List of stumbling blocks in Staßfurt
The list of stumbling blocks in Staßfurt contains all stumbling stones that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Staßfurt 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 Staßfurt. Between 2011 and 2015, a total of 27 stones were laid at 17 addresses.
Relocations
- October 14, 2011: Six stones at three addresses
- November 11, 2011: A stone at an address
- April 25, 2012: Five stones at three addresses
- March 26, 2013: Seven stones at five addresses
- June 14, 2013: A stone at an address
- March 26, 2014: Three stones at three addresses
- March 20, 2015: Four stones at four addresses
List of stumbling blocks
Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap
address | Date of relocation | person | inscription | image | Picture of the house |
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Ackerstrasse 41 |
March 26, 2014 |
Gustav Langstädtler was born in Staßfurt. He was a trained saddler and became a member of the KPD in 1923 . After the National Socialists came to power, as a communist he had to report to the police regularly. On September 27, 1939, he was taken into "protective custody" on one such occasion. He was initially imprisoned in Magdeburg prison and transferred to Sachsenhausen concentration camp on March 5, 1940 . A little later he was taken to Dachau concentration camp , where he was murdered on March 22, 1940. |
Gustav Langstädtler (1902–1940)Here lived GUSTAV LONG STAEDTLER born. 1902 in resistance / KPD 'protective custody' 1939 prison Magdeburg 1940 Sachsenhausen murdered 03/22/1940 Dachau |
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At the Bode 1 |
March 26, 2014 |
Richard Lohdau from Staßfurt had been a member of the KPD since 1928. He was arrested on September 28, 1933 and was one of 19 defendants in the Staßfurt high treason trial on April 9 and 10. He was sentenced to two years in prison for passing on postage stamps and magazines to party members. He was sent to Luckau prison on June 5, 1934 and released on June 30, 1935. On February 23, 1937, he died in the Staßfurt hospital as a result of his imprisonment. |
Richard Lohdau (1881–1937)Here lived RICHARD LOHDAU Jg. 1881 in resistance / KPD arrested 09/28/1933 'preparation for high treason' Luckau dead of adhesion consequences 02/23/1937 Stassfurt |
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Athensleben Way 3 |
March 26, 2013 |
Walter Rémi was born in Vienna as the only child of the court musician Heinrich Rémi and his wife Berta. In 1902 the family converted from the Jewish to the Protestant faith. In 1914 he began studying medicine, but was drafted into military service in 1915. In 1918 he continued his studies, but switched to chemistry. The doctorate took place in 1922. In the same year he moved to Staßfurt, where he was born in 1930 Ilse. Solms got married. Since he was considered a Jew according to the Nuremberg race laws , he had to cede a considerable part of his assets in 1938. In September 1939 he developed brucellosis and died on December 31, 1939. |
Walter Rémi (1896–1939)DR. WALTER RÉMI, born in 1896, lived here, humiliated / disenfranchised, dead December 31, 1939 |
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Athensleben Way 5 |
April 25, 2012 |
Hans Rieger was born in Dresden and worked as a doctor in Staßfurt. Since he was Jewish, he had to close his practice in 1938. In the same year he lost his apartment. It was looked after by his non-Jewish wife and their son until the end of the war. In 1945 he was forced to return to his job, but was bedridden in May 1946 and died the following month. |
Hans Rieger (1871-1946)Here lived HANS Rieger Jg. 1871 disbarment 1938 Apartment terminated in 1939 survived |
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Bischofstrasse 15 |
March 20, 2015 |
Edith Schulz was born on September 10, 1938 in Staßfurt as the daughter of Albert and Marie Schulz. She suffered from hydrocephaly and was therefore treated several times from May 1940. At the end of March 1941 she came home again, but was finally admitted to the Görden State Institute on July 16 . When they are admitted, only a backwardness in their motor skills is diagnosed. However, her condition quickly deteriorated during her stay in the institution. She fell ill with gastroenteritis in late July and bronchitis in early August . On August 18, 1941, Edith Inge Schulz officially died of her illness, but presumably as a result of an overdose of phenobarbital . |
