List of stumbling blocks in Sangerhausen

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The list of stumbling blocks in Sangerhausen contains all stumbling blocks that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Sangerhausen 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 Sangerhausen. Between 2012 and 2015, a total of 17 stones were laid at twelve addresses.

Relocations

  • November 5, 2012: five stones at two addresses
  • November 8, 2013: four stones at three addresses
  • October 10, 2014: three stones at three addresses
  • October 2, 2015: five stones at four addresses

List of stumbling blocks

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap

address Date of relocation person inscription image Picture of the house
Old Magdeburger Strasse 2
Erioll world.svg
October 10, 2014 Franz Heymann (1875-1945)

Franz Heymann was a member of the SPD and co-founder of the Sangerhausen consumer association, which was forcibly dissolved after 1933. In 1944 Heymann was arrested and deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp. In January 1945 he was transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp. He fell ill on the transport and died in Buchenwald in March 1945.

Here lived
FRANZ Heymann
Jg. 1875
in resistance / SPD
arrested in 1944
'Action Grid'
Sachsenhausen
dead 1945
Transport Buchwald
Stolperstein Franz Heymann, 1, Alte Magdeburger Strasse 2, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Alte Magdeburger Strasse 2, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Old Market 14
Erioll world.svg
November 8, 2013 Edith Große (1926-1940)

Edith Große had been a patient at the Uchtspringe Sanatorium since 1936 . On August 28, 1940, she was transferred to the Brandenburg killing center, where she was murdered on the same day as part of Operation T4 .


EDITH GROSSE,
born in 1926, lived here .
January 21, 1936
Uchtspringe Sanatorium
'relocated' August 28, 1940
State nursing home
Brandenburg
murdered August 28, 1940
Action T4
Stolperstein Edith Grosse, 1, Alter Markt 14, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Alter Markt 14, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Bahnhofstrasse / Marienanlage
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October 10, 2014 Paul Beck (1900-1940)

Paul Beck came from Kindelbrück and was a trained model fitter. During the First World War, he suffered a wound that paralyzed his lower body for years. In 1928 he became a member of the KPD and worked in Sangerhausen for a newspaper of the party. In 1933 he was arrested and interned in the Lichtenburg concentration camp. After his release, he initially resumed his work for the newspaper, but was betrayed and arrested again. He was interned on May 20, 1935 to serve a five-year prison sentence in the Kassel-Wehlheiden prison and murdered there on February 26, 1940.

Huet Tens route 97
lived
PAUL BECK
born. 1900
in resistance / KPD
'protective custody' in 1933
Lichtenburg
denounced
arrested 1,935
prison Wehlheiden
murdered 02/26/1940
Stumbling Stone Paul Beck, 1, Bahnhofstrasse-Marienstraße, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Bahnhofstrasse 21
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October 10, 2014 Walter Telemann (1906–1944)

The socialist Walter Telemann was drafted into military service in 1940 and served as a tank grenadier on the Eastern Front. In May 1943 he was seriously wounded. In 1944 his regiment was broken up and withdrew to East Prussia . Telemann decided at this time not to do any further military service and withdrew from his regiment. On August 4th, he was arrested at Sparken and shot dead.


WALTER TELEMANN
born in 1906 lived here,
deserted 1944,
arrested on August 3, 1944 ,
shot dead on
August 4, 1944
Sparken
Johannesburger Heide
Stolperstein Walter Telemann, 1, Bahnhofstrasse 21, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Bahnhofstrasse 21, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Göpenstrasse 10
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5th November 2012 Adele Hampel b. Gosler (Gosslar) (1874–1942)

Adele Hampel came from Wippra . In neighboring Sangerhausen, she ran a toy shop with her husband Paul. On September 19, 1942, she was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto via Halle (Saale) , where she died on November 22, 1942.


ADELE HAMPEL
nee lived here . Gossler,
born 1874,
deported to
Theresienstadt in 1942,
dead on November 22 , 1942
Stumbling stone Adele Hampel, 1, Göpenstrasse 10, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Göpenstrasse 10, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Göpenstrasse 13
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November 8, 2013 Ernst Ludwig Ikenberg (1901–1944)

Ernst Ikenberg was born the younger of two sons in Sangerhausen, the son of the businessman Bendix Ikenberg and his wife Sophie. His parents had to give up their business in the early 1930s and moved to Bad Frankenhausen . Ernst Ikenberg accompanied them. On September 20, 1942, he was deported via Leipzig to the Theresienstadt ghetto and from there on to the Auschwitz concentration camp on May 18, 1944 , where he was murdered that same year. His older brother Paul managed to emigrate to Palestine .


