 they were deported to Riga with him. In 1943 she was probably deported to the Kaiserwald concentration camp and the following year to the Stutthof concentration camp, where she was murdered.
Stumbling block for Margot Höxter, Hans-Böheim-Strasse 2, Dresden.JPG This is where
Margot Höxter married lived
. NATO joke
Jg. 1920
Intern 1942
Heller mountains
deported in 1943
Auschwitz
1945 death march
freed
Margot Sophie Höxter, married. Natowitz was born on September 20, 1920 in Bibra. She was a tailor in Dresden and married to Leonhard Herbert Natowitz. Both were deported together with his parents on November 23/24, 1942 to the "Hellerberg Jewish camp" in Dresden and on March 2, 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Margot had prisoner number 37034 in Auschwitz; she was able to experience the liberation on January 27, 1945 in Auschwitz. She then emigrated to the USA, where she died on May 17, 2014 in New York.
Stumbling block for Günter Höxter, Hans-Böheim-Strasse 2, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Günter Höxter
Jg. 1925
Kindertransport 1938
Holland
interned Westerbork
deported in 1942
Auschwitz
death march
dead 02.02.1945
Günter Höxter was born on May 5, 1925 in Bibra as the only son of Aron and Paula Höxter. In 1938 he fled to the Netherlands on a Kindertransport, from where he was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942. He died in February 1945 during a death march .
Heinz Martin Wendisch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Hans-Sachs-Strasse 27
(location)
Pieschen
Trachenberg
Sep 24 2013
Heinz Martin
Wendisch,
born in 1913, lived here .
1938
Colditz sanatorium
'relocated' 1939 Grossschweidnitz
sanatorium murdered 19.3.1940

Heinz Martin Wendisch was born out of wedlock in 1913. He was mentally disabled and was cared for by the family until he was 16 years old. In 1929 he was sent to the Arnsdorf State Institution and in 1938 transferred to Colditz, where he was systematically starved. After he was forced to move to Großschweidnitz in 1939, he died there in 1940 of a “general decline in strength”.
Arthur Oskar Chitz Stolperstein Dresden (cropped) .JPG Helmholtzstrasse 3b
(location)
Südvorstadt Dec. 5, 2013,
Sep. 11 2014 (relocation due to vandalism)
This is where
Dr. Arthur Oskar
Chitz
born in 1882
'protective custody' 1938
Buchenwald
deported 1942
Riga
murdered 1944
Riga-Kaiserwald
Arthur Oskar Chitz was born in Prague on September 5, 1884. He learned to play the piano and violin and composed. Among other things, he studied music history and received his doctorate in 1905 for the Hofmusikkapelle Kaiser Rudolf II. After marrying Gertrud Helene Stern in 1907, Chitz studied chemistry at the TH Dresden, but then remained active as a musician and composer. In 1920 he became musical director of the Dresden theater. In 1933 he was released from his offices and arrested during the November pogroms in 1938 and deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp, but released in 1938. In 1940 he and his wife had to move into the "Judenhaus" Lothringer Weg 2. Both were deported to Riga in January 1942, where they probably perished in the Kaiserwald concentration camp.
Gertrud Helene Chitz Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Dec 5, 2013 This is where
Gertrud Helene
Chitz,
née Stern,
born in 1884
, lived . Deported 1942,
Riga,
Riga-Kaiserwald,
murdered
Gertrud Helene Stern was born in Prague on May 24, 1884. She was active as a writer, singer, pianist and painter. In 1907 she married Arthur Oskar Chitz and they have two children. In 1940 she and her husband had to move into the "Judenhaus" Lothringer Weg 2. Both were deported to Riga in January 1942, where they probably perished in the Kaiserwald concentration camp.
Hilda Margarethe Bock Stolperstein Dresden 2014.JPG Dec. 5, 2013,
Sep. 11 2014 (relocation due to vandalism)

Hilda Margarete
Bock,
née Chitz,
born in 1907, lived here .
Escape 1939
France,
China / USA,
survived
Hilda Margarethe Chitz was the daughter of Arthur Oskar and Gertrud Helene Chitz. She managed to escape. The stumbling block was relocated after vandalism (stone was broken out). The last two lines were changed, so it was said in the original "China / USA (paragraph) survived".
Dr.  Herman Ernst Sheets stumbling block 2014 corr..JPG Dec. 5, 2013,
Sep. 11 2014 (relocation due to misspelling)
This is where
Dr. Herman Ernst
Sheets
born in 1908,
escaped 1936
Czechoslovakia
USA
Herman Ernst Sheets was the son of Arthur Oskar and Gertrud Helene Chitz. He managed to escape to the USA via Czechoslovakia. His stumbling block was replaced because the name was misspelled with Hermam . The first stumbling block also ended with the word “survived”.
Selma Nussbaum Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Henzestraße 15
(location)
Striesen Nov 25, 2012
Selma Nussbaum,
née Braun,
born in 1876
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered December 29 , 1942
Selma Nussbaum was born on September 14, 1876 in Dortmund . She was married to the butcher Leopold Nussbaum († 1926), the marriage had two daughters. Selma Nussbaum last lived in the “Judenhaus” at Altenzeller Strasse 32 and was deported to Theresienstadt on August 25, 1942.
Stumbling block for Ilija Stojanovic, Hochschulstrasse 20A, Dresden.JPG Hochschulstrasse 20a
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015 Here lived
Ilija Stojanovic
Jg. 1917
in the resistance
arrested in 1944
prison Radeberg
1945 Buchenwald
death march Flossenburg
freed / dead 05/10/1945
at the detention Follow
He was born on August 26, 1917 in Bujanovac , Yugoslavia . He studied chemistry from 1939 to 1944 at the Technical University of Dresden and from 1943 was a member of the illegal student group BONSS ("Bălgarski obšt naróden studéntski săjúz"). He was arrested in 1944 and deported to Buchenwald concentration camp in 1945. In April 1945 he was sent on a death march to Flossenbürg.
Curt Fraenkel Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg Hochschulstraße / footpath extension Schnorrstraße 20
(location)
Fraenkel family stumbling blocks Dresden (1) .jpg
Südvorstadt July 22, 2021 Here lived
Curt Fraenkel
Jg. 1900
"protective custody" in 1938
Sachsenhausen
death of adhesion consequences
19/01/1939
Dora Fraenkel Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg This is where
Dora Fraenkel,
née Hönigsberg,
born in 1901,
interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943,
Auschwitz
murdered in 1943
Stumbling blocks Holbeinstraße 48 - 05.jpg Holbeinstrasse 48
(location)
Stumbling blocks Holbeinstraße 48 - 01.jpg
Johannstadt July 22, 2021
Katharina Caro,
born in 1873
, lived here, deported August 11, 1942
Theresienstadt
murdered March 24, 1944
Stumbling Stones Holbeinstraße 48 - 06.jpg
Paula Caro,
born in 1874
, lived here, deported August 11, 1942
Theresienstadt
murdered April 23, 1944
Stumbling Stones Holbeinstraße 48 - 07.jpg
Charlotte Caro,
born in 1889
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Stumbling block for Otto Ernst Faber, Hopfgartenstrasse 2, Dresden (2) .JPG Hopfgartenstrasse 2
(location)
Johannstadt 15th March 2018
Otto Ernst
Faber,

born in 1896
, lived here, arrested,
convicted § 175
Sachsenhausen
murdered December 4, 1939
Emil Hochberg Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Kleinzschachwitzer Ufer 68
(location)
Kleinzschachwitz Dec 5, 2013
Emil Hochberg,
born in 1874
, lived here . Deported 1943
Auschwitz
murdered August 26 , 1943
Emil Hochberg was born on September 10, 1874 in Osterode. He was married to Martha Hochberg, nee Wetzig. He was arrested and deported to Auschwitz concentration camp, where he perished, for allegedly covering his Jewish star.
Stumbling block for Robert Schein, Königsbrücker Strasse 26, Dresden.JPG Königsbrücker Strasse 26
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Robert and Martha Schein, Königsbrücker Strasse 26, Dresden (2) .JPG
Outer new town 15th March 2018 Here lived
Robert bill
Jg. 1876
humiliated / Disenfranchised
shelter prohibition
dead in airstrike
02/13/1945
Stumbling block for Martha Schein, Königsbrücker Strasse 26, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Martha sham
born Ehrich
Jg. 1876
humiliated / Disenfranchised
shelter prohibition
dead in airstrike
02/13/1945
Jacob Urbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Koenigsbrücker Strasse 37
(location)
Outer new town Dec 5, 2013
Jacob Urbach,
born in 1893, lived here .
Escape 1936
Poland.
Fate unknown
Jacob Benjamin Urbach was born on November 5, 1893 in Alexandrowo. From 1917 he lived in Saxony as a representative. He was married to Martha Hentschel, the marriage had three or four children. Urbach was expelled to Poland in 1936. He is considered lost.
Martha Urbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Martha Urbach,
née Hentschel,
born in 1900, lived here .
Poland Action 1938
deported
Łodz / Litzmannstadt
murdered
Martha Hentschel was born on May 17, 1900. She was married to Jacob Benjamin Urbach, the marriage had three or four children. She was probably deported to Poland with her son Siegfried in 1938 ("Polenaktion"). She is said to have lived in the Łódź ghetto and is believed to have been lost.
Siegfried Urbach Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Siegfried Urbach,
born in 1920, lived here .
Poland Action 1938
deported
Łodz / Litzmannstadt
murdered
Siegfried Urbach was the only son of Jacob Benjamin and Martha Urbach. He was born on March 25, 1920 in Dresden and worked as a work boy in his youth. He was probably deported to Poland with his mother Martha in 1938 ("Polenaktion"). He is said to have lived in the Łódź ghetto and is believed to have been lost.
Fanny Urbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Fanny Urbach,
born in 1921, lived here,
escaped from
Palestine,
survived
Fanny Urbach was the eldest daughter of Jacob Benjamin and Martha Urbach. She was born on March 13, 1921 in Dresden. She managed to escape to Palestine.
Edith Urbach Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Edith Urbach,
born in 1922, lived here,
escaped from
Palestine,
survived
Edith Urbach was the second daughter of Jacob Benjamin and Martha Urbach. She was born on December 5, 1922 in Dresden. She managed to escape to Palestine.
Nathan Arthur Levi Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Koenigsbrücker Strasse 57
(location)
Outer new town Nov 26, 2012
Nathan Arthur
Levi,

born in 1894
, lived here . Arrested 1942
Buchenwald
murdered October 17 , 1942
Nathan Arthur Levi, also Levy , was born on August 30, 1894 in Potsdam . He may have worked as a messenger, market helper or nurse. After his arrest in Dresden, he was deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp, where he perished.
Marianne Schönfelder Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Köpckestrasse 1
(location)
Inner New Town Nov 25, 2012 Here lived
Marianne
Schönfelder

