People of the Etter-Rose-Hampel Group

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The list of people in the Etter-Rose-Hampel Group is a supplement to the article on the Etter-Rose-Hampel Group , an association of resistance fighters against National Socialism in Hamburg .

C.

D.

  • Barbara Dollwetzel (born January 29, 1920 to April 21, 2013), later Barbara Reimann, daughter of Max Dollwetzel and Clara Clasen, was a friend of Max Kristeller and joined the group around 1936. She was arrested at her workplace on June 16, 1943, as was her mother, her husband, and her godmother Wilhelmine Hundert on the same day. On April 20, 1944, Fuhlsbüttel was transferred to the Ravensbrück concentration camp, where she survived with her mother.

E.

Erika-Etter-Kehre in Hamburg-Allermöhe
  • Marie Engler was arrested on April 1, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.
  • Otto Engler , was arrested on April 1, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers was deployed.
  • Erika Etter (September 22, 1922 to April 21, 1945), née Schulz, daughter of Adolf and Charlotte Schulz, murdered in a final crime in Neuengamme concentration camp . She was arrested on May 17, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.
  • Werner Etter (September 16, 1913 to February 19, 1945), executed in the Brandenburg prison. He was arrested on March 21, 1944 after the use of provocateurs Herbert Lübbers.

G

  • Hannes Gehrke , belonged to the initial tribe of the group
  • Ursula Gehrke , who joined the group around 1937, was arrested on January 11, 1945 in an evacuation site in Upper Silesia and was transferred to the Fuhlsbüttel police prison. In April 1945 she survived the “evacuation march” to the Kiel-Hassee labor education camp .

H

Wilhelmine Hundert Weg in Hamburg-Allermöhe
  • Willi Hase , was arrested on March 21, 1944 after being used by the provocateurs Herbert Lübbers.
  • Ernst Hampel (September 16, 1919 to April 20, 1945), executed in Brandenburg prison; belonged to the initial tribe of the group, was arrested on June 3, 1943 at his troop base in Rendsburg .
  • Hugo Hecht (January 21, 1905 to 1945, exact date of death unknown), was transferred from the Auschwitz concentration camp to the Groß-Rosen concentration camp on January 17, 1945and has since been considered missing. He joined the group around 1937 and was arrested on May 14, 1943. On May 31, 1944, he was transferred as a police prisoner to the Neuengamme concentration camp, at the end of July he was first returned to Fuhlsbüttel and on August 7, 1944 he was transferred to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
  • Wilma Hecht , joined the group around 1937
  • Franz Heitgres , husband of Minka Heitgres, joined the group around 1937 and was arrested on May 10, 1943.
  • Minka Heitgres , wife of Franz Heitgres, joined the group around 1937, was arrested on May 10, 1943, and released in early July 1943.
  • Karl Hellbach (jun.), One of the group's initial tribe, was arrested on May 11, 1943, at the time he was a soldier on leave from the front.
  • Karl Hellbach (senior), was arrested on March 11, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.
  • Magdalene Hellbach , wife of Karl Hellbach (senior) and mother of Karl Hellbach (jun.). She was arrested on March 11, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.
  • Wilhelmine Hundert (July 4, 1887 to April 1945), murdered after being transferred from the Ravensbrück concentration camp to a work detachment in Oranienburg. She was Barbara Dollwetzel's godmother and was arrested on June 16, 1943, along with her mother and stepfather.

J

  • Ludwig Jörn , joined the group around 1936.

K

  • Max Kristeller , one of the group's initial tribe, was arrested on May 5, 1943 as the alleged leader of the group of those with no criminal record. He was imprisoned in Fuhlsbüttel police prison for 16 months, including 13 months in intensified solitary confinement. On August 7, 1944, he was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp, where he was selected for labor service . He experienced the liberation in the Ebensee concentration camp . After the war he opened the Kristeller art shop in Hamburg .

L.

  • Ada Löwe , fiancee of Ernst Hampel, belonged to the initial tribe of the group and was arrested on September 25, 1943 in the Gößweinstein evacuation site . After her temporary imprisonment in Fuhlsbüttel, she was deported to Ravensbrück like Clara Clasen and Barbara Dollwetzel and liberated there in April 1945 by Allied forces.
  • Max Löwe , father of Ada Löwe, (May 30, 1889 to November 24, 1944),perishedin the Stutthof concentration camp . He was arrested on September 25, 1943 in the Gößweinstein evacuation site. On May 31, 1944, he was transferred as a police prisoner to the Neuengamme concentration camp, at the end of July he was initially returned to Fuhlsbüttel and on August 7, 1944, he was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

M.

  • Luise Muhs , née Schönfeld, daughter of Richard Schönfeld (senior), was arrested on March 21, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.

R.

  • Carl Rose , was part of the group's initial tribe
  • Elisabeth Rose (November 8, 1919 to February 2, 1945),executedin Plötzensee prison; belonged to the group's initial tribe, was arrested on June 3, 1943.

S.

  • Richard Schönfeld Sr. (November 4, 1885 to January 18, 1945), died as a police prisoner in Neuengamme concentration camp . He was arrested on March 28, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers was deployed.
  • Richard Schönfeld Jr., was arrested on May 15, 1943.
  • Walter Schönfeld , was part of the group's initial tribe and died as a soldier in World War II .
  • Adolf Schulz (September 2, 1886 to March 14, 1945), father of Erich Schulz and Erika Etter, was arrested on March 8, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers was deployed. He died of the consequences of imprisonment in the Hamburg remand prison after he was transferred there from the Neuengamme concentration camp.
  • Charlotte Schulz , wife of Adolf Schulz and mother of Erich Schulz and Erika Etter, was arrested on March 21, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed. She is the only survivor of the Schulz-Etter family.
  • Erich Schulz (August 5, 1920 to April 1945), son of Charlotte and Adolf Schulz, brother of Erika Etter. He was arrested on March 28, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed, released on April 12, 1945 from the Wehrmacht prison in Altona to the Weichsel probation company , and disappeared there after April 15, 1945.
  • Margarethe Spethmann , fiancé of Emil Tippmann, was arrested on March 20, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had been employed.
  • Friedrich Stoltenberg (January 14, 1895 to April 6, 1945) was arrested on March 20, 1944 after the provocateur Herbert Lübbers had deployed. He died of the consequences of imprisonment in the Hamburg remand prison after he was transferred there from the Neuengamme concentration camp.

T

  • Emil Tippmann , fiancé of Margarethe Spethmann, was arrested on March 20, 1944 after the provocateurs Herbert Lübbers had been employed.

V

  • Senta Vogt , arrested on March 7, 1944 after the provocative Herbert Lübbers was used.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b SPD regional organization Hamburg: For Freedom and Democracy: Hamburg Social Democrats in Persecution Resistance 1933-1945 , Books on Demand, 2003, p. 40; viewable as google-book
  2. a b c d e Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , pp. 423, 431
  3. a b Franziska Bruder, Heike Kleffner (ed.): ... memory must not die. Barbara Reimann - A biography from eight decades in Germany, Unrast Verlag 2001, ISBN 3-89771-802-2 book review
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , p. 432
  5. State Center for Political Education: Erika Etter
  6. Stolpersteine ​​Hamburg: Werner Etter
  7. a b c d e f g h Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , p. 423
  8. Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , pp. 423, 431 f.
  9. Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , pp. 423, 430
  10. Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , pp. 423, 430
  11. Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , pp. 423, 430, 432
  12. Ursel Hochmuth, Gertrud Meyer: Streiflichter from the Hamburg resistance. 1933-1945 , p. 431 f.