ERNST IKENBERG,
born in 1901
, lived here, deported 1942
Theresienstadt,
murdered 1944
Auschwitz
Stolperstein Ernst Ikenberg, 1, Göpenstrasse 13, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Göpenstrasse 13, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Göpenstrasse 21
Erioll world.svg
November 8, 2013 Henrietta Loewe b. Cohn (around 1870? - after 1945?)

Henrietta Loewe b. Cohn came from a merchant family from Sangerhausen. She and her husband Moritz had two sons and three daughters. The boycott of the Jews after the seizure of power by the National Socialists already led in 1933 to the family their business as well as numerous private possessions sell below value and their home had to leave. The Loewes were initially housed in the basement of a brewery. In December 1933 the entire family emigrated to Palestine.


HENRIETTA LOEWE
nee lived here . Cohn,
born in 1870,
humiliated / harassed
'Judenbokott' 1933
Escape 1933
Palestine
survived
Stolperstein Henrietta Loewe, 1, Göpenstrasse 21, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Göpenstrasse 21, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Moritz Loewe (1867–1945)

Moritz Loewe was born in Klein Wanzleben . One of his brothers was Heinrich Loewe . Moritz Loewe took over the business of his deceased father-in-law and achieved considerable wealth. The boycott of the Jews after the seizure of power by the National Socialists already led in 1933 to the family their business as well as numerous private possessions sell below value and their home had to leave. The Loewes were initially housed in the basement of a brewery. In December 1933 the entire family emigrated to Palestine. Moritz Loewe died there in 1945; his wife probably survived him.

This is where
MORITZ LOEWE,
born in 1867, lived .
Humiliated / harassed
'Jewish boycott' 1933
Escape 1933 Survives
Palestine
Stolperstein Moritz Loewe, 1, Göpenstrasse 21, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Huettenstrasse 26
Erioll world.svg
5th November 2012 Eva Miriam Bernstein (1938–1942)

Eva Bernstein was born in Berlin as the daughter of Jutta Bernstein. She and her mother returned to their parents in Sangerhausen in 1939. The family later had to move to a “ Jewish house ” in Halle (Saale) . On June 1, 1942, all four were deported to the Sobibor extermination camp , where they were murdered two days later on arrival.


EVA MIRIAM
BERNSTEIN,
born in 1938
, lived here, deported in 1942,
Sobibor
murdered on June 3 , 1942
Stumbling stone Eva Mirjam Fleischmann, 1, Hüttenstrasse 26, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Hüttenstrasse 26, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Jutta Bernstein born Fleischmann (1911–1942)

Jutta Bernstein born Fleischmann was born in 1911 as the daughter of Otto and Rosa Fleischmann. She lived temporarily with her husband in Berlin , where their daughter Eva was born in 1938. Jutta Bernstein's husband managed to emigrate to England in 1939 with the help of the Reich Association of Jews in Germany . Jutta Bernstein then returned to her parents with her daughter. The family later had to move to a “ Jewish house ” in Halle (Saale) . On June 1, 1942, all four were deported to the Sobibor extermination camp , where they were murdered two days later on arrival.


JUTTA BERNSTEIN
nee lived here . Fleischmann
born 1911
deported 1942
Sobibor
murdered June 3 , 1942
Stolperstein Jutta Bernstein, 1, Hüttenstrasse 26, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Otto Fleischmann (1879–1942)

Otto Fleischmann came from Prichsenstadt and ran a cattle and horse trade in Sangerhausen. He and his family later had to move to a “ Jewish house ” in Halle (Saale) . On June 1, 1942, all four were deported to the Sobibor extermination camp , where they were murdered two days later on arrival.


OTTO FLEISCHMANN,
born in 1879
, lived here, deported in 1942, murdered by
Sobibor on
June 3 , 1942
Stumbling stone Otto Fleischmann, 1, Hüttenstrasse 26, Sangerhausen, district of Mansfeld-Südharz.jpg
Rosa Fleischmann born Friedmann (1878-1942)

Rosa Fleischmann born Friedmann came from Köditz . She and her family later had to move to a “ Jewish house ” in Halle (Saale) . On June 1, 1942, all four were deported to the Sobibor extermination camp , where they were murdered two days later on arrival.


ROSA FLEISCHMANN
nee lived here . Friedmann
born in 1878
deported 1942
Sobibor
murdered June 3 , 1942
Stumbling stone Rosa Fleischmann, 1, Hüttenstrasse 26, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Kylische Strasse 9
Erioll world.svg
October 2nd, 2015 Erhard Meyerstein (1898–1982)

Erhard Meyerstein was the son of Matthias and Therese Meyerstein. From Frankfurt am Main he was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp on February 18, 1945. After its liberation, he returned to Sangerhausen, where he lived until his death on December 14, 1982.