Edith Inge Schulz (1938–1941)Here lived EDITH INGE SCHULZ Jg. 1938 instructed 16/07/1941 State Institute Gorden 'Children's Ward' murdered 08/18/1941 |
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Concordiastrasse 13 |
March 26, 2014 |
Manfred Albert Meyer was born in Leopoldshall and had a mental handicap. On May 26, 1942, he was admitted to the Dosen sanatorium in Leipzig with the diagnosis “idiocy”. There he died on July 30, 1942 at the age of three. The official cause of death was bronchopneumonia , but like 550 other children he was probably murdered by a phenobarbital overdose. |
Manfred Albert Meyer (1938–1942)MANFRED ALBERT MEYER, born in 1938, lived here 'briefed' May 26, 1942 Children's department Leipzig- Dosen murdered July 30, 1942 |
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Freytagstrasse 3 |
April 25, 2012 |
Otto Hampel came from Staßfurt and was a trained locksmith. He was a member of the SPD and a city councilor. In 1921 he became managing director of the German Metalworkers Association (DMV). In 1933 he moved to live with his daughter in Hamburg. He was involved in setting up an illegal information network for the DMV. At the beginning of 1935 he was arrested and interned in the Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp, where he was subjected to brutal interrogations. On May 3, 1935, he committed suicide in his cell. |
Otto Hampel (1888–1935)This is where OTTO HAMPEL, born in 1888, lived in the resistance 1933 Hamburg, arrested February 21, 1935 Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp in custody, escaped to death on May 3, 1935 |
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Hamster Street 12a |
March 20, 2015 |
Wilhelm "Willy" Heine came from Staßfurt and worked as an electrician. In 1927 he became a member of the KPD and was involved as an editor for various newspapers. After the KPD was banned in 1933, he worked underground. He was arrested on November 24, 1933 and taken to Berlin-Moabit . On May 17, 1934, he was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for “preparing for high treason ”. He served them in the Luckau prison . Nothing is known about the years after his release. At an unknown point in time, he was drafted into Penal Division 999 . On November 3, 1944, he fell in Agino Selo near Banja Luka . |
Wilhelm Heine (1904–1944)Here lived WILHELM HEINE Jg. 1904 in resistance / KPD 'protective custody' 1933 'preparation for high treason' sentenced 05/17/1934 Criminal Division 999 dead 11.03.1944 Agino Selo |
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Hamsterstrasse 26 |
March 20, 2015 |
Sally Lewy (1882-1941) Sally Lewy was born in Küstrin and ran a shop for lingerie, fabrics and women's fashion in Bernburg, and later also a factory. Lewy was a member of the Anhalt State Parliament and served as an officer in World War I , for which he was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class. He was married and had five children. He opened a branch of his business in Staßfurt. Shortly after the National Socialists came to power, he was subjected to reprisals. In April 1933 a boycott list appeared, which also listed his company. Lewy's daughter Irmgard temporarily used the address of the Staßfurt branch as an apartment in 1935/36. In 1937 she became a partner in the company. On November 9, 1938, Sally Lewy was arrested along with all the other Jewish men in Bernburg and taken to Dessau. While most of the others were deported to Buchenwald concentration camp, Lewy was sent back and locked up in Bernburg prison the following day. At the same time, his shops in Bernburg and Staßfurt were devastated and "Aryanized" in December 1938. Sally Lewy remained in custody until 1941. Shortly after his release, he died of a heart attack on March 21, 1941 . Of his family, only his son Gerhard survived the war by fleeing in time via Czechoslovakia to Palestine . A stumbling block was also laid for Sally Lewy in Bernburg, see list of stumbling blocks in Bernburg (Saale) . |
Here worked SALLY LEWY Jg. 1882 'protective custody' 1938 prison Bernburg murdered 03/21/1941 |
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Hohenerxlebener Strasse 98 |
November 11, 2011 |
