List of stumbling blocks in Lilienthal

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The list of stumbling blocks in Lilienthal contains all of the stumbling blocks that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Lilienthal 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 Lilienthal. When it was relocated in April 2006, two stumbling blocks were laid.

List of stumbling blocks

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap

image address Laying date Person, inscription annotation
BW
Hauptstrasse 44
Erioll world.svg
April 18, 2006 Here lived
Julius Frank
Jg. 1907
...
Julius Frank was born on March 22, 1907 as the son of Henry and Johanna Frank in Lilienthal. The family was a respected family of photographers with their own studio and had been based in Lilienthal since 1872. Julius Frank also became a photographer and continued to run his father's studio after his father's death in 1931. From 1933 the reprisals against Jews increased and increased more and more. He then sold the family's business in May 1936 and fled to the USA in June 1936 with the ship President Harding from Hamburg . His fiancée Hildegard followed him and the couple married in Detroit in May 1937 . The marriage had three children. In 1947 the family moved to Los Angeles. Julius Frank died in August 1959 during a stay in Mexico. His widow and two of his children were present when the Stolpersteine ​​were laid in Lilienthal.
BW
Here lived
Louis Frank
Jg. 1909
...
Ludwig Frank was born on October 28, 1909 as the son of Henry and Johanna Frank in Lilienthal. After school he became an actor and had minor engagements on theatrical stages. He was living in Bremen when his family fled to the USA in 1936. He was arrested during the November pogroms in 1938 and was imprisoned in Oranienburg concentration camp until July 5, 1939 . In 1939 he fled to England. From there he went to Canada , where he had to do forced labor and was released in 1945. Ludwig Frank died in Montreal in September 1977.

Relocations

  • April 18, 2006: two stumbling blocks at one address.

literature

  • Harald Kühn, Peter Richter: When hope died ...: the fate of the Jewish photographer family Frank from Lilienthal . Heimatverein Lilienthal eV, Lilienthal 2005, ISBN 978-3-927723-90-0 ( limited preview in the Google book search).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Elisabeth Jessen: Coming home after almost 70 years. In: Abendblatt.de. April 29, 2006, accessed July 2, 2019 .
  2. Harald Kühn, Peter Richter: When hope died ...: the fate of the Jewish photographer family Frank from Lilienthal . Heimatverein Lilienthal eV, Lilienthal 2005, ISBN 978-3-927723-90-0 ( limited preview in the Google book search).
  3. Siegfried Deismann: Stolpersteine ​​are back in: weser-kurier.de , accessed on July 2, 2019.