ERHARD
MEYERSTEIN
born in 1898 lived here,
deported in 1944, liberated
Theresienstadt
Stolperstein Erhard Meyerstein, 1, Kylische Strasse 9, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Kylische Strasse 9, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Therese Meyerstein born Flatow (1874-1946)

Therese born Flatow was married to Matthias Meyerstein and had a son with him named Erhard. After the death of her husband, Therese Meyerstein was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp on September 20, 1942. She survived her imprisonment and returned to Sangerhausen after Theresienstadt was liberated, where she died in 1946.


THERESE
MEYERSTEIN
nee lived here . Flatow
born in 1874,
deported in 1942, liberated
Theresienstadt
Stolperstein Therese Meyerstein, 1, Kylische Strasse 9, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Kylische Strasse 31
Erioll world.svg
October 2nd, 2015 Alban Hess (1891–1970)

Alban Hess was a Christian bookseller and a staunch opponent of National Socialism. He was a member of the Confessing Church and refused to sell Mein Kampf in his bookstore . Because of his dissident activities he was arrested several times from 1941 and interned in the Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944. He was released in April 1945. Alban Hess died in 1970. A street in Sangerhausen is named after him.


ALBAN HESS,
born in 1891, lived here
in the Christian
resistance
since 1941
arrested several times .
1944 Buchenwald
liberated
Stolperstein Alban Hess, 1, Kylische Strasse 31, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Kylische Strasse 31, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Rudolf-Breitsteid-Strasse 11
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October 2nd, 2015 Sofie Luise Gorek b. Tailor (1877-1944)

Sofie Luise Gorek was married to the master confectioner Johannes Gorek. Since he was not a Jew, she was initially somewhat protected from repression. When her husband died on May 11, 1942, Sofie Luise Gorek was first deported to Leipzig and then to Theresienstadt concentration camp on January 13, 1944. She died there on January 16, 1944. It is unclear whether she was murdered or died as a result of the deportation.

Here lived
SOFIE LOUISE
Górek
Jg. 1877
deported in 1942
Theresienstadt
dead 01.16.1944
Stumbling block Sofie Luise Gorek, 1, Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 11, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 11, 1, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg
Schulgasse 4
Erioll world.svg
October 2nd, 2015 Klara Merkelt (1901–1944)

Klara Merkelt was married to Paul Merkelt, the son of a master carpenter, and moved with him to Hamburg. After the Nazis came to power, she was exposed to hostility because of her Jewish origins, but was hidden by her husband. The couple adopted a Jewish orphan named Auguste. In July 1943, their home was bombed out and they moved to an emergency shelter. There their daughter was taken away from them and they had to flee to Sangerhausen to avoid being arrested. They came to live with Paul Merkelt's parents. But as Klara Merkelt's Jewish ancestry became known in Sangerhausen as well, she was threatened with expulsion within 24 hours while her husband was absent in 1944, whereupon she committed suicide.


KLARA MERKELT,
born in 1901,
moved to Schulgasse 4, moved to Hamburg,
bombed out in 1943
, lived in hiding,
denounced
escape to death
10.1.1944
Stumbling stone Klara Merkelt, 1, Schulgasse 4, Sangerhausen, Mansfeld-Südharz district.jpg

Web links

Commons : List of stumbling blocks in Sangerhausen  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Frank Schedwill: Three new stumbling blocks are being laid , Mitteldeutsche Zeitung , September 24, 2014. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
  2. a b c Remembrance and Commemoration - Socialists ( Memento of the original from October 19, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved October 15, 2014. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.erinnern-und-gedenken.de
  3. a b c d Tina Edler: New stumbling blocks set with great sympathy , Mitteldeutsche Zeitung , November 8, 2013. Accessed January 27, 2014.
  4. a b c d e f g Helga Koch: Stolperstein recalls Adele Hampel , Mitteldeutsche Zeitung , November 5, 2012. Accessed January 27, 2014.
  5. Memorial Book Halle - Hampel, Adele . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  6. Address by Pastor Johannes Müller at the laying of the stone for Ernst Ikenberg, November 8, 2013 ( Memento of the original from February 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved January 27, 2014. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.erinnern-und-gedenken.de
  7. a b Address by Helmut Qual on the occasion of the stone laying for Moritz and Henriette Loewe on November 8, 2013 ( memento of the original from March 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved January 27, 2014. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.erinnern-und-gedenken.de
  8. ^ A b Moritz Loewe II. & Henrietta "Jettchen" Cohn . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  9. Halle Memorial Book - Bernstein, Eva . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  10. Memorial Book Halle - Bernstein, Jutta . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  11. Halle Memorial Book - Fleischmann, Otto . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  12. Halle Memorial Book - Fleischmann, Rosa . Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  13. a b c d e f g h i Stolpersteine ​​in Sangerhausen . Retrieved April 11, 2016.