List of stumbling blocks in Königslutter

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of stumbling blocks in Königslutter contains all the stumbling blocks that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Königslutter am Elm as part of the art project of the same name . They are intended to commemorate the victims of National Socialism who lived and worked in Königslutter. On August 2, 2011, two stumbling blocks were laid.

List of stumbling blocks

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap

image address Laying date Person, inscription annotation
BW
Bahnhofstrasse 16
Erioll world.svg
0August 2, 2011
Adolf Klimt,
born in 1897, lived here .
Forbidden
labor. 1942
Todt penal company
1943/1944 Liberated / survived prison camp
in Paris
Adolf Klimt was born on March 28, 1897. During the First World War he was deployed to France . He then finished his training and became a teacher at the high school in Delligsen , where he met and married his future wife, Henny Nelke. When he refused to divorce his Jewish wife in 1935, he was transferred to Hasselfelde in April 1936 , where he taught at the middle school. In 1938 he was banned from working as a teacher; he then found a job as an accountant at the local sawmill. During the mobilization at the beginning of the Second World War he was used in reserve hospitals in Quedlinburg and Braunschweig and from 1942 in a punishment company of the Todt Organization , where he was again transferred to France. In 1945 he returned to Hasselfelde and in 1948 moved with his wife to Königslutter. There he taught at the grammar school until his retirement. Adolf Klimt died in May 1966.
BW

Henny Klimt
nee lived here . Carnation
born in 1898
deported 1945
Theresienstadt
liberated / survived
Henny Klimt was born as Henny Nelke in 1898. She was married to Adlf Klimt and lived in Delligsen. They had three children together (Elisabeth, born June 9, 1924, Annemarie, born December 31, 1925 and Ilse, born July 25, 1929) In 1936, she and her family moved to Hasselfelde. In February 1945 she was deported from there to the Theresienstadt ghetto , where she worked as a kindergarten teacher and was liberated in May 1945. After her liberation she moved back to Hasselfelde and in 1948 with her husband to Königslutter at Bahnhofstrasse 16. She died in 1975.

Relocations

  • August 2, 2011: two stumbling blocks at one address

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Stolpersteine ​​in Königslutter shine in new splendor In: regionalheute.de , accessed on May 29, 2019.
  2. Blooming trees: A story from the 1st World War (1914–1918) by Adolf Klimt In: Tetzelzeitung No. 16 , braunschweig-touren.de, accessed on June 5, 2019 (PDF; 2.3 MB, p. 14 )
  3. a b Thomas Gaevert: Survival under the swastika: The story of the Klimt family In: thomas-gaevert.de , accessed on June 5, 2019 (SWR2 Tandem broadcast on September 25, 2013 with a detailed manuscript)