Jg. 1917
trained 1,938
hospital Arnsdorf
"relocated" in 1943
sanatorium
Großschweidnitz
murdered 16/02/1945
Action Brandt
For a detailed biography see Marianne Schönfelder .
Stumbling block for Lucie Meyring, Krenkelstraße 23, Dresden.JPG Krenkelstrasse 23
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Meyring family, Krenkelstraße 23, Dresden (1) .JPG
Blowjoke Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Lucie Meyring
born Hinzelmann
Jg. 1896
Escape 1938
USA
Stumbling block for Ingetraut Meyring, Krenkelstraße 23, Dresden.JPG
Ingetraut Meyring,
born in 1923, lived here, expelled from
school in
1938,
USA
Stumbling block for Walter Meyring, Krenkelstraße 23, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Walter Meyring
Jg. 1891
disbarment 1938
flight 1938
United States
Richard Roy Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Laubegaster Ufer 23
(location)
Leaf guest Dec 5, 2013
Richard Roy lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead September 15, 1935
Richard Roy was married to Marie Roy. He died on September 15, 1935 "in connection with the Nuremberg Laws", the reason is not known.
Marie Roy Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Marie Roy,
née Langer,
born in 1895
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Marie Langer was born on September 30, 1895 or 96 in Dresden. The shop assistant married Richard Roy for the second time. She had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Maxstrasse 1 and do forced labor. In 1942 she was deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" and in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she was murdered.
Stumbling block for Hedwig Löwenstamm, Laubestrasse 4, Dresden.JPG Laubestrasse 4
(location)
Striesen Sep 21 2016
Hedwig Löwenstamm,
born in 1891
, lived here, interned in 1942, Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Hedwig Löwenstamm was born on July 19, 1891 as the daughter of Salo and Elisabeth Löwenstamm in Meißen. In the early 1920s she moved from Meissen to Dresden. In connection with the increasing repression against Jews from Dresden from 1938 onwards, Hedwig Löwenstamm had to move into so-called Jewish houses, first at Cranachstrasse 6, then at Ziegelstrasse 41. From November 1942, she did forced labor at Zeiss Ikon. In March 1943, all of the camera maker's forced laborers were deported to Auschwitz, where Löwenstamm was presumably murdered on March 3, 1943. Of her siblings, only Erwin Löwenstamm survived. Brother Willy was deported to Riga and murdered there in 1942. Her brother Kurt was murdered in Auschwitz.
Max Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Laubestrasse 24
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Steinhart family, Laubestrasse 24, Dresden.JPG
Striesen Sep 11 2014 Here lived
Max Steinhart
Jg. 1881
"protective custody" in 1938
Buchwald
deported in 1942
Riga
1944 Dachau
murdered in 1944
Auschwitz
Merchant Max Steinhart was born on July 22nd, 1881 in Tachau . He was married to Bertha Steinhart, the marriage had the children Gerald, Edith and Irwin. He came to Saxony in 1904 and was naturalized in 1927. He ran a department store in Dresden. He was deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp in the course of the pogrom night in 1938; after his return he lived with his wife and daughter Edith in the “Judenhaus” Strehlener Strasse 52. With his wife and daughter, he was deported to the Riga ghetto in 1942 and then to Strasdenhof. After further deportations to Dachau and Auschwitz, his trace is lost.
Bertha Steinhart 2 Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Bertha Steinhart
née Brauch,
born in 1892
, lived here, deported 1942
Riga
1944 Stutthof
murdered November 19, 1944
Riga-Strasdenhof
Bertha Steinhart was born on August 7 or March 9, 1892 in Neudorf. She lived with her daughter and husband in the “Judenhaus” at Strehlener Strasse 52, and was deported to the Riga ghetto in 1942 and then to Strasdenhof. It is possible that she was subsequently deported to Stutthof; their track is lost.
Edith Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Edith Steinhart,
born in 1921
, lived here . Deported 1942
Riga
1944 Stutthof
1944 Riga-Strasdenhof
murdered
Edith Steinhart was born on January 13, 1918 in Dresden. She and her parents had to move to the "Judenhaus" at Strehlener Strasse 52, from where she was deported to the Riga camp. Her further fate is unknown.
Gerald Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Gerald Steinhart,
born in 1914, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
USA
Gerald Steinhart was born on February 19, 1914 in Dresden. He may have managed to escape.
Irwin Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Irwin Steinhart,
born in 1918, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
USA
Irwin Steinhart was born on January 13, 1918 in Dresden. He may have managed to escape. The stumbling block was relocated on September 28, 2015 due to a typographical error.
Stumbling block for Markus Rosengarten, Laubestrasse 24, Dresden.JPG Laubestrasse 24
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Rosengarten family, Laubestrasse 24, Dresden (1) .JPG
Striesen Dec 2, 2019
Markus
Rosengarten,

born in 1876, lived here .
Deported 1942
Theresienstadt
Murdered September 15, 1942
Stumbling stone for Julche Rosengarten, Laubestrasse 24, Dresden.JPG
Julche 'Julie'
Rosengarten,

née Joseph,
born in 1868, lived here .
Deported in 1942
Theresienstadt.
Murdered
November 30, 1942
Stumbling block for Moritz Rosengarten, Laubestrasse 24, Dresden.JPG
Moritz
Rosengarten,

born in 1900, lived here .
Escape 1933
Uruguay
Heinz Steinberg Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg Lehnertstrasse 8
(location)
White deer July 22, 2021
Heinz Steinberg,
born in 1897, lived here .
“Protective custody” 1938
Sachsenhausen
Escape 1939 France
Forced labor 1940
Bou Arfa / Morocco
liberated
Stumbling Stone Kurt Schlosser.jpg Leipziger Strasse 72
(location)
Pieschen 28 Sep 2015 Here lived
Kurt Schlosser
Jg. 1900
in resistance / KPD
arrested 03/12/1943
"high treason and
aiding the enemy"
executed 16.08.1944
District Court
For a detailed biography see Kurt Schlosser .
Stumbling block for Dr.  Werner Hofmann, Lene-Glatzer-Strasse 23, Dresden.JPG Lene-Glatzer-Straße 23
(location)
Blowjoke 15th March 2018 This is where
Dr. Werner
Hofmann,

born 1878, was
banned from working in 1934,
fleeing to death on
March 3, 1939
Joseph Fränkel Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Leubener Strasse 2
(location)
Leuben Dec 5, 2013
Joseph Fränkel,
born in 1888
, worked here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943,
Auschwitz
murdered on March 3 , 1943
For a short biography, see the Fränkel couple, Oberer Kreuzweg 6.
Josef Rabinowitsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Liebigstrasse 23
(location)
Südvorstadt Sep 24 2013
Josef
Rabinowitsch,
born in 1864
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered October 1, 1942
Josef Rabinowitsch was born on October 19, 1864 in Haindan, Lithuania. He was married to Selma Rabinowitsch, their son Martin Herbert was born. He worked as a businessman. The couple had to move with their son's family to the “Judenhaus” on Schweizer Strasse and in 1942 were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
Selma Rabinowitsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Selma
Rabinowitsch,
born Jacoby,
born in 1872
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered October 6 , 1942
Selma Rabinowitsch was born on February 13, 1872 in Schwetz. She was married to businessman Josef Rabinowitsch, and the marriage had a son. She had to move with her husband and her son's family to the “Judenhaus” on Schweizer Strasse and in 1942 was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
Martin Herbert Rabinowitsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Martin Herbert
Rabinowitsch,
born in 1895
, lived here . Arrested in 1941,
Buchenwald was
murdered
Martin Herbert Rabinowitsch was born on May 25, 1895 in Dresden as the son of Josef and Selma Rabinowitsch. He probably took over his father's business in the 1930s. He was married to Hertha Ruth Rabinowitsch; the marriage had a son. He had to move with his family and parents to the "Judenhaus" on Schweizer Strasse and was deported from there to Buchenwald in 1941.
Hertha Ruth Rabinowitsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Hertha Ruth
Rabinowitsch,
née Kann,
born in 1904
, lived here, deported in 1942, murdered in
Riga
Hertha Ruth Rabinowitsch was born on June 30, 1904 in Berlin or Dresden. She attended the Lyceum and then worked as a commercial correspondent. She was married to Martin Herbert Rabinowitsch, the marriage had son Stefan. With her parents-in-law and her family, she had to move into the “Judenhaus” on Schweizer Strasse. She was deported to the Riga ghetto in 1942 and murdered there.
Stefan Rabinowitsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Stefan
Rabinowitsch,
born in 1936
, lived . Deported in 1942, murdered in
Riga
Stefan Rabinowitsch was born on March 30, 1936, the son of Herbert Martin and Hertha Ruth Rabinowitsch in Dresden. He and his family had to move into the “Judenhaus” on Schweizer Strasse. He was deported with his mother to the Riga ghetto in 1942 and murdered there.
Hildegard Rau Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Lortzingstrasse 1
(location)
Johannstadt Sep 11 2014
Hildegard Rau,
born in 1917, lived here .
1944
Heilanstalt Arnsdorf
"relocated" May 19, 1944 Großschweidnitz
hospital murdered June 25, 1944

Hildegard Marie Elisabeth Rau was born on October 28, 1917 in Dresden. She suffered from anxiety at an early age and had been on treatment for epileptic seizures since she was a teenager. She was forcibly sterilized and, after a severe attack in 1944, first transferred to the Löbtau City Hospital, then to the Arnsdorf State Institution and finally to the Großschweidnitz State Hospital in Saxony . She was given an overdose of Luminal and died in 1944 of pneumonia.
Justine Kleiner Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Louisenstrasse 12
(location)
Outer new town Oct 26, 2012
Justine Kleiner,
née Kaplan,
born in 1891
, lived here, deported 1942 to
Riga,
murdered in
Riga-Kaiserwald
Justine Kleiner came on 18./31. Born January 1891 in Warsaw . She was married to watchmaker Markus Kleiner (1879–1933) and they had four children. Justine Kleiner lived in Dresden from 1917 and worked as a nurse. In 1942 she was deported to Riga and then to the Riga-Kaiserwald concentration camp.
Moses Kleiner Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Moses Kleiner,
born in 1918, lived,
deported in 1942 to
Riga.
Fate unknown
Moses Kleiner was born on November 4, 1918. He was one of three sons of Markus and Justine Kleiner. In mid-January 1942 he was deported to the Salaspils police detention center. Nothing is known about his further fate.
Heinrich Kleiner Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Heinrich Kleiner,
born in 1920
, lived here . Deported 1941
Theresienstadt
1942 Riga
Fate unknown
Heinrich Kleiner was born on January 18, 1920 in Dresden. He was one of three sons of Markus and Justine Kleiner. He was deported to Theresienstadt and Riga and has been missing since 1942.
Marie Kleiner Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Marie Kleiner,
born in 1922, lived here,
dead 6/6/1940,
cause of death
never clarified
Marie Kleiner was born on October 21, 1922 as the only daughter of Markus and Justine Kleiner in Dresden. She died in Dresden in 1940 for unknown reasons.
Stumbling block for Friedrich Leopold Berlowitz, Lukasstrasse 3, Dresden.JPG Lukasstrasse 3
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Berlowitz family, Lukasstrasse 3, Dresden (1) .JPG
Südvorstadt (Dresden) May 23, 2016 This is where
Dr. Friedrich L.
Berlowitz,