Ernst Israel came from Leopoldshall and worked as an optician and watchmaker. According to the Nuremberg Laws, he was considered a half-Jew, but until 1938 only had to accept relatively minor reprisals. At the beginning of November 1938, however, he had to give up his business. Immediately after the Reichspogromnacht he was to be arrested on November 10, 1938. He evaded this by throwing himself out of the window of his apartment to his death. |
Ernst Israel (1895–1938)ERNST ISRAEL, born in 1895 , lived here before his arrest. Escape to death on November 10, 1938 |
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Holzmarkt 9 |
March 20, 2015 |
Wilfried Münzel was born in Leopoldshall in 1923 as the oldest of four siblings. After moving to Staßfurt, he attended the Pestalozzi School there, which he left at the age of 14. Since his mother was in a mental institution from July 1938, Wilfried Münzel first lived in an orphanage. A medical report confirmed that he had severe physical and mental deficits. On November 25, 1938, he was admitted to the Uchtspringe Sanatorium for “upbringing and professional training” . There he worked in a saddlery and in the cemetery. On August 9, 1940, he was transferred to the Brandenburg killing center as part of Operation T4 and gassed immediately after his arrival. |
Wilfried Münzel (1923–1940)Here lived WILFRIED Münzel Jg. 1923 instructed 11/25/1938 sanatorium Uchtspringe 'relocated' 09.08.1940 provincial nursing home Brandenburg murdered 08/09/1940 Action T4 |
tore off | |
Parkstrasse 8 |
14th of June 2013 |
Hermann Kasten (1885–1933) Hermann Kasten came from Unseburg and was a trained painter. In 1903 he became a member of the SPD. From 1923 to 1933 he was a member of the Prussian state parliament . In 1929 he was also the first mayor of Staßfurt. On the evening of February 4, 1933, an unknown perpetrator shot him twice in front of his house. Despite an emergency operation, he succumbed to his injuries the next day. The proceedings against a suspect were dropped in the following month and the case was finally filed in 1939. The murder case was never solved. |
Here lived and was gunned down on February 4, 1933, HERMANN KASTEN born in 1885 in the resistance of Mayor Member of the SPD in the Prussian state parliament, dead February 5, 1933 |
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Prinzenberg 14 |
March 26, 2013 |
Juda Hersch Korn came from Lubaczów . In 1930 he married Taube Wolf. He lived with her in Staßfurt since 1934 at the latest. Daughter Sali was born in the same year. As part of the “ Poland Action ”, the family was deported to Poland at the end of October 1938 . Since they could not stay with relatives there, they initially stayed in a camp in the border town of Bentschen . In the summer of 1939 they were able to move to Krakow . The further fate of the family is unknown. |
Juda Hersch Korn (1896–?)JUDA HERSCH KORN, born in 1896, lived here Poland Action 1938 Bentschen 1940 Krakow ? ? ? |
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Sali Korn was born in Magdeburg as the daughter of Judah and Taube Korn. As part of the “Poland Action”, the family was deported to Poland at the end of October 1938. Since they could not stay with relatives there, they initially stayed in a camp in the border town of Bentschen. In the summer of 1939 they were able to move to Krakow. The further fate of the family is unknown. |
Sali Korn (1934–?)SALI KORN, born in 1934, lived here Poland Action 1938 Bentschen 1940 Krakow ? ? ? |
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Taube Korn born Wolf came from Brzostek. As part of the “Poland Action”, she was deported to Poland with her husband and daughter at the end of October 1938. Since they could not stay with relatives there, they initially stayed in a camp in the border town of Bentschen. In the summer of 1939 they were able to move to Krakow. The further fate of the family is unknown. |
Taube Korn born Wolf (1897–?)TAUBE KORN nee lived here . Wolf Born 1897 Poland Action 1938 Bentschen 1940 Cracow ? ? ? |
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Steinstrasse 23 |
March 26, 2013 |
David Bartfeld was from Delatyn . He lived temporarily in Staßfurt, but moved to Nuremberg in 1932 , where he became Edith, nee. Landmann married. In 1933 daughter Gerda was born. In 1934 he was expelled from Bavaria as a Polish citizen and initially returned to Staßfurt. As part of the "Poland Action", he was driven across the Polish border on October 28, 1938. In August 1939 he returned to his family in Nuremberg, but was arrested on September 8th and taken to Buchenwald concentration camp on October 10th . In the course of Aktion 14f13 he was transferred to the Bernburg killing center on March 2, 1942 and murdered on the same day. |
