List of stumbling blocks in Mainz-Hechtsheim

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

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Stumbling blocks in Mainz-Hechtsheim

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap

address Laying date Donated by inscription image annotation
Alte Mainzer Strasse 8
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Alte Mainzer Straße 8 - Location Stolpersteine ​​Mainz.jpg
June 24, 2013 Association of Hechtsheim
Local History e. V.

DAVID KAPP
JG LIVED HERE . DEPORTED IN 1882 MURDERED IN OCCUPIED POLAND
IN 1942

Kapp David.jpg David Kapp was single and owned a small textile and haberdashery shop in Hechtsheim. After the Nazis came to power and the associated calls for boycotts, he only eked his life by secretly selling his goods to loyal customers. On the night of the pogrom on November 9, 1938, an SA horde attacked him in his house and hung him upside down from the window on his first floor while the crowd roared in the street. On September 30, 1942, he was deported to Treblinka and murdered there.
At the upper Born 1
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Am Ober Born 1.jpg

Stolpersteine ​​collection - Am Ober Born 1.jpg
HERE LIVED
ELIZABETH WEISS
GEB. MICHEL
JG. DEPORTED IN 1883 MURDERED IN OCCUPIED POLAND
IN 1942

Weiss Elisabeth.jpg Julius Weiß was a wealthy cattle dealer and one of the village notables. Active in the social and theater association "Club Unity 1908" and head of the Jewish community, earned him the title of "Israelite Mayor", which was not meant to be serious. The five children of the Weißes were able to save themselves before the deportations to the USA and Palestine began. On November 18, 1938, a few days after the Nazi horde raged in their home, Julius and Elisabeth Weiß fled to Mainz, where Elisabeth Weiß had relocated the increasingly poor milk business. After the pogrom, an SA guard moved up in front of the shop to prevent non-Jewish customers from entering. Finally, the Weißes were ordered to close.
Identity card Elisabeth Weiß
Identity card Julius Weiß
JULIUS
WEISS
JG LIVED HERE . DEPORTED IN 1880 MURDERED IN OCCUPIED POLAND
IN 1942

Weiss Julius.jpg
Bachstrasse 1
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Bachstr.  1.jpg
CLARA
WEISS
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1872 1942
THERESIENSTADT
MURDERED 04/02/1943
Weiss Clara.jpg Clara Weiß was the third of eight children of the cattle dealer Abraham and his wife Elisabetha Weiß. Little is known of Clara Weiß. We know that she devotedly cared for her mother, who died in October 1933 at the age of 92, and also her younger brother Moritz Maximilian, whose life had ended a month earlier, in September 1933. Clara remained unmarried and lived alone in the house inherited from her mother. She was subjected to numerous harassment from the local Nazis. In December 1937, Clara Weiß moved to a Jewish retirement home in Mainz because of the increasing terror. On September 27, 1942, she was deported to Theresienstadt and murdered
Heuerstrasse 9
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Heuerstr.  9.jpg
HERE LIVED
EMMA WHITE
BORN SÜSSMANN
JG. DEPORTED IN 1887 MURDERED IN OCCUPIED POLAND
IN 1942

White Emma.jpg After the pogrom night of 9/10 In November 1938 the house of Emma Weiß was largely destroyed, in January 1939 she sought protection with her relatives in Alsbach, where she was born . She was deported from her last place of residence in Darmstadt on September 30, 1942 and murdered shortly afterwards, presumably in Treblinka.
Grauelstrasse 19
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Grauelstr.  19.jpg

Stolpersteine ​​Collection - Grauelstr.  19.jpg
August 16, 2014 BERTHOLD
SELIG
JG LIVED HERE .
DEPORTED 1878 1942
MURDERED
PIASKI
Selig Berthold.jpg With the beginning of the Nazi regime, Berthold Selig and his family were disenfranchised and humiliated and forced to sell their property below its value. After the pogrom night of 9/10 November 1938 his house was ravaged, he was forced to move to Mainz with his wife. The Selig couple lived there in poor conditions. On March 25, 1942, Berthold and Margarethe Selig were deported to the Piaski ghetto in the Lublin district and murdered a short time later.
HERE LIVED
MARGARETHE BLESSED
GEB. HIRSCH
JG.
DEPORTED IN 1879, 1942
MURDERED
PIASKI
Blessed Margaret.jpg
Bürgermeister-
Keim-Strasse 2
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Mayor -Keim-Str.  2.jpg

Stolpersteine ​​Collection - Bürgermeister-Keim-Str.  2.jpg

June 11, 2007 HERE LIVED
ANTONIE BLESSED
GEB. KAHN
JG. 1874
ESCAPED 1939 HOLLAND
INTERNED WESTERBORK
DEPORTED 1943
SOBIBOR
MURDERED
Blessed Antonie.jpg In the pogrom night of 9/10 November 1938 the house was completely devastated by Nazi hordes. In January 1939 the Seligs managed to escape to the Netherlands. After the invasion of the Wehrmacht, they were trapped in a hopeless trap. Siegfried Josef Selig died on September 30, 1942 at the age of 74. On April 9, 1943, Antonie Selig was taken to the Westerbork transit camp. A little later, on April 23, 1943, she was deported to her death in Sobibór.

SIEGFRIED JOSEF
SELIG

JG LIVED HERE . 1868
ESCAPE 1939 HOLLAND
DEAD
30.9.1942 GOUDA
Blessed Siegfried Josef.jpg
Trip -threshold
Synagogenstrasse 1
Mainz-Hechtsheim
Erioll world.svg
Location of the stumbling block Hechtsheim.jpg
03rd February 2015 The synagogue of the Jewish community in Hechtsheim was in this house
from 1844 to 1938


Tripping threshold in front of the former synagogue in Hechtsheim.jpg Tripping threshold in Mainz-Hechtsheim in front of the building of the former synagogue

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. Renate Knigge-Tesche: Remembering David Kapp. (PDF p. 1, 2) Hechtsheim Local History Association, June 24, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  3. Remembering Julius and Elisabeth Weiß, geb. Michel. (PDF p. 12, 13) Hechtsheim Local History Association, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  4. Elisabeth Weiß identification card. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  5. Julius Weiß ID card. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  6. Remembering Clara Weiss. (PDF p. 7, 8) Association of Hechtsheim Local History, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  7. Renate Knigge-Tesche: Remembering Emma Weiß, geb. Sweet man. (PDF pp. 9, 10) Hechtsheim Local History Association, June 24, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  8. Renate Knigge-Tesche: Remembering Berthold and Margarethe Selig, geb. Deer. (PDF p. 1, 2) Hechtsheim Local History Association, June 24, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  9. Remembering Siegfried Josef and Antonie Selig, geb. Boat. (PDF p. 5, 6) Hechtsheim Local History Association, accessed on September 9, 2018 .