born 1897,
fled
Palestine in 1936
Dr. Friedrich Leopold Berlowitz was born on March 24th, 1897 in Eydtkuhnen in East Prussia. Due to pogroms during the Russian Civil War, the family fled to Königsberg, where Friedrich began studying dentistry and graduated with the defense of his dissertation in 1921. In 1931 he was elected to the board of the Zionist Association Germany of the Dresden local group. Friedrich Berlowitz was also involved as a Freemason in the Fraternitas Lodge in 1931/1932. His dental practice was in Johannstadt. In 1936 he fled with his family via Trieste to Haifa, where he ran a dental practice until his retirement in 1960. He died on June 7th, 1963 in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv.
Stumbling stone for Cilly Berlowitz, Lukasstrasse 3, Dresden.JPG This is where
Cilly
Berlowitz,
née Rowelsky,
born in 1900,
fled
Palestine in 1936
Cecilia "Cilly" Berlowitz was born on June 2nd, 1900 in Saillen / Insterburg. She married Friedrich Leopold Berlowitz and moved with him to Dresden. She worked as a singer and répétiteur at the Semperoper and belonged to the liberal-intellectual bourgeoisie as well as to Victor Klemperer's circle of friends. In 1936 she and her family fled to Haifa via Trieste. She died on September 14, 1985 in Ramat Gan (Tel Hashomer) near Tel Aviv. Two of her sisters were murdered in the Majdanek concentration camp near Lublin, while other sisters and brothers emigrated to the USA.
Stumbling stone for Doris Ruth Berlowitz, Lukasstrasse 3, Dresden.JPG
Doris Ruth
Berlowitz married lived here
. Levy,
born 1925,
escaped from
Palestine in 1936
Doris Ruth Levy-Berlowitz was born on September 13, 1925 as the daughter of Friedrich Leopold and Cecilia Berlowitz in Dresden. Due to increasing repression by the National Socialists and the ban on Jews from attending public schools, she switched to the Jewish school in 1935/1936. In 1936 her family fled to Haifa via Trieste. After World War II she studied in London and worked there as an assistant to a child psychiatrist. In 1952 she graduated from the interpreting school in Geneva. During the Eichmann trial in 1961, she was asked to act as a simultaneous translator (Hebrew-German). She also interpreted 20 years later in the court case against the war criminal John Demjanjuk. Today she lives near Tel Aviv.
Stumbling stone for Arthur Juliusburger, Mansfelder Strasse 17, Dresden.JPG Mansfelder Strasse 17
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Arthur and Martha Juliusburger, Mansfelder Strasse 17, Dresden.JPG
Striesen Sep 21 2016
Arthur Juliusburger,
born in 1888, lived here,
arrested several times,
forced labor,
murdered April 23, 1943,
police prison
Arthur Juliusburger was born on June 6, 1888 in Belk, Upper Silesia, in the Rybnik district. He was married to Martha Juliusburger, nee Zeidler. Arthur was a clothing manufacturer, businessman and owner of the Carl Meyer company, founded in 1858, a specialist shop for men's and boys' clothing. In July 1942 he was doing forced labor at the Goehle factory, where Jewish forced laborers were forced by the ZEISS company to assemble torpedo detonators, among other things. After an initial arrest in July 1942 for 3 weeks, he was arrested again on April 21, 1943 and taken to the Dresden police prison together with Fritz Meinhardt. After 2 days both were dead.
Stumbling block for Martha Juliusburger, Mansfelder Strasse 17, Dresden.JPG
Martha
Juliusburger,

nee Zeidler,
born in 1891
, lived here, humiliated, but
survived disenfranchised
Martha Juliusburger, née Zeidler, was born on July 6th, 1891 in Dippoldiswalde. She was married to Artur Juliusburger and survived the Shoah as a non-Jewish woman.
Stumbling block for Otto Kastner, Marschnerstrasse 21, Dresden.JPG Marschnerstrasse 21
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Kastner family, Marschnerstraße 21, Dresden.JPG
Johannstadt 28 Sep 2015
Otto Kastner,
born in 1880
, lived here, arrested in 1937,
escaped to death on
February 21, 1938 in a
police prison
Otto Kastner was born on October 19, 1880 in Görlitz. In 1910 he married Alexandrine Jacoby from Dresden, born on April 4, 1877. The marriage resulted in their son Hans Werner, born on January 4, 1913 in Dresden. Otto worked as a pediatrician in Dresden from 1920 and was forced into retirement in 1933. He was charged in 1935 and 1937 and sentenced to five months in prison in the second trial. He is said to have hanged himself on February 21, 1938. After initially interested in music, Alexandrine had studied medicine and worked as a school doctor until her work permit was revoked in 1934. After her husband's death, she moved to Berlin with her son. In 1939 she organized the escape to England for her son. Alexandrine was deported to Trawniki in 1942.
Stumbling stone for Alexandrine Kastner, Marschnerstrasse 21, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Alexandrine
Kastner
born Jacoby
Vol. 1877
deported in 1942
Warsaw Ghetto
murdered.
Stumbling stone for Hans-Werner Kastner, Marschnerstrasse 21, Dresden.JPG
Hans-Werner
Kastner,
born in 1913, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
Stumbling block for Salcia Geyer, Mathildenstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG Mathildenstrasse 15
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Geyer family, Mathildenstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG
Pirnaische suburb 15th March 2018
Salcia Geyer,
née Kandel,
born in 1883
, lived here, deported 1942
Riga
1943 Auschwitz
murdered Nov. 1943
Stolperstein for Cäcilie Geyer, Mathildenstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG
Cäcilie Geyer,
born in 1912, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
Stumbling block for Minna Geyer, Mathildenstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG
Minna Geyer,
born in 1914, lived here .
Escape 1939
England
Stumbling block for Max Geyer, Mathildenstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Max Geyer
Jg. 1918
'protective custody' 1938
Dachau
flight 1939
England
Max Sachs stumbling block Dresden.JPG Max-Sachs-Strasse 2
(location)
Briesnitz June 11, 2011 This is where
Dr. Max Sachs
born in 1883
arrested 1935
Sachsenburg concentration camp
murdered September 27 , 1935
Max Sachs was born on September 23, 1883 in Breslau, the son of a banking family. He studied economics and joined the SPD . From 1912 he worked as an editor of the Dresdner Volkszeitung and from 1920 to 1933 was a member of the SPD in the Saxon state parliament . Arrested in 1933 and driven through the streets of Johannstadt with the sign “I am a Jew” hanging around his neck ; Arrested again in 1935 and tortured to death in Sachsenburg .
Maria Sachs Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Nov 26, 2012
Maria Sachs,
nee Meyer
Age, lived here
involuntarily moved
1935 Bielefeld
survived
Maria Friederike Adele Sachs was the wife of Max Sachs. They both married in 1910 and they had two children. Shortly after the marriage, the family moved to Dresden. After Max Sachs' second arrest, the family's home was expropriated; Maria Sachs went to Bielefeld, where her husband was buried.
Claire Ehrmann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Here lived
Claire Ehrmann
born Sachs
Jg. 1916
Escape 1935
Holland
France
Portugal
United States
survived
Ursula Klara "Claire" Ehrmann (née Sachs) was born on January 13, 1916 in Dresden. She was the second daughter of Max and Maria Sachs. During the Nazi era, she had contact with forbidden underground organizations of the SPD and was also persecuted. Via Holland and France she managed to escape to the USA, where she became involved in the women's rights movement.
Edith Kaufmann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Edith Kaufmann,
née Sachs,
born in 1912, lived here .
Escape 1935
Holland
France
USA
survived
Edith Kaufmann was born on November 11, 1912 (or 1911) in Dresden as the first daughter of Max and Maria Sachs. After her father was deported, she managed to escape.
Joseph Fränkel Stumbling Stone 2014 Dresden.JPG Melanchthonstrasse 23
(location)
Inner New Town Sep 11 2014
Joseph Fränkel,
born in 1888
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Joseph Fränkel was born on June 18, 1888 in Schneidemühl. He worked as a textile merchant. In 1935 he married Ida Steinhart, owner of the Max Steinhart department store. Fränkel and his wife were deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943, where both perished.
Ida Fränkel Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Ida Fränkel,
née Steinhart,
born in 1887
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Ida Fränkel was born on December 9, 1887 in Tachau. Her first marriage was to Max Steinhart; from this marriage there were two children. The marriage with Joseph Fränkel was concluded in 1935. The couple were deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943, where both perished.
Stumbling block for Bruno Gimpel, Mendelssohnstraße 10, Dresden.JPG Mendelssohnstrasse 10
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Gimpel family, Mendelssohnstraße 10, Dresden.JPG
Blowjoke Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Bruno Gimpel
Jg. 1886
disbarment 1935
Escape to the death
04/28/1943
Stumbling block for Irene Gimpel, Mendelssohnstraße 10, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Irene Gimpel
born Herzing
Jg. 1895
disbarment in 1933
humiliated / Disenfranchised
survive with the help
Stumbling block for Max Schweriner, Mosczinskystrasse 14, Dresden.JPG Mosczinskystraße 14
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Schweriner family, Mosczinskystrasse 14, Dresden.JPG
Suburb of the lake Sep 21 2016
Max Schweriner,
born in 1877
, lived here . Deported 1942
Theresienstadt.
1944 Auschwitz
murdered
Max Schweriner was born on May 8, 1877 in Greifenberg. He ran the manufacture and shop for men's underwear in Dresden. He was married to Käthe Schweriner; they had a son and a daughter. Together they were deported to Theresienstadt on July 28, 1942 and then to Auschwitz on May 15, 1944, where they were murdered. Her son Emil managed to escape across several countries.
Stumbling block for Käthe Viktoria Schweriner, Mosczinskystrasse 14, Dresden.JPG This is where
Käthe Viktoria
Schweriner,

born Marwitz,
born in 1883, lived,
deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
1944,
murdered by Auschwitz
Käthe Viktoria Schweriner, née Marwitz, wife of Max Schweriner, was born on July 4, 1883 in Dresden. Together with her husband, she was deported to Theresienstadt on July 28, 1942, and then to Auschwitz on May 15, 1944, where both were murdered.
Thea Liebermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Mosczinskystraße 14
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Liebermann family, Mosczinskystrasse 14, Dresden.JPG
Suburb of the lake June 11, 2011
Thea Liebermann,
née Katz,
born in 1908
, lived here, deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Thea Liebermann was born on October 1, 1908 or 1910 in Beuthen . From 1935 she lived in Dresden with her husband Emil Liebermann. The marriage had four children. Her husband managed to emigrate in 1939. Thea Liebermann was deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and to Auschwitz in 1943.
Klaus Peter Liebermann Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Klaus Peter
Liebermann,

born in 1932
, lived here, deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Klaus Peter Liebermann was born on August 25, 1932 in Breslau to Emil and Thea Liebermann. In 1942 he and his mother were deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and in 1943 to Auschwitz.
Gabriele Ruth Liebermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Gabriele Ruth
Liebermann,

born in 1934
, lived here, deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Gabriele Ruth Liebermann was born on June 2, 1934 in Dresden as the daughter of Emil and Thea Liebermann. She probably spent the last years of her life in Breslau with her grandparents, who were deported in 1942. It is considered lost.
Wolfgang Dietrich Liebermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Wolfgang Dietrich
Liebermann,

born in 1937
, lived here, deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Wolfgang Dietrich Liebermann was born on June 30, 1937 in Dresden as the son of Emil and Thea Liebermann. He presumably spent the last years of his life in Breslau with his grandparents, who were deported in 1942. He was deported to Grüssau in 1942 and from there to the east in May 1942. Nothing is known about his further fate.
Denny Liebermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Denny
Liebermann,