David Bartfeld (1896–1942)DAVID BARTFELD, born in 1896, lived here, Poland Action 1938 Bentschen arrested 1939 Buchenwald 'relocated' 2.3.1942 Bernburg murdered 2.3.1942 |
tore off | |
Steinstrasse (formerly 26) |
October 14, 2011 |
Gustav Rosenberg was born in Karow . In Staßfurt he ran a shoe shop with his wife Helene, which they had to give up in 1938 at the latest. After the Reichspogromnacht Gustav Rosenberg was arrested on November 10, 1938 and later released. On December 2, 1942, he and his wife were deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto. From there they went on to Auschwitz on May 17, 1944, where they were murdered. The exact date of death is not known. |
Gustav Rosenberg (1872–1944)GUSTAV ROSENBERG, born in 1872 , lived here, deported in 1942 Theresienstadt, murdered in 1944 in Auschwitz |
tore off | |
Helene Rosenberg came from Neustadt in West Prussia . On December 2, 1942, she and her husband were deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto. From there they went on to Auschwitz on May 17, 1944, where they were murdered. The exact date of death is not known. |
Helene Rosenberg b. Schleimer (1878-1944)HELENE ROSENBERG nee lived here . Schleimer born in 1878 deported 1942 Theresienstadt murdered in 1944 in Auschwitz |
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March 26, 2013 |
Charlotte Rosenberg was born in Kolberg in 1902 as the daughter of Gustav and Helene Rosenberg. She married around 1931 and moved to Magdeburg around 1933. Nothing is known about her husband except that his last name was Schlums and that he died before 1947. She survived the war in Trier , where her later second husband Walter Buch passed her off as his "Aryan" sister. In December 1953 the couple emigrated to the United States , where Charlotte Buch died on February 26, 1985. |
Charlotte Schlums b. Rosenberg (1902–1985)CHARLOTTE SCHLUMS nee lived here . Rosenberg, born in 1902, moved 1937 Trier hidden / survived |
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Steinstrasse 36 (formerly 20) |
October 14, 2011 |
Elsbeth Crohn came from Neustadt in West Prussia. She was married to Max Crohn and had three children with him. In Staßfurt, she and her husband ran two textile and equipment stores. In April 1933, these shops were affected by a boycott initiated by the NSDAP; after the Reichspogromnacht they had to be sold. In September 1940 the Crohns moved to Berlin-Schöneberg . On March 28, 1942, the couple were deported to the Piaski Ghetto , where they were both murdered on June 30, 1942. |
Elsbeth Crohn b. Schleimer (1884–1942)ELSBETH CROHN nee lived here . Schleimer Born 1884 deported 1942 Piaski murdered |
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Max Crohn was born in Czarnikau . In Staßfurt, he and his wife ran two textile and equipment stores. In April 1933, these businesses were affected by a boycott initiated by the NSDAP. After the Reichspogromnacht, Max Crohn was temporarily arrested and the shops had to be sold. In September 1940 the Crohns moved to Berlin-Schöneberg. On March 28, 1942, the couple were deported to the Piaski Ghetto, where they were both murdered on June 30, 1942. |
Max Crohn (1879-1942)MAX CROHN, born in 1879 , lived here, deported in 1942, murdered Piaski |
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April 25, 2012 |
Siegbert Crohn was the son of Max and Elsbeth Crohn. In 1938 he emigrated to Argentina , where he started a family. In 1946 the family moved to the United States, where Siegbert Crohn died in 2004. |
Siegbert Crohn (1918-2004)SIEGBERT CROHN, born in 1918, lived here . Escape 1938 Argentina survived |
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Edit Crohn was the daughter of Max and Elsbeth Crohn. She was married to Hermann Jacks and emigrated with him to the United States in March 1939. There she died at the age of 95. |
Edit Jacks born Crohn (1909-2004/05)EDIT JACKS nee lived here . Crohn Jg. 1909 Escape 1939 USA survives |
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Wilfriede Crohn was the daughter of Max and Elsbeth Crohn. She married Max Joseph Neumann in Berlin. On February 4, 1943, she and her husband were deported to Auschwitz, where Wilfriede Neumann was murdered on March 1, 1943. |
