Textile store

Complete profile
50

Hermann Gerson, who had a textile store in the building Kirchberg 8. He, too, was non-Jewish by marriage. His two children Ruth and Alexander had already emigrated to Palestine in 1930. In 1938, Hermann Gerson's business was forcibly "Aryanized". Hermann Gerson and his wife Julie became homeless. They found shelter with the non-Jewish Heß family. In 1944 Hermann Gerson was denounced and deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

Electrical store

Complete profile
50

Vladimir Slobodkin, who ran an electrical store at Georgstraße 25 and had become a Protestant since his marriage to Magda née Glaser in 1917. In 1933 he returned to the Soviet Union due to strong hostility. His wife and daughter Edith, born in 1918, initially remained in Eisfeld, but were later deported; their fate is unknown

.

Villa Glue

Complete profile
80

Former villa of the Jewish merchant family Klebe in Goethestraße 48. In September 1941, the 145 Jews still living in the city were crammed into this house and deported from there to Theresienstadt. The building is in a dilapidated condition. A notice board is not attached.

Prayer Hall (Eisenach)

Complete profile
50

In the 19th century, after the establishment of the Jewish community, a prayer hall could be inaugurated already on September 30, 1864. Until then the services had taken place in private houses of Jewish families, among others in the house of the solver Herz Kayser in Georgenstraße. The prayer hall was located in the rear building of the house Jacobsplan 19, which had been purchased by the community. 

Prayer Hall (Eisenach)

Complete profile
40

In the 19th century, after the establishment of the Jewish community, a prayer hall could already be inaugurated on September 30, 1864. Until then, services had taken place in private homes of Jewish families, including the house of the solver Herz Kayser in Georgenstraße.