born in 1939
, lived here, deported in 1945,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Denny Liebermann was born on September 30, 1939 as the son of Emil and Thea Liebermann in Dresden. He presumably spent the last years of his life in Breslau with his grandparents, who were deported in 1942. He is considered lost.
Sally Saul Stolperstein Dresden 2.JPG Niederwaldstrasse 30
(location)
Striesen Nov 25, 2012
Sally Saul,
born in 1882, lived here,
fate unknown
Sally Saul was born on November 21, 1882 in Preußisch Stargard . He worked as a merchant in Dresden and traded in grain and animal feed. His wife Elsa Margareta Schneider was born on December 19, 1893 in Dresden. The couple probably emigrated to Denmark, where they were both deported. Nothing is known about their further fate.
Elsa Margareta Saul Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Elsa Margareta
Saul,

née Schneider,
born in 1893, lived here .
Fate unknown
Stumbling block for Margareta Beate Schmitz, Nürnberger Strasse 28g, Dresden.JPG Nürnberger Strasse 28g
(location)
Südvorstadt Sep 21 2016 Here lived
Margareta Beate
Schmitz

born Egerström
Jg. 1902
trained 1,938
asylum hard tail
'transferred' 23.4.1941
hospital Wiesengrund
murdered 08/17/1941
Margareta Beate Schmits, née Egerström, was born on April 1st, 1902 in Sweden. She was an art student in Dresden and after her marriage in Berlin and after divorce in 1934 lived with her daughter Ingrid in Dresden. As a "mentally ill" person, she was admitted to various mental hospitals in 1938, where she was forced to undergo sterilization, as prescribed in the "Law for the Prevention of Hereditary Diseases" passed by the National Socialists in 1933. On April 23, 1941, she was transferred to the Wiesengrund sanatorium, today's Dobrany in the Czech Republic, where she died at the age of 39. In the death register, the cause of death was noted: from "pneumonia"; one of the usual official Nazi euphemisms for "murdered".
Alfred Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Oberer Kreuzweg 6
(location)
Inner New Town Sep 11 2014
Alfred Steinhart,
born in 1909
, lived here, deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Alfred Steinhart was the son of Max and Ida Steinhart (later Fränkel, see Melanchthonstrasse 23). He was born on February 17, 1907 in Dresden. He was the owner of a household goods store and was expropriated. He was probably deported to Auschwitz, where he perished.
Herta Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Herta Steinhart married here lived
. Saalheimer
born 1915
Escape 1938
England
Canada
Herta Steinhart was born on November 27, 1915 in Dresden; her parents were Max and Ida Steinhart (later Fränkel), her brother Alfred. She managed to escape.
Stumbling block for Emanuel Goldberg, Oeserstrasse 5, Dresden (2) .JPG Oeserstraße 5
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Goldberg family, Oeserstrasse 5, Dresden RK01.jpg
Loschwitz 15th March 2018
Emanuel Goldberg,
born in 1881, lived here .
Escape 1933
France
1937 Palestine
For a detailed biography see Emanuel Goldberg .
Stumbling block for Sophie Goldberg, Oeserstrasse 5, Dresden RK01.jpg Dec 2, 2019
Sophie Goldberg,
née Posniak,
born in 1886, lived here .
Escape 1933
France
1937 Palestine
Stumbling block for Herbert Goldberg, Oeserstrasse 5, Dresden RK01.jpg
Herbert Goldberg,
born in 1914, lived here .
Escape 1933
France
1937 USA
Stumbling block for Rentate Eva Goldberg, Oeserstrasse 5, Dresden RK01.jpg
Renate Eva Goldberg,
born in 1922, lived here .
Escape 1933
France
1937 Palestine
Stumbling stone for Fritz Isidor van Emden, Ostra-Allee (Kronentor), Dresden (1) .JPG Ostra-Allee ( Kronentor )
(location)
Inner old town Dec 2, 2019 Here worked
Fritz Isidor
van Emden

Jg. 1898
disbarment 1933
Escape 1936
England
For a detailed biography see Fritz van Emden .
Leizer Kohn Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Pestalozzistraße 1
(location)
Inner old town Nov 25, 2012 This is where
Leizer Kohn,
born in 1884, lived in
Poland Action,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Leizer or Leon Kohn was born on March 8, 1884. In 1911 he married Berta Kohn and the couple had five children. Leizer Kohn worked as a meat and sausage dealer in Dresden and owned his own shop. In 1938 he was deported to Poland and lived there with his family in Przemyśl . Nothing is known about the further fate.
Bela Kohn Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Bela Kohn,
née Podhorzer,
born in 1885, lived here .
Poland Action,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Berta or Beile Kohn, née Podhover (also Podhorcer or Pordhotzer) was born around 1885. She was the wife of Leizer Kohn, whom she married in 1911. The couple had five children. Berta Kohn was deported to Poland in October 1938 and lived there with her family in Przemyśl . Nothing is known about the further fate.
Regina Kohn Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Regina Kohn,
born in 1919, lived in
Poland,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Regina Kohn was born on March 25, 1919 in Dresden. She was a daughter of Leizer and Berta Kohn. She and her parents were deported to Poland in 1938 and lived there with her family in Przemyśl . Nothing is known about the further fate.
Edith Kohn Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Edith Kohn,
born in 1920, lived here,
Poland Action,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Edith Kohn was born on April 3, 1920 in Dresden. She was a daughter of Leizer and Berta Kohn. She and her parents were deported to Poland in 1938 and lived there with her family in Przemyśl . From 1939 to 1940 she lived in Novi Schokly and planned to emigrate to Palestine there . She returned to her parents in Przemyśl shortly before leaving. Nothing is known about the further fate.
Fanny Kohn Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG This is where
Fanny Kohn,
born in 1922, lived in
Poland,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1938
Fanny Kohn was born on December 5, 1922 in Dresden. She was a daughter of Leizer and Berta Kohn. She and her parents were deported to Poland in 1938 and lived there with her family in Przemyśl . Nothing is known about the further fate.
Stumbling stone for Ignatz Isaak Natowitz, Pestalozzistrasse 17, Dresden.JPG Pestalozzistraße 17
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Natowitz family, Pestalozzistrasse 17, Dresden.JPG
Pirnaische suburb Sep 21 2016
Ignatz Isaak
Natowitz,
born in 1885
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Ignatz Isaak Natowitz was born on September 26, 1885 in Kalwaria, Poland. He was married to Feiga Sofia, nee Weinsieder. They had two children together: Günther and Leonard. Ignatz worked as a chemigrapher and was the deputy chairman of the Association of Jewish Traders and Employees in Dresden. The couple were initially committed to the “Judenhaus” at Cranachstrasse 6, on November 23/24, 1942 to the “Hellerberg Jewish camp” near Dresden and in March 1943 to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Presumably they were murdered immediately upon arrival.
Stumbling block for Feiga Fanny Natowitz, Pestalozzistrasse 17, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Feiga Fanny
NATO joke
born wine boilers
Jg. 1888
interned in 1942
Heller mountains
deported in 1943
murdered in
Auschwitz
Feiga Sofia Natowitz, née Weinsieder, was born on April 1st, 1888 in Kolomea, then Poland, now Ukraine. She was married to Ignatz Isaak Natowitz. They had two sons together: Günther and Leonard. The couple were initially committed to the “Judenhaus” at Cranachstrasse 6, on November 23/24, 1942 to the “Hellerberg Jewish camp” near Dresden and in March 1943 to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Presumably they were murdered immediately upon arrival.
Stumbling stone for Leonard Natowitz, Pestalozzistrasse 17, Dresden.JPG
Leonard Natowitz,
born in 1914
, lived here, interned 1942
Hellerberge
deported 1943
Auschwitz
1945 Liberated
Buchenwald death march
Leonard Natowitz, son of Ignatz and Feiga Natowitz, was born on October 11, 1914 in Dresden. He married Margot Sophie, née Höxter. He completed a teachers' seminar in Würzburg and taught as a teacher at the Jewish school in Dresden. Both were deported, together with his parents, to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" in Dresden on November 23/24, 1942. From there they were deported to Auschwitz on March 2, 1943. His inmate number was 105486 and most of the time he had to work in the coal mine. During the evacuation on January 22, 1945, he reached Buchenwald on the so-called death march and was liberated there in April 1945. After meeting again in Dresden, they both emigrated to America.
Stumbling stone for Günther Natowitz, Pestalozzistrasse 17, Dresden.JPG
Günther Natowitz,
born in 1922, lived here .
Kindertransport 1939
Holland
interned / deported
Auschwitz
Sachsenhausen
liberated
Günter Natowitz, son of Ignatz and Feiga Natowitz, was born on August 15th, 1922 in Dresden. He celebrated his bar mitzvah on August 24th, 1935. He reached the Netherlands on the Kindertransport in 1939, was interned and deported to Auschwitz. His prisoner number was 150744. He was deported from Auschwitz to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where he was liberated on April 23, 1945.
Stumbling stone for Oskar Steinhart, Pfotenhauer Strasse 16, Dresden.JPG Pfotenhauer Strasse 16
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Steinhart family, Pfotenhauer Strasse 16, Dresden.JPG
Johannstadt 28 Sep 2015
Oskar
Steinhart,
born in 1883
, lived here . Deported 1942
Riga
murdered
Auschwitz in November 1943
