List of stumbling blocks in Mainz-Kastel

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

The list of stumbling blocks in Mainz-Kastel ( AKK ) is also integrated into the list of stumbling blocks in Mainz .

list

address Surname Inscription with additions Laying date image annotation
In the joke 36
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- In der Witz 36.jpg
Johann July
Johann Juli,
born in 1894, lived here .
Arrested 1936
Mainz prison.
Survived
October 12, 2009 July Johann.jpg Johann Juli, last chairman of the SPD in Mainz-Kastel before the Nazi regime came to power, active in the resistance, sentenced to twelve months in prison in 1936.
Eleonorenstrasse 16
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Eleonorenstr.  16.jpg
Abraham foliage
Abraham Laub,
born in 1895, lived here .
Deported in 1942.
Piaski
murdered
05th September 2016 Foliage Abraham.jpg Abraham and Itta Laub were a wealthy family of merchants who ran a raw materials business in Mainz with metals, animal skins and rags. Before they were expropriated in 1940 and forcibly moved to Mainz-Kastel, they were able to bring their three sons to safety in Switzerland. Abraham Laub felt entirely German and was a member of the carrier pigeon association and an association of BMW motorcyclists.
Itta foliage
Itta Laub,
born in 1896, lived here .
Deported 1942
Piaski
murdered
Foliage Itta.jpg
Marie Oppenheim
Marie Oppenheim,
born in 1881, lived here .
Deported in 1942.
Piaski was
murdered
Oppenheim Marie.jpg Little is known of the Oppenheim family. Moritz Oppenheim was a bank clerk and presumably an authorized signatory at Deutsche Diskontobank in Mainz, his wife Marie a housewife. Their son Alfred, born in 1906, emigrated to Argentina in 1933 and died there in 1977. He never saw his parents again.
Marie Oppenheim
identification card Moritz Oppenheim identification card
Moritz Oppenheim
Moritz Oppenheim,
born in 1877, lived here .
Deported in 1942.
Piaski
murdered
Oppenheim Moritz.jpg
Dr. Julius Thilo This is where
Dr. Julius Thilo Born
1866
Deported 1942
Auschwitz
Murdered December 3rd, 1942
Thilo Julius.jpg Dr. Thilo owner, a he founded in 1901 chemical factory in Mainz, was in 1942 because of " preparing a treasonable enterprise arrested" and sentenced and never returned more to his house back
Kennkarte Dr. Julius Thilo
Heinrich Wolff
Heinrich Wolff,
born in 1878, lived here .
Deported 1942
Piaski
murdered
Wolff Heinrich.jpg The Wolff family ran a wine wholesaler in Nackenheim. Heinrich Wolff was a frontline fighter in World War I and was very popular in Nackenheim as a member of the volunteer fire brigade and the TuS Nackenheim. The family's two sons escaped the Nazis by fleeing to NYC in 1938 . A few weeks before their deportation, Selma and Heinrich Wolff were assigned the apartment in Kastel.
Identification card Heinrich Wolff
Identification card Selma Wolff
Selma Wolff
Selma Wolff,
born in 1883, lived here .
Deported in 1942.
Piaski was
murdered
Wolff Selma.jpg
Zehnthofstrasse 38
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Zehnthofstraße 38.jpg
Peter Schneider
Peter Schneider
born in 1907 lived here .
Arrested 1933
Osthofen concentration camp.
Survived
October 12, 2009 Stumbling Stone Peter Schneider.jpg Peter Schneider, toolmaker at Opel in Rüsselsheim , trade unionist and social democrat, was sent to the Osthofen concentration camp by the Nazis in 1933 . There he met Carlo Mierendorff , who had a lasting impact on his further life. After the war he became involved in the local politics of his hometown Mainz-Kastel as an “unencumbered person”.
Church on Rochusplatz
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Kirche am Rochusplatz.jpg
Johann Baptist Schwalbach Here worked
pastor
Johann Baptist
Schwalbach
Jg. 1889
Arrested in 1938
and 1941
prison Darmstadt
Survived
Schwalbach Johann.jpg Pastor Johannes Baptist Schwalbach occupied the pastor's post in Mainz-Kastel on March 1st, 1923 and from November 3rd, 1936 also held the position of diocesan president of the Catholic men's and workers' associations, which brought him into the sights of the National Socialists. This brought him from 02/11. until 29.09.1938 and again in 1941 for three weeks in Frankfurt / Main and Darmstadt a " protective custody ". Pastor Schwalbach died in 1957 and was buried in Nierstein.
Eisenbahnstrasse 12
Erioll world.svg
Location stumbling blocks - Eisenbahnstraße 12.jpg
Friedel Janecek
Friedel Janecek,
born in 1905, lived here .
Arrested 1933
Osthofen concentration camp.
Survived
Janacek Friedel.jpg Janecek and his wife Ella were indicted several times in the 50s and 60s for their commitment against remilitarization and for the illegal KPD . In 1979, Mayor Jockel Fuchs awarded Friedel Janecek the coat of arms of the city of Mainz for services to sport.
Mainzer Str. 1
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Mainzer Straße 1.jpg
Peter Hück
Peter Hück,
born in 1905, lived here .
Arrested in
1936 and 1944 for
"agitation" prison Kassel
Buchenwald
Penal Battalion 999
survived
Hück Peter.jpg Peter Hück, regional base head of the union of the resistance against the Nazi regime organized by supraregional SPD and KPD members, was sentenced in 1936 to a prison term of two years and three months.
Mainzer Str. 2
Erioll world.svg
Location Stolpersteine ​​- Mainzer Straße 2.jpg
August Klotzbach
August Klotzbach,
born in 1899, lived here .
Arrested in 1935
for " treachery "
Darmstadt prison
survived
Klotzbach August.jpg August Klotzbach, suffered gas poisoning as a soldier in World War I, from which he never recovered and was therefore disabled. Klotzbach was sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment in peacetime in 1934 for violating the " Heimtückegesetz ". In 1951 he was refused compensation for the wrongly suffered imprisonment.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Axel Ulrich: On the political resistance against the "Third Reich" in Mainz. (PDF) 2008, pp. 10, 11 , accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  2. a b Hannelore Richter, Axel Ulrich: The hope of freedom gave them strength - Wiesbaden social democrats in resistance against the “Third Reich”. (PDF) SPD Wiesbaden, p. 12 , accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  3. ^ Hartmut Bohrer: Stumbling blocks in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 56.
  4. ^ Hartmut Bohrer: Stumbling blocks in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 58.
  5. identity card Marie Oppenheim. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  6. identity card Moritz Oppenheim. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  7. ^ Hartmut Bohrer: Stumbling blocks in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 54.
  8. Identification card Dr. Julius Thilo. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  9. ^ Raymond Wolff, Stolpersteine ​​in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 60.
  10. identity card Heinrich Wolff. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  11. ^ Identity card Selma Wolff. (PDF) Central archive for research into the history of Jews in Germany, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  12. ^ Richard Schneider: Stumbling blocks in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 218.
  13. Episcopal Chancellery (ed.): Necrologium Moguntinum 1802/03 - 2009. Mainz 2009, pp. 193–194.
  14. Horst Gobrecht: Ella Janecek became 95th DKP, March 12, 2004, accessed on September 10, 2018 .
  15. ^ Hartmut Bohrer: Stumbling blocks in Wiesbaden. Volume 2: 2009-2010. Active Museum Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden 2011, ISBN 978-3-941289-07-9 , p. 112.