Wilfriede Neumann b. Crohn (1915-1943)WILFRIEDE NEUMANN nee lived here . Crohn born 1915 deported 1943 Auschwitz murdered March 1st , 1943 |
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Steinstrasse 39 (formerly 22) |
October 14, 2011 |
Elli Schönstädt b. Rechnitz came from Halle (Saale) . In Staßfurt she married Julius Schönstädt and had a son and a daughter with him. Her son managed to emigrate to Palestine, the daughter moved to live with her husband in Zurich . In February 1939, the Schoenstädt couple decided to leave Germany. They first moved to live with their daughter in Zurich. From there they managed to emigrate to Bolivia on April 27, 1939 . In January 1947 they returned to Zurich. Elli Schönstädt died there on March 7, 1949. |
Elli Leontine Schönstädt b. Rechnitz (1884–1949)ELLI LEONTINE SCHÖNSTÄDT nee lived here . Rechnitz born in 1884, fled 1939 Bolivia, survived |
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Julius Schönstädt was born in Luisenthal near Arolsen and founded a clothing store in Staßfurt in 1898. During the Reichspogromnacht on 9/10 November 1938 the business was destroyed and Julius Schönstädt was taken into “protective custody”. He was later forced to sell the property, business and apartment. In February 1939, the Schoenstädt couple decided to leave Germany. They first moved to live with their daughter in Zurich. From there they managed to emigrate to Bolivia on April 27, 1939. In January 1947 they returned to Zurich. Julius Schönstädt died there on October 3, 1947. |
Julius Schönstädt (1874–1947)JULIUS SCHÖNSTÄDT, born in 1874, lived here . Escape 1939 Survived Bolivia |
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March 26, 2013 |
Ernst Ten Bosch was born in Bocholt as the son of the painter Abraham ten Bosch and his wife Fanny. In 1932 he moved to Düsseldorf , in 1937 to Schöppingen for a short time and in the same year to Staßfurt, where he worked as a salesman. During the Reichspogromnacht he was on 9/10. Arrested November 1938 and taken to Buchenwald concentration camp on November 11. He was released on December 22, 1938. He emigrated to Palestine with his non-Jewish wife . However, his wife returned to Germany a year later. In 1944 he married again and had four children. The marriage later divorced and Ernst ten Bosch returned to Germany, where he lived in Berlin with his third wife from 1983 to 2000. After the death of his wife, he moved back to live with his children in Israel, where he died that same year. Ernst ten Bosch's parents and sister were murdered in the Minsk ghetto in 1942 . Stolpersteine were laid for them in Bremen (see list of stumbling stones in Bremen ). |
Ernst ten Bosch (1911–2000)ERNST TEN BOSCH, born in 1911, lived here . 'Protective custody' 1938 Buchenwald Escape 1938 Survives Palestine |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Gustav Lang Staedtler ( Memento of 29 March 2014 Internet Archive )
- ↑ stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Richard Lohdau ( Memento of 29 March 2014 Internet Archive )
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Walter Rémi
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Hans Rieger
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Edith Inge Schulz
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Manfred Albert Meyer ( Memento from March 29, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Otto Hampel ( Memento from March 29, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Wilhelm Heine
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Sally Lewy
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Ernst Israel ( Memento from March 29, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Wilfried Münzel
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Hermann Kasten ( Memento from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b c Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Family Korn ( Memento from March 15, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: David Bartfeld ( Memento from March 15, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Rosenberg family
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Charlotte Schlums ( Memento from March 15, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b c d e Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Family Crohn
- ↑ a b Stolpersteine in Staßfurt: Julius and Elli Schönstädt
- ^ Stumbling blocks in Staßfurt: Ernst ten Bosch ( Memento from March 15, 2014 in the Internet Archive )