Oskar Steinhart was born on February 8, 1883 in Tachau. His siblings were Ida Fränkel, Max Steinhart and Rosa Steinhart (see Stolpersteine ​​entries). Oskar was married to Bertra Rosenberger, born on December 10, 1881 in Haid. Erich, born on March 29, 1912, and Herbert, born on January 18, 1914, were born in Dresden. The family was deported to the Riga ghetto in 1942, the couple were murdered in Auschwitz in 1943. Erich Steinhart is considered lost; his trace is lost in the Buchenwald camp. Herbert was murdered in the Natzweiler concentration camp.
Stumbling stone for Berta Steinhart, Pfotenhauer Strasse 16, Dresden.JPG
Berta
Steinhart,
née Rosenberger,
born in 1881
, lived here, deported 1942
Riga,
murdered November 5, 1943
Auschwitz
Stumbling block for Erich Steinhart, Pfotenhauer Strasse 16, Dresden.JPG
Erich
Steinhart,
born in 1912
, lived here . Deported 1942
Riga
1944 Stutthof
murdered in
Buchenwald
Stumbling stone for Herbert Steinhart, Pfotenhauer Strasse 16, Dresden.JPG Herbert
Steinhart,
born in 1914
, lived here, deported 1942
Riga
1944 Stutthof
murdered November 27, 1944
Natzweiler
Stumbling stone for Hans Nagelstock, Pillnitzer Straße 34, Dresden (1) .JPG Pillnitzer Strasse 34
(location)
Pirnaische suburb Sep 21 2016 Here lived
Hans nail Stock
Jg. 1906
arrested several times
because of § 175
prison Bautzen
1941 Sachsenhausen
murdered 16/02/1942
Hans Nagelstock was born on August 1st, 1906 in Dresden. He worked as a businessman. He was arrested several times because of his homosexuality. In January 1941 he was deported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp with the prisoner number 35.056 and the prisoner categories as "professional criminal", §175 and as a Jew, where he was murdered in 1942.
Haydee Schmidt stumbling blocks Dresden.jpg Räcknitzstrasse 11
(location)
Suburb of the lake July 22, 2021
Haydee Schmidt,
née Grünwald,
born in 1884
, lived here, deported 1942
Auschwitz
murdered March 31, 1943
Chaim Levin Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Regensburger Strasse 3
(location)
Plauen Nov 4, 2009
Chaim Levin,
born in 1866
, lived here, deported on September 7th,
1942 Theresienstadt
murdered on December 15th, 1942
Merchant Chaim Lewin was born on November 25, 1866 in Ashyany . His first wife, with whom he had four children, died in 1923. Chaim Lewin was married to Anna Barwich for the second time. He had to spend his last years in the "Judenhaus" at Pirnaische Strasse 23 and was deported to Theresienstadt in 1942.
Herbert Samuel Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Regensburger Strasse 15
(location)
Plauen Nov 26, 2012
Herbert Samuel,
born in 1894
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge,
deported in 1943,
murdered in
Auschwitz
Herbert Samuel was born on May 12, 1894 in Stolp . He worked as a merchant for grain and animal feed. A son came from the marriage with child educator Ellen Samuel. Samuel had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Röhrhofsgasse 16 and in 1942 he was deported to the "Judenlager Hellerberg". In 1943 he was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp.
Stumbling blocks Riesaer Straße 40 (03) .jpg Riesaer Strasse 40
(location)
Stumbling blocks Riesaer Straße 40 (01) .jpg
Pieschen July 21, 2021 Here lived
Georg Friedrich
Swiss
Jg. 1870
Member SPD
"protective custody" in 1933
Hohnstein
1,934 sick dismissed
Here lived
Louise Martha
Swiss
born Wiesner
Jg. 1874
humiliated / Disenfranchised
Stolpersteine ​​Riesaer Straße 40 (04) .jpg Here lived
Louis Alexander
Swiss
Jg. 1901
since 1914 several
medical institutions
"relocated" 26/05/1941
Pirna-Sonnenstein
murdered 26/05/1941
Action T4
Stumbling block for Leo Leiser Langer, Rietschelstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG Rietschelstrasse 15
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Langer family, Rietschelstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG
Pirnaische suburb Sep 21 2016 Here lived
Leo Leiser Langer
Jg. 1887
'Poland action' 1938
Beythen / Bytom
murdered in
occupied Poland
Leo Langer was born on December 5, 1887 in spas that were then part of Poland . He had eight other siblings. He lived in Dresden from the beginning of the 20th century. During World War I he fought in the German army on the Eastern Front and was taken prisoner by the Russians. After his liberation he received a Cross of Merit. His son Max Langer was born on June 30, 1913, almost ten years later, on August 25, 1923 Antonie, called Toni, Langer was born. Together with his wife Rosa (Reisel) Langer, née Adler, he ran a furniture and antique shop as well as a shoe store. Both had 2 children: Max and Toni. When the National Socialists came to power, they were exposed to increasing reprisals. As part of the so-called “Poland Action” between October 28 and 29, 1938, Reinhard Heydrich, the head of the SS security service, arrested all Jews of Polish origin and deported them to Poland. Except for Max, who was able to save himself, the Langer family was affected. Presumably they were murdered in an extermination camp in 1942.
Stumbling stone for Rosa Langer, Rietschelstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Rosa Langer
née Adler
born. 1887
'Poland action' 1938
Beythen / Bytom
murdered in
occupied Poland
Rosa / Reisel Langer was born on December 5, 1887 in Roschnjatiw, then part of Poland, as Rosa / Reisel Adler, known as Morgenstern. She had seven other siblings. Since the beginning of the 20th century she lived in Dresden and ran a furniture and antique shop as well as a shoe store with her husband Leiser Leo Langer. Both had 2 children: Max and Toni. When the National Socialists came to power, they were exposed to increasing reprisals. As part of the so-called “Poland Action” between October 28 and 29, 1938, Reinhard Heydrich, the head of the SS security service, arrested all Jews of Polish origin and deported them to Poland. Except for Max, who was able to save himself, the Langer family was affected. Presumably they were murdered in an extermination camp in 1942.
Stumbling block for Max Langer, Rietschelstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG
Max Langer,
born in 1913, lived here .
Flucht 1936
Palestine
Max Langer was born on June 30, 1913 as the first child of Rosa and Leo Langer in Dresden. He attended high school in Wettin and was also active in the German-Jewish scout group Blau-Weiß. Later he was active in the KPD. After the National Socialists came to power, his father advised him to leave Dresden. He obtained an exit certificate for two people to Palestine, apparently married his cousin Ester Edelstein and emigrated with her in 1936, saving her from murder. After their divorce, Max married Flora Elisabeth Langer, née Hamburg, who came from Holland. Max Langer died in Israel on November 8, 2000.
Stumbling block for Toni Langer, Rietschelstrasse 15, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Toni Langer
Jg. 1923
'Poland action' 1938
Beuthen / Bytom
murdered in
occupied Poland
Antonie (Toni) Langer was born on August 25, 1923 as the second child of Rosa and Leo Langer in Dresden. She and her parents were deported to Poland during the so-called "Poland Action". Presumably they were murdered in an extermination camp near Lemberg in 1942.
Owadie Leib Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Rietschelstrasse 19
(location)
Pirnaische suburb Sep 11 2014
Owadie Leib
Zwecher,
born in 1880,
“Polenaktion” lived here . 1938
Bentschen / Zbaszyn
murdered in
occupied Poland
Owadie Leib Zwecher was born on June 9, 1880 in Kolomea. He was married to Chane Zwecher; the children Malka Lea and Chaskel Kurt came from the marriage. He worked as a businessman and was deported to Poland with his wife and daughter in 1938; his fate is unknown.
Chane Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Chane Zwecher,
née Fränkel,
born in 1879
“Polenaktion” lived here . 1938
Bentschen / Zbaszyn
murdered in
occupied Poland
Chane Zwecher was born on October 23, 1879 in Buckow. She was deported to Poland with her husband and daughter in 1938 and is considered missing.
Malka Lea Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Malka Lea
Zwecher,
born in 1919, lived
"Polenaktion" 1938
Bentschen / Zbaszyn
murdered in
occupied Poland
Malka Lea Zwecher was born on July 21, 1919 in Dresden. She and her parents were deported to Poland in 1938; possibly she managed to emigrate.
Chaskel Kurt Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Chaskel Kurt
Zwecher,
born in 1912, lived here .
Escape 1939
Italy
Palestine
Chaskel Kurt Zwecher was born on November 11, 1912 in Dresden and was involved in the city's Jewish cultural life. He studied law and, after his exclusion, Jewish theology in Breslau. After brief imprisonment in Dresden in 1939, he managed to escape that same year.
Albert Hirsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Rietschelstrasse 28
(location)
Pirnaische suburb Sep 11 2014
Albert Hirsch,
born in 1900
, lived here . Arrested 1943
Mauthausen
liberated / survived
Albert Hirsch, born on February 2 or December 1900 in Borghorst, was married to Fanny Hirsch from 1929; the marriage had son Manfred. He was arrested in 1938 and deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp. After his release in 1939, he emigrated to the Netherlands, was arrested and brought to Dresden, arrested again in 1939 and, from 1941, a slave laborer at the Goehle factory in Dresden. From 1942 the family lived in the "Judenhaus" at Sporergasse 2 and in 1942 they were deported to the "Judenlager Hellerberg" and in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp. In 1945 Hirsch came to Mauthausen concentration camp, where he was liberated.
Fanny Hirsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Fanny Hirsch,
née Schneck,
born in 1901
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Fanny Hirsch was born on September 17, 1901 as the daughter of Abraham and Pessia Schneck (see Seestraße 7 ) in Dresden. His marriage to Albert Hirsch in 1929 had a son. From 1941 she was forced to work in the

