Residence of Jella Lepman, née Lehmann
Josef Lehmann lived here with his wife Flora Lehmann, née Lauchheimer, and their daughters Clara, Jella and Bertha.
Julius Baumann apartment
Time referee for the “Stuttgarter Kickers”; he was taken to the Mauthausen concentration camp and, according to the usual message, shot there on October 1, 1942 “while fleeing”
Esslingen Jewish Cemetery
Residence of Jella Lepman, née Lehmann
Josef Lehmann lived here with his wife Flora Lehmann, née Lauchheimer, and their daughters Clara, Jella and Bertha.
Stuttgart Teaching House Foundation for Interreligious Dialogue
http://www.stuttgarter-lehrhaus.de
Apartment of Bertha Thalheimer and her family
Moritz Thalheimer was the first Jewish cattle dealer in Winnenden. He came from Affaltrach in the Württemberg district of Weinsberg and came to the town in 1892 with his family - his wife Karoline and their three children Bertha, August and Anna. He had already been involved in trade beforehand. On May 12, 1892, he announced his business in the Winnender Volks- und Anzeigeblatt: "We will continue the livestock trade we have been operating in the same way as before and will provide a solid service.
Thekla Kauffmann's parental home
Thekla Kauffmann was an important Stuttgart personality. She campaigned for women's suffrage, was the first Jewish member of the first state parliament of Württemberg (1919) and later helped Jews to prepare their departure from Germany. She also worked for many years at the state employment office until she was dismissed in 1933 due to the ban on Jews working in the civil service. She was able to emigrate from Germany in 1941 and survived the Holocaust. She died in 1980 at the age of 97.
Herold family
Adolf Herold lived here with his family; he came from Schopfloch in central Franconia and had started out in Metzingen in 1910 as a seller of textile goods. In 1922, he opened a knitwear factory at Schillerstra e 13. His wife Jenny, née Goldschmidt, was born on October 28, 1880 in Vacha. Adolf Herold was friends with the Metzingen factory owner Hugo F. Boss for many years.
Dreifus & Lehmann
The company Dreifus & Lehmann für Herrenkonfektion had its headquarters here in the so-called "Hansabau" since 1910. One of the partners was the merchant and manufacturer Josef Lehmann (1853-1911), who in turn was married to Flora Lehmann, née Lauchheimer (1867-1940), an aunt of the sociologist Max Horkheimer (1895-1973). The couple, from a Jewish-liberal family, had three children: Clara, Jella and Bertha.
Kaufhaus Schocken
The Schocken Kaufhaus in Stuttgart belonged to the company of the Schocken Family, founded in Zwickau in 1901. Inspired by the Bauhaus principles, a Schocken Department Store was designed and built in the years 1926-1928 in Stuttgart.The building was designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn and became an icon of modernist architecture.In the 1930s, due to its Jewish origins the Schocken family had to sell more and more of its properties and assets and in 1939 the Schocken company was acquired and re-named Merkur Aktiengesellschaft.