List of stumbling blocks in Mainz-Bretzenheim

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 Info:  Information on properties, which all sublists for Mainz have in common, can be found under List of stumbling blocks in Mainz .

Note 1 : The list is sortable . By clicking on a column header, the list is sorted according to this column; clicking twice reverses the sorting. Any desired combination can be achieved by clicking two columns one after the other.

Note 2 : Clicking an image increases the resolution

Stumbling blocks in Mainz-Bretzenheim

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap

address Laying date Donated by inscription image annotation
Wilhelmsstrasse 51
Mainz-Bretzenheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Wilhelmsstr.  51.jpg

Collection - Wilhelmsstr.  51.jpg

September 11, 2010 Bretzenheim-Zahlbach local history and
history association

BERNHARD
ZACHARIAS
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1873 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED 04/30/1942
Zacharias Bernhard.jpg The Zacharias family has been running a veal and ox butcher's shop not far from the former synagogue in Bretzenheim for generations. During the serious riots during the “Reichskristallnacht” in November 1938, her shop was destroyed and master butcher Zacharias was badly mistreated.
HERE LIVED
SELMA ZACHARIAS
GEB. GRÜNEWALD
JG.
DEPORTED 1888 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED
Zacharias Selma.jpg
Zaybachstrasse 27
Mainz-Bretzenheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Zaybachstr.  27.jpg

Stolpersteine ​​Collection - Zaybachstr.  27.jpg


ALBERT GERSON
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1883 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED
Gerson Albert.jpg Jakob Lorch's beef butcher's shop was located in Zaybachstrasse and was run by her niece Betty and her husband, master butcher Albert Gerson, after the death of Lorch's wife. Jakob Lorch, a brother of Emil Lorch, who lived in Bäckergasse, was deported in September 1942 and committed suicide in the Darmstadt assembly camp.

After the death of Jakob Lorch's wife, who ran a beef butcher's shop on Zaybachstrasse, his niece Betty took over the business together with her husband, master butcher Albert Gerson. Before Jakob Lorch could be deported to an extermination camp in the East, he committed suicide in September 1942 in the Darmstadt assembly camp.
Albert Gerson ID card

HERE LIVED
BETTY GERSON
GEB. LEVI
JG.
DEPORTED 1892 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED
Gerson Betty;  Mainz.jpg

JAKOB LORCH
JG LIVED HERE . 1868 ESCAPED TO DEATH
BEFORE DEPORTATION
9/21/1942 IN THE
DARMSTADT
COLLECTION CAMP
Lorch Jakob.jpg
Bäckergasse 5
Mainz-Bretzenheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Bäckergasse 5.jpg

Stolpersteine ​​collection - Bäckergasse 5.jpg

0November 9, 2010
EMIL LORCH
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1863 1942
THERESIENSTADT
MURDERED December 8th, 1942
Lorch Emil.jpg The cattle dealer Emil Lorch, the last head of a family in Bretzenheim that has been documented for centuries, was the second chairman of the traditional TSG 1846 Bretzenheim. Lorch, his wife Franziska, daughter Klara, her husband Theodor Schloss and the 8-year-old grandson Günther were deported and murdered in 1942: only his daughter Selma managed to emigrate to Chile.
Emil Lorch identification card

FRANZISKA LORCH
GEB. LIVED HERE GOLDMANN
JG.
DEPORTED 1869 1942
THERESIENSTADT
MURDERED December 31, 1942
Lorch Franziska.jpg

GÜNTHER SCHLOSS
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1933 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED
Günther Castle.jpg

KLARA SCHLOSS
GEB. LIVED HERE LORCH
JG.
DEPORTED 1898 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED December 31, 1942
Klara Castle.jpg

THEODOR SCHLOSS
JG LIVED HERE . 1902
DEPORTED 1942
PIASKI / LUBLIN
MURDERED
Theodor Castle.jpg

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. According to the official list of the city of Mainz (PDF)
  2. a b c Helga Wittkopf; Institute for Historical Regional Studies at the University of Mainz eV
  3. ^ Albert Gerson ID card. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  4. identity card Emil Lorch. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 9, 2018 .