Goehle factory in Dresden and in 1942 move into the "Judenhaus" at Sporergasse 2. In 1942 she was deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish camp" and in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she perished.

Manfred Hirsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Manfred Hirsch,
born in 1929
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Manfred Hirsch, born on November 10, 1929 in Dresden, had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Sporergasse 2 with his parents in 1942. In 1942 he was deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish camp" and in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where he perished.
Zalko Bialaschewsky Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Robert-Blum-Strasse 1 at the
corner of Kleine Marienbrücke
(location)
Inner New Town June 11, 2011 This is where
Zalko
Bialaschewsky,

born in 1865, lived,
deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered 7.2.1943
Merchant Zalko Bialaschewsky was born on October 15, 1865 in Grajewo and moved to Dresden in 1897. He had four children with his wife Tauba († 1933). Most recently, Bialaschewsky, who had received German citizenship in 1920, had to live in the "Judenhaus" at Kaiserstraße 1. He was deported to Theresienstadt in 1942.
Stumbling blocks Röhrhofsgasse 18 - 04.jpg Röhrhofsgasse 18
(location)
Stumbling blocks Röhrhofsgasse 18 - 01.jpg
Old town July 21, 2021
Jona Hönigsberg,
born in 1879, lived here .
Flucht 1939
arrested October 20, 1938
1939 Waldheim
prison released 1941
Dead as a result of imprisonment in Hanover
May 6, 1941
Stumbling Stones Röhrhofsgasse 18 - 05.jpg
Klara 'Chaye' Hönigsberg,
née Geller,
born in 1880
, lived here, deported to Poland in 1939.
Fate unknown /
murdered in occupied Poland
Rosa Menzer Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Rosa-Menzer-Strasse 19
(location)
Striesen Sep 24 2013 Here lived
Rosa Menzer
born Litwin
Jg. 1886
in the resistance
arrested in 1934
Waldheim prison
in 1940 Ravensbruck
, 'May 1942 laid
Bernburg
murdered 28/05/1942
For a detailed biography see Rosa Menzer .
Stumbling Stone Rosenstrasse 31 - 01.jpg Rosenstrasse 31
(location)
Old town July 21, 2021
George Steinhart,
born 1879
, lived here, arrested in
Dresden
Hellerberge prison,
escaped to death on
January 31, 1935
Kurt Mosberg Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Rückertstrasse 12
(location)
Pieschen Dec 5, 2013
Kurt Mosberg,
born in 1911
, lived here, arrested 1940
Sachsenhausen
1941 Dachau
moved March 3rd, 1942
Hartheim Castle
murdered March 3rd, 1942
Kurt Mosberg was born on April 13, 1911 in Dresden. He had a child with his partner Ella Greif. He worked as a galvanizer. He was probably deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp and, in 1940, to Dachau concentration camp. He came to Hartheim Castle in Austria in the course of an "invalid transport" in 1942 and was gassed here after his arrival in 1942.
Stumbling block for Walter Karl Schäfer, Rudolf-Leonhard-Straße 36, Dresden.JPG Rudolf-Leonhard-Strasse 36
(location)
Hechtviertel 28 Sep 2015 Here lived
Walter Karl
Schaefer
Jg. 1910
Jehovah's Witnesses
arrested in 1942
conscientious denied
executed 09.26.1942
Brandenburg-Gorden
Walter Karl Schäfer was born on November 28, 1910 in Dresden. As a Jehovah's Witness he refused military service, was sentenced to death in August 1942 and executed in September 1942.
Stumbling block for Hans Schulze, Saarstrasse 30, Dresden.JPG Saarstrasse 30
(location)
Coschütz 29 Sep 2015 Here lived
Hans Schulze
Jg. 1920
Jehovah's Witnesses
arrested in 1941
conscientious denied
executed 05.09.1941
Brandenburg-Gorden
Hans Schulze was born on November 21, 1920 in Dresden. As a Jehovah's Witness he refused to do military service, was sentenced to death in April 1941 and executed in May 1941.
Stumbling stone for Iwan Schwarz, Schandauer Straße 22, Dresden (1) .JPG Schandauer Strasse 22
(location)
Striesen Dec 2, 2019 Here lived
Ivan Black
Vol. 1893
Forced Labor
shelter Prohibition
Dead air strike
13/02/1945
Saxony, Dresden, Hofkirche NIK 7169.jpg Schloßplatz ,
Catholic Court Church ,
main entrance
(location)
Inner old town June 11, 2011 Here worked
Kaplan
Alojs Andritzki
Jg. 1914
arrested in 1941
Dachau
murdered
03/02/1943
For a detailed biography see Alojs Andritzki .
Clara Weiss Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Schlueterstrasse 22b
(location)
Gruna Nov 4, 2009
Clara Weiss,
née Nathan,
born in 1889
, lived here, deported in 1942
Hellerberge camp,
murdered in 1943 in
Auschwitz
Clara Weiss was born on June 22, 1889 in Zduny . She was married to the cloth merchant Hermann Weiss; the marriage had two children. At last she had to move to the “Judenhaus” at Fiedlerstrasse 3 and was deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and to Auschwitz in 1943.
Eva Weiss Stolperstein Dresden.JPG This is where
Eva Weiss,
born in 1921, lived in
the Hellerberge camp,
murdered in 1943 in
Auschwitz
Eva Weiss was born on July 28, 1921 in Dresden as the daughter of Hermann and Clara Weiss. She played in the handball club and from 1940 worked as a consultation assistant for doctor Willy Katz . In 1942 she was deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Ruth Jahrreiß Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Schurichtstrasse 3
(location)
Räcknitz /
Zschertnitz
Nov 26, 2012 Here lived
Ruth Jahrreiss
born Mannheim
Jg. 1902
"protective custody" in 1942
deported in 1942
Auschwitz
murdered 23/12/1942
Ruth Jahrreiß, also Jahreiß , was born on January 2nd, 1902 in Berlinchen . She was a drawing teacher. She had two sons with her husband, Robert Otto Jahrreiß, who was not a Jew. She was obliged to do forced labor and, presumably after a denunciation, arrested in 1942 and deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Stumbling block for Berta Kaps, Schweizer Strasse at the corner of Kaitzer Strasse, Dresden (1) .JPG Schweizer Strasse and Kaitzer Strasse
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Bertha Kaps,
née Beck,
born in 1882, lived here .
Deported 1943
Auschwitz
murdered November 1st, 1943
Bertha Kaps was the daughter of Aurelie Beck.
Stumbling block for Aurelie Beck, Schweizer Strasse 5, Dresden.JPG Schweizer Strasse 5
(location)
Südvorstadt 29 Sep 2015
Aurelie Beck,
née Simon,
born in 1856
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered September 8 , 1942
Aurelie Beck was born on December 20, 1856 in Horschitz as the daughter of Salomon Simon and Sophie Mandelbaum. She moved to Dresden with her husband and children in the mid-1880s, where the family converted to Protestantism. After her husband's death in 1932, she lived with her daughter and later in the Henriettenstift retirement home (“Judenhaus”), from where she was deported to Theresienstadt.
Abraham Jacob Schneck Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Seestrasse 7
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Schneck family, Seestraße 7, Dresden.JPG
Inner old town Sep 11 2014
Abraham Jacob
Schneck,
born in 1874
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered December 18, 1943
Auschwitz
Abraham Jacob Schneck was born in Kolomea on September 20, 1874. The marriage with Pessia had the children Rosa, Leon, Betty and Fanny (married Hirsch, see Rietschelstrasse 28). He worked as a merchant and had to move into the "Judenhaus" at Röhrsdorfgasse 16 with his wife. Both were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942 and to Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943, where they perished.
Pessia Schneck Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Pessia Schneck,
née Prinsterstein,
born in 1876
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered December 18, 1943
Auschwitz
Pessia Schneck, born on September 13, 1876 in Kolomea, was deported with her husband to Theresienstadt in 1942 and to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943, where they perished.
Rosa Schneck Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Rosa Schneck,
born in 1905
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Rosa Schneck was born in Dresden on January 21 or 24, 1905. She was deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and to Auschwitz in 1943, where she perished.
Leon Schneck Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG This is where
Leon Schneck,
born in 1914, lived in
“protective custody”.
Deported in 1939 ,
murdered in
occupied Poland in 1940
Leon Schneck, born on June 22, 1914 in Dresden, was arrested in 1939 and deported to Lublin in late 1939 or early 1940, where he perished.
Stumbling Stone Dresden Schneck Betty.jpg 28 Sep 2015
Betty Schneck,
born in 1907
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Betty Schneck, born on October 8, 1907 in Dresden, was the sister of Leon and Rosa Schneck. She was the mother of Jutta (born July 9, 1938 in Dresden) and Tana (born June 16, 1940 in Dresden). She and her daughters were deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in November 1942 and from there to Auschwitz-Birkenau in March 1943, where they were presumably immediately murdered.
Stumbling Stone Dresden Schneck Tana.jpg
Tana Schneck,
born in 1940
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Stumbling Stone Dresden Schneck Jutta.jpg Jutta Schneck, born in 1938 , lived
here, interned in 1942, deported to Hellerberge in 1943, murdered by Auschwitz on March 3rd , 1943






Stumbling block for Markus Hundert, Seestraße 7, Dresden.JPG Seestrasse 7
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Hundert family, Seestraße 7, Dresden (2) .JPG
Inner old town Dec 2, 2019
Markus Hundert,
born in 1906, lived here .
Escape 1934 Interned in France
Drancy
deported 1942
Auschwitz
murdered August 13 , 1942
Stumbling block for Berl Hundert, Seestraße 7, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Berl hundred
Jg. 1899
'Poland action' 1938
1941 Ghetto Stanislau
murdered in 1942
Stumbling block for Heni Hundert, Seestraße 7, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Heni hundred
Born bird
Jg. 1904
'Poland action' 1938
1941 Ghetto Stanislau
murdered in 1942
Stumbling block for Isel Hundert, Seestraße 7, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Isel hundred
Jg. 1925
'Poland action' 1938
1941 Ghetto Stanislau
murdered in 1942
Stumbling blocks Semperstrasse 3b - 05.jpg Semperstrasse 3b
(location)
Stumbling blocks Semperstraße 3b - 02.jpg
Südvorstadt July 22, 2021
Mary Gertrud Cronheim,
born in 1870
, lived here . Deported 1942
Theresienstadt.
1944 Auschwitz
murdered
Stumbling blocks Semperstrasse 3b - 04.jpg
Elisabeth Cronheim,
born in 1860, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead in 1938
Stumbling Stone Dresden Dietze.JPG Sophienstrasse 16
(location)
Old town 29 Sep 2015 Here worked
Hermann Max
Dietze
Jg. 1901
Jehovah's Witnesses
arrested in 1933
Hohnstein
1935 Sachsenburg
dead of adhesion consequences
28/09/1938
Max Hermann Dietze was born on July 20, 1901 in Auerbach. He completed an apprenticeship at the Porcelain Manufactory in Meißen and, as a co-inventor of tunable porcelain bells, was involved in the development of the porcelain carillon of the Frauenkirche Meißen and the Dresden Zwinger. As a Jehovah's Witness, Dietze was arrested for the first time in 1933 and deported to the Hohnstein concentration camp in December 1933. Several arrests and his release from the Meißen factory in 1935 followed. He was imprisoned in Sachsenburg concentration camp until 1936 and died in 1938 as a result of the abuse in Selb.
Stumbling Stone Dresden Gottschling.JPG Here worked
Ernst Fritz
Gottschling
Jg. 1903
Jehovah's Witnesses
arrested in 1937
Buchenwald
death march
murdered 21/04/1945
Ernst Fritz Gottschling was born on October 3, 1903 in Meißen and worked as a porcelain painter. He was involved in the development of the carillon in the Dresden Zwinger. As a Jehovah's Witness, Gottschling was released in 1935, arrested in 1937 and sentenced to six months in prison. After he was detained, he was deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp. He was shot dead during a death march in April 1945.
Stumbling block for Willy Nathan Estreicher, Spenerstrasse 36, Dresden.JPG Spenerstraße 36
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Else and Willy Nathan Estreicher, Spenerstrasse 36, Dresden.JPG
Striesen 15th March 2018
Willy Nathan
Estreicher,

born in 1879
, lived here, arrested December 8, 1941
Gestapo Dresden
1942 Buchenwald
murdered July 2, 1942
Willy Nathan Estreicher was born on September 21, 1879 in Dresden and baptized Jewish. He was trained as a businessman and worked among other things. as an advertiser for the Israelitische Religionsgemeinde Dresden, where in 1939 he was also the head of the housing agency. On December 8, 1941, the Gestapo picked him up at his home at Stormstrasse 31, imprisoned him and, after being deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp, murdered him on July 2, 1942. His ashes were sent home to his wife Else in an urn. House and street no longer exist, hence the relocation of the stumbling blocks "around the corner".
Stumbling block for Else Estreicher, Spenerstrasse 36, Dresden.JPG
Else Estreicher,
née Göbler,
born in 1900, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
survived
Else Göbler was born on October 9th, 1900 in Sebnitz / Erzgebirge and moved with her family to Dresden-Striesen after the First World War. There she married Willy Nathan Estreicher in the late 1920s and had a son, Erhard Estreicher in 1929. When Willy was arrested and imprisoned by the Gestapo in 1941, the Nazis urged Else to divorce her (she was Christian, he was Jewish), but she refused and was sent to Gestapo prison for months without giving in. After her release, bombing and the end of the war, she moved with her two sons (Joachim Hammer from 1st marriage) to Geising / Erzgebirge, where she died in 1986.
Stumbling stone for Arthur Weineck, Stollestrasse 40, Dresden (1) .JPG Stollestrasse 40
(location)
Löbtau Sep 21 2016 Here lived
Arthur Weineck
Jg. 1900
in resistance / KPD
arrested 03/12/1943
'high treason and
aiding the enemy'
executed 16.08.1944
District Court
For a detailed biography see Arthur Weineck .
Leo Silbermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Strehlener Strasse 19
(location)
Südvorstadt Nov 26, 2012
Leo Silbermann,
born in 1895
, lived here, deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Leo Silbermann was born in Łódź on April 18, 1895 . Simon Silbermann (Stolperstein Winckelmannstrasse 3) was his brother. Leo Silbermann came to Germany in 1923, where he worked as a cashier. He had to move with his wife and daughter to the “Judenhaus” at Strehlener Strasse 52, in 1942 he was deported to the “Judenlager Hellerberg” and from there in 1943 to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Rosa Silbermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Rosa Silbermann,
née Semmel,
born in 1900
, lived here, deported to
Auschwitz
in 1943 and murdered
Rosa Silbermann was born on December 3, 1900 in Stanislau . She married Leo Silbermann in 1926, and daughter Margot Felicja was born the following year. Rosa Silbermann had to move with her husband and daughter to the “Judenhaus” at Strehlener Strasse 52, was deported to the “Judenlager Hellerberg” in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943.
Margot Felicja Silbermann Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG This is where
Margot Felicja
Silbermann,

born in 1927
, lived . Deported in 1943, murdered
Auschwitz
Margot Felicja Silbermann was born on September 8, 1927 in Dresden as the daughter of Leo and Rosa Silbermann. She attended the Jewish school in Dresden. She and her parents had to move to the “Judenhaus” at Strehlener Strasse 52, were deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and from there to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943.
Sigmund Hann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Striesener Strasse 38a
(location)
Johannstadt Nov 25, 2012
Sigmund Hann,
born in 1875
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered February 15, 1943
Sigmund Hann was born on November 17, 1875 in Dresden. He worked as a pastry chef. He and his wife Malwine, who was born in Prague on August 4, 1875, had to move into the “Judenhaus” on Cranachstrasse 6 in Dresden. Both were deported to Theresienstadt in August 1942.
Malwine Hann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Malwine Hann
nee Brandeis
born in 1875 lived here,
deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered December 16 , 1942
Stumbling Stones Stübelallee 7h - 05.jpg Stübelallee 7h
(location)
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 01.jpg
Johannstadt July 22, 2021
Olga Kussi,
née Langer,
born in 1874, lived here .
Escape 1939 Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Theresienstadt
murdered 10/30/44
Auschwitz
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 08.jpg This is where
Nelly Steinberg
née Kussi,
born in 1896, lived,
deported in 1942,
Ravensbrück
deported in 1942,
Auschwitz
murdered November 15 , 1942
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 06.jpg This is where
Dr. Viktor Kussi Born
1897
Escape 1939 Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Theresienstadt
murdered 10/30/44
Auschwitz
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 07.jpg This is where
Dr. Werner Franz
Kussi Born
1910
Escape 1939 Holland
interned Westerbork
deported 1943
Theresienstadt
1944 Auschwitz
liberated
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 09.jpg This is where
Stefan Manfred
Steinberg,
born in 1923, lived .
Escape 1939
England,
British soldier,
dead April 9th, 1945
near Hanover
Stumbling blocks Stübelallee 7h - 10.jpg
Franz Egon
Steinberg,
born in 1925
, lived here . Deported 1943
Auschwitz
Forced labor 1943
Ghetto Warsaw
1944 Dachau
liberated
Stumbling stone for Felicia Glückmann, Tiergartenstraße 8, Dresden (1) .JPG Tiergartenstrasse 8
(location)
Stumbling Stones Tiergartenstrasse 8 (03) .jpg
Old town Dec 2, 2019
Felicia Glückmann,
née Elb,
born in 1858, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised,
dead in 1941
Stumbling Stones Tiergartenstrasse 8 (02) .jpg July 21, 2021
Helene Martha Zucker,
née Glückmann,
born in 1879
, lived here, deported in 1942, murdered in
Riga on February 5 , 1942

Stumbling block for Elsa Salzburg, Tiergartenstraße 18, Dresden.JPG Tiergartenstrasse 18
(location)
Stumbling blocks for Elsa Salzburg and the Stein family, Tiergartenstraße 18, Dresden (2) .JPG
Old town Dec 2, 2019
Elsa Salzburg,
née Glückmann,
born in 1881, lived here,
escaped in 1940,
Cuba,
USA
Stumbling stone for Alfred Stein, Tiergartenstraße 18, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Alfred, Fred '
Stone

Vol. 1909
Escape 1933 France
arrested in 1939
' Enemy Aliens'
interned Villerbon
1940 fled / hidden
flight 1941 United States
Stumbling stone for Liselotte Stein, Tiergartenstraße 18, Dresden.JPG Here lived
Liselotte, Lilo '
Stein

born Salzburg
Jg. 1910
Escape 1933 France
since 1940 hidden
flight 1941 United States
Hans Maier stumbling blocks Dresden.jpg Tolstoistraße 9
(location)
Family Maier Stolpersteine ​​Dresden (1) .jpg
Loschwitz July 22, 2021 This is where
Dr. Hans Maier
born 1889
member / SPD
humiliated / disenfranchised
Escape in de death
December 18, 1937
Anna Maier Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg
Anna Maier
née Graetz,
born in 1890, lived here,
humiliated / disenfranchised
Hanna Maier stumbling blocks Dresden.jpg
Hanna Maier,
born in 1915, lived here .
Escape 1938
USA
Henry Maier Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg
Henry Maier,
born in 1918, lived here .
Escape 1938 USA
Margarete Maier Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg
Margarete Maier,
born in 1921, lived here,
escaped from
Brazil in 1938
Walter Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Trachenberger Strasse 23
(location)
Pieschen Nov 26, 2012
Walter Steinhart,
born in 1880
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Walter Steinhart was born on September 5, 1880 in Weiden. He ran a home and kitchen appliance shop. In 1940 he suffered a stroke. He and his wife, Rosa Steinhart , who was born in Tachau on June 17, 1885, had to move to the “Judenhaus” at Bautzner Strasse 20;
Rosa Steinhart Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Rosa Steinhart,
born in 1885
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Gertrud Hille Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Uhlandstrasse 34
(location)
Südvorstadt Oct 26, 2012
Gertrud Hille,
born in 1899, lived here,
patient
in various
sanatoriums and nursing homes
, 'relocated' 1941
Pirna-Sonnenstein
murdered March 25, 1941
Action T4
Gertrud Hille was born on December 12, 1899 in Coschütz . She worked as a housemaid and was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1917. A brief treatment in the Arnsdorf psychiatry followed in 1918 ; from 1927 to 1940 Arnsdorf psychiatry, 1940 Hochweitzschen , 1941 Großschweidnitz and then deportation to the Pirna-Sonnenstein killing center , where she was murdered in 1941 .
Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Voglerstrasse 15
(location)
Striesen Nov 25, 2012 Here lived
Elfriede
Lohse-Wächtler

born Wächtler
Jg. 1899
trained 1,932
hospital Arnsdorf
"relocated" 07/31/1940
Pirna-Sonnenstein
murdered 31/07/1940
Action T4
For a detailed biography see Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler .
Stumbling stone for Albert Hensel, Volkersdorfer Strasse 3, Dresden (1) .JPG Volkersdorfer Strasse 3
(location)
Trachenberg 28 Sep 2015 Here lived
Albert Hensel
born. 1895
in resistance / KPD
arrested in 1941
"conspiracy to
high treason"
police prison
executed 06.05.1942
Berlin-Plötzensee
For a detailed biography see Albert Hensel .
Hirsch German Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Wallotstrasse 7
(location)
Johannstadt Sep 24 2013
Hirsch Deutsch,
born in 1873
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered April 15, 1943
Hirsch Deutsch was born on May 9, 1873 in Zempelburg. He was married to Ella Deutsch from 1909, and they may both have a daughter. He worked as a merchant for textiles and had to move into the "Judenhaus" in Chemnitzer Strasse with his wife. Both were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942, where they perished in 1943.
Ella Deutsch Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Ella Deutsch,
née Jessel,
born in 1877
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered February 15, 1943
Ella Deutsch was born in Stettin on October 9, 1877. She married Hirsch Deutsch in 1909; the marriage may have had a daughter. She and her husband had to move into the "Judenhaus" in Chemnitzer Strasse. Both were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942, where they perished in 1943.
Stumbling stone for Gabriel Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG Wallstrasse 9
(location)
Stumbling blocks for the Blumenkranz family, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden (2) .JPG
Old town 15th March 2018
Gabriel
Blumenkranz,

born in 1888, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Hanna Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG This is where
Hanna
Blumenkranz,

née Müller,
born in 1888,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Michael Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG
Michael
Blumenkranz,

born in 1911, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Hans Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG
Hans
Blumenkranz,

born in 1912, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Fritz Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG
Fritz
Blumenkranz,

born in 1914, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Berta Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG
Berta
Blumenkranz,

born in 1916, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Stumbling stone for Max Blumenkranz, Wallstrasse 9, Dresden.JPG
Max
Blumenkranz,

born in 1917, lived here,
escaped from
Argentina in 1938
Edith Hildegard Kühnert Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Weinbergstrasse 40
(location)
Pieschen
Trachenberg
Sep 24 2013
Edith Hildegard
Kühnert,
née Teutsch,
born 1913, lived here .
Deportation
order February 16, 1945 Left
Dresden
dead February 18, 1945
Cause of death unclear
Edith Hildegard Kühnert was born on October 5, 1913 in Munich. She worked as a teacher; her husband was a Catholic, which initially saved her from deportation. The couple had a daughter, Barbara. She received the deportation order on February 16, 1945 and fled with her daughter on foot in the direction of Elsterwerda. Her body and that of her child were found on February 18, 1945 in a fish pond near Thalberg, although the cause of death could not be clarified.
Barbara Kühnert Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Barbara Kühnert,
born in 1943, lived here,
deportation
order February 16, 1945 left
Dresden
dead February 18, 1945
Cause of death unclear
Barbara Kühnert was born on February 5, 1945 as the only child of Willibald and Edith Hildegard Kühnert in Dresden. Her mother fled with her on foot in the direction of Elsterwerda after she had received the deportation order in February 1945. Her body and that of her mother Edith Hildegard were found on February 18, 1945 in a fish pond near Thalberg, although the cause of death could not be clarified.
Anna Pick Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Wilsdruffer Strasse at the
corner of Wallstrasse
(location)
Inner old town June 11, 2011
Anna Pick
née Fleischner,
born in 1862
, lived here, deported to
Theresienstadt,
murdered on November 30, 1942
Anna Pick was born on October 22 or December 1862 in Zájezdec , Bohemia, as one of four sisters. She married Jakob Pick († 1904), the marriage had three children. Anna Pick lived with her sister in Dresden and was deported to Theresienstadt on September 7, 1942.
Irma Sonnenschein Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Wiener Strasse 95
(location)
Suburb of the lake Sep 24 2013
Irma
Sonnenschein,
born in 1924
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Irma Sonnenschein was born on November 13, 1924 in Dresden. She grew up with her grandparents with her sisters Mirjam and Sonja after their father died in 1931 and their mother died in 1933. In 1942 Irma was deported with her siblings to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and from there to Auschwitz in 1943, where she perished.
Mirjam Sonnenschein Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Mirjam
Sonnenschein,
born in 1926
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Mirjam Sonnenschein was born on August 26, 1926 in Dresden. She grew up with her grandparents with her sisters Irma and Sonja after their father died in 1931 and their mother died in 1933. In 1942 Mirjam was deported with her siblings to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and from there to Auschwitz in 1943, where she perished.
Sonja Sonnenschein Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG
Sonja
Sonnenschein,
born in 1929
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Sonja Sonnenschein was born on February 25, 1929 in Dresden. She grew up with her grandparents with her sisters Mirjam and Irma after their father died in 1931 and their mother died in 1933. In 1942 Sonja and her siblings were deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” and from there to Auschwitz in 1943, where she perished.
Simon Silbermann Stumbling Stone Dresden.JPG Winckelmannstrasse 3
(location)
Trachenberg Nov 26, 2012
Simon Silbermann,
born in 1891
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Simon Silbermann was born in Łódź on March 18, 1891 . Leo Silbermann (Stolperstein Strehlener Straße 19) was his brother. Simon Silbermann lived in Saxony from 1919 and worked as a businessman. He was married to Gertrud Silbermann, the marriage had two twin sons. He and his wife were deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and from there to Auschwitz in 1943, where he perished.
Gertrud Silbermann Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Gertrud
Silbermann,

née Fleischmann,
born in 1895
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Gertrud Silbermann was born on April 16, 1895 in Dresden. She married Simon Silbermann, the marriage had twin sons. Gertrud Silbermann was a slave laborer at Zeiss Ikon . She and her husband were deported to the "Hellerberg Jewish Camp" in 1942. In 1943 she was deported to Auschwitz, where she perished.
Hedwig Simon Stolpersteine ​​Dresden.jpg Wolfshügelstraße 7
(location)
White deer July 22, 2021
Hedwig Simon,
born in 1881
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered by
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Josef Herzberg Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Ziegelstrasse 12
(location)
Pirnaische suburb Sep 24 2013
Josef Herzberg,
born in 1887
, lived here, deported in 1940 to
Lublin.
Fate unknown
Josef Hillel Herzberg was born on February 6, 1887 in Dolina. He had three children with his wife, Helene Herzberg. The family lived in Saxony from 1922, where he worked as a cantor and meat inspector. He was initially imprisoned and in 1940 deported to the Lublin concentration camp, where he was probably shot.
Helene Herzberg Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Helene Herzberg,
née Waldhorn,
born in 1887
, lived here, interned in 1942,
Hellerberge
deported in 1943, murdered in
Auschwitz on
March 3rd , 1943
Helene Herzberg was born on December 18, 1887 in Bohorodczany . She was married to Josef Herzberg; the marriage had three children. From 1922 the family lived in Saxony. Helene Herzberg worked as a packer in a cigarette factory; After the deportation of the man she had to move to the "Judenhaus" at Sporergasse 2 and do forced labor. She was deported to the “Hellerberg Jewish Camp” in 1942 and from there to Auschwitz in March 1943, where she was murdered.
Szymon Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG Sep 11 2014
Szymon Zwecher,
born in 1897,
“Polenaktion” lived here . 1938
Bentschen / Zbaszyn
murdered in
occupied Poland
Szymon Zwecher was born on February 26, 1897 and came to Germany in 1922, where he worked as a clerk. He married Anna Zwecher in 1935; the marriage was born to son Bernhard. The family was expelled to Poland in 1938; her further fate is unknown.
Anna Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Anna Zwecher,
née Weinsieder,
born in 1905
, lived here, expelled in 1939,
murdered in
occupied Poland
Anna Zwecher was born on June 5, 1905 in Dresden. She was married to Szymon Zwecher from 1935. The family was expelled to Poland in 1938; her further fate is unknown.
Bernhard Zwecher Stolperstein Dresden.JPG
Bernhard Zwecher,
born in 1939
, lived here . He was expelled in 1939,
murdered in
occupied Poland
Bernhard Zwecher, born on January 8, 1939 in Dresden, came to Poland with his parents Szymon and Anna, who were expelled in 1938; her further fate is unknown.

literature

  • Society for Christian-Jewish Cooperation, Memorial Book Working Group (ed.): Book of Remembrance. Jews in Dresden. deported, murdered, missing 1933–1945 . Thelem Universitätsverlag, Dresden 2006, ISBN 3-939888-14-1 .

Web links

Commons : Stolpersteine ​​in Dresden  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Dresden should join the Stolpersteine ​​initiative - state capital is considering fees . In: Ostthüringer Zeitung , February 6, 2009, p. OASM906.
  2. a b Gunnar Klehm: tripping over German history. In: Sächsische Zeitung , November 4, 2009, p. 11.
  3. State capital receives first stumbling blocks - five memorial plaques for Nazi victims in Dresden . In: Ostthüringer Zeitung , October 30, 2009, p. OASM930
  4. 19 stumbling blocks will be laid on Saturday . In: Dresdner Latest News , June 10, 2011, p. 13.
  5. Stumbling Over History . In: Sächsische Zeitung , May 14, 2012, p. 14.
  6. a b c Bettina Klemm: A bow to the victims . In: Sächsische Zeitung , October 27, 2012, p. 18.
  7. Julia Vollmer: Commemoration of the victims of National Socialism: 28 new stumbling blocks will be laid in Dresden on Tuesday . In: Dresdner Latest News , September 24, 2013.
  8. Tabular overview on the website of the Stolpersteine association for Dresden
  9. Kay Haufe: Longing for Dresden - Monica Blumenkranz's grandparents fled from the Nazis to Argentina in 1938. They never forgot their homeland. In: Sächsische Zeitung , March 16, 2018, p. 14
  10. Further stumbling blocks for Dresden. dresden.de, accessed on November 6, 2021 .
  11. a b Blitzblau family, Michael . In: Book of Memory , pp. 52–53.
  12. Information on the Wronkow family. stolpersteine-dresden.de
  13. The Pick family, Franz . In: Book of Memory , pp. 280–281.
  14. Former Jewish Dresden residents - The Wermuth, Ryster, Fränkel, Bitterwolf families. (PDF; 891 kB) In: community sheet of the Jewish community in Dresden, June 2019
  15. Biography of Lina Marie Schöbel. Gedenkort-t4.eu
  16. ^ Family Conradi . In: Book of Memory , p. 69.
  17. ↑ The Schmolls . In: Book of Memory , p. 330.
  18. a b Family Schapira . In: Book of Memory , pp. 324-325.
  19. a b Steinhart family, Richard . In: Book of Memory , p. 355.
  20. a b c d Steinhart family, Kurt . In: Book of Memory , pp. 356–357.
  21. Else Auguste Seifert's biography. stolpersteine-dresden.de
  22. Kreidl, Ernst . In: Book of Memory , p. 203.
  23. YouTube video: Stolperstein Project: Portrait of Arthur Anton Zinn, 2019
  24. Altbach family . In: Book of Memory , p. 26.
  25. ^ Family Schindler, Ernst . In: Book of Memory , p. 328.
  26. Vimeo video on laying the stumbling block for Alfred Leupold
  27. Biography of Julius Ferdinand Wollf. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  28. Federal Archives: Memorial Book - Victims of Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Tyranny in Germany 1933–1945
  29. ^ Biography of Johanna Sophie Wollf. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  30. a b c d Fantl family . In: Book of Memory , p. 89.
  31. a b Meyer family, Harry Herbert Hirschel . In: Book of Memory , pp. 250-251.
  32. a b Meyer family, Harry Herbert Hirschel . In: Book of Memory , pp. 251-252.
  33. The last appearance of Heinz and Fritz took place in the cemetery. The Meyer family of musicians . In: Agata Schindler: Dresden List. Music city of Dresden and the Nazi persecution of Jews 1933–1945 n word and image . Pertermann, Dresden 2003, p. 84.
  34. Wolff, Irma . In: Book of Memory , p. 387.
  35. Tobias Wolf: Three stones for three lives . In: Sächsische Zeitung , September 12, 2014, p. 6.
  36. a b c the Höxter family . In: Book of Memory , p. 158.
  37. Margot Höxter's biography. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  38. a b c d Chitz family . In: Book of Memory , pp. 65–66.
  39. ^ Nussbaum, Selma . In: Book of Memory , pp. 266–267.
  40. ↑ The Hochbergs . In: Book of Memory , p. 156.
  41. a b c d e Urbach family, Jacob . In: Book of Memory , p. 373.
  42. ↑ The Levy couple, Nathan Arthur. In: Book of Memory , p. 220.
  43. a b Roy family . In: Book of Memory , p. 308.
  44. Biography of Hedwig Löwenstamm. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  45. ^ Family Steinhart, Max . In: Book of Memory , p. 355.
  46. a b Family Rabinowitsch, Josef . In: Book of Memory , p. 289.
  47. a b c Rabinowitsch family, Martin Herbert . In: Book of Memory , pp. 289–290.
  48. a b c d Family Kleiner, Markus . In: Book of Memory , p. 189.
  49. Biography of Dr. Friedrich Leopold Berlowitz. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  50. ^ Biography of Cilly Berlowitz. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  51. ^ Biography of Doris Ruth Berlowitz. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  52. ^ Biography of Arthur Juliusburger. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  53. ^ Biography of Martha Juliusburger. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  54. Herbert Goldammer, Karin Jesche (Beabr.): Dresdner memorials for the victims of the Nazi regime . ddp goldenbogen, Dresden 2002, pp. 81–82
  55. ^ A b c Society for Christian-Jewish Cooperation, Working Group Memorial Book (Ed.): Book of Memory. Jews in Dresden. deported, murdered, missing 1933–1945 . Thelem Universitätsverlag, Dresden 2006, p. 313.
  56. Swen Steinberg: Max Sachs . In: Institute for Saxon History and Folklore (Ed.): Saxon Biography .
  57. Julia Lachmann: Stumbling with the Heart , in: Sächsische Zeitung, December 11, 2012
  58. ^ Married couple Fränkel, Joseph . In: Book of Memory , p. 98.
  59. a b Schweriner family . In: Book of Memory , p. 338.
  60. a b c d e Liebermann family . In: Book of Memory , pp. 225–225.
  61. ↑ The Saul couple . In: Book of Memory , p. 321.
  62. Margareta Schmits' biography. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  63. ^ Married couple Steinhart, Alfred . In: Book of Memory , p. 357.
  64. a b c d e Kohn family, Leon Leiser . In: Book of Memory , p. 195.
  65. Biography of Ignatz Isaac Nato joke. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  66. Biography of Feiga Fanny NATO joke. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  67. Biography of Leonard NATO joke. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  68. Biography of Günter NATO joke. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  69. Biography of Hans Nagel floor. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  70. See biography of Chaim Lewin. stolpersteine-dresden.de
  71. Lewin family, Chaim . In: Book of Memory , p. 221.
  72. Samuel family . In: Book of Memory , pp. 317-318.
  73. Biography of Dr. Leo Leiser Langer. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  74. Rosa Langer's biography. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  75. Max Langer's biography. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  76. ^ Biography of Toni Langer. In: Tabular overview of the stumbling blocks in Dresden
  77. Zwecher family, Owadie . In: Book of Memory , p. 392.
  78. ^ Family Hirsch, Albert . In: Book of Memory , p. 150.
  79. Bialaschewsky family . In: Book of Memory , p. 50.
  80. Mosberg, Kurt . In: Book of Memory , p. 257.
  81. a b Weiss family, Hermann . In: Book of Memory , p. 381.
  82. The Jahreiß family . In: Book of Memory , p. 164.
  83. ^ Family Schneck . In: Book of Memory , p. 331.
  84. a b c Familie Silbermann, Leo . In: Book of Memory , p. 342.
  85. ↑ The Hann . In: Book of Memory , p. 138.
  86. ^ Married couple Steinhart, Walter . In: Book of Memory , p. 357.
  87. ^ Sabine Hanke: Gertrud Hille . Biography on stolpersteine-dresden.de
  88. "I knew nothing of this tragic fate". Biographical portraits of victims of the Pirna-Sonnenstein killing center . Issue 10/2012.
  89. a b Family Deutsch . In: Book of Memory , pp. 71–72.
  90. a b Kühnert family . In: Book of Memory , pp. 208–209.
  91. The Pick family, Anna . In: Book of Memory , p. 279.
  92. a b c Sisters Sunshine . In: Book of Memory , p. 347.
  93. a b Familie Silbermann, Simon . In: Book of Memory , p. 342.
  94. a b Herzberg family, Josef . In: Book of Memory , p. 148.
  95. family Zwecher, Simon . In: Book of Memory , p. 393.