Jewish cemetery Zeppelinstraße
The Jewish cemetery on Zeppelinstrasse is the oldest Jewish cemetery in Pirmasens. It was established in 1813 and closed in 1876. Today there are 95 gravestones on 1360 square meters on a slope on 4 levels. Originally the entrance was from Gefäller Weg, where you can still see the remains of the former entrance. Today the cemetery is entered from Zeppelin Street. The cemetery gate is locked, the key to it can be borrowed from the garden and cemetery office.
Mikvah at the synagogue Rheydt
See description of the Rheydt synagogue.
School at the synagogue
See description of the synagogue.
Gladbach prayer room
In the annex of the house Abteiberg 4 the Jewish community built a prayer room. It was the residence of the community leader Joseph Cahn. With his appointment as headman in 1809, Jewish life in Gladbach began to organize. As head of the community, Cahn was responsible, among other things, for the possibility of conducting religious services. Therefore, it is obvious that shortly after his appointment he provided the congregation with the premises in his house.
The Jewish cemetery of Wingst
The Jewish Cemetery Wingst is a Jewish cemetery in the municipality of Wingst (joint municipality Land Hadeln) in the district of Cuxhaven in Lower Saxony. The Jewish cemetery in the Wingst was the burial site for the synagogue community of Neuhaus(Oste) and surrounding places
Jewish cemetery Wanlo
The Jewish cemetery between Wickrath and Wanlo was probably occupied during the 19th and 20th centuries. The estimated 721m² burial area was fully occupied when the site was acquired by a farmer in 1939 and leveled. The leveled burial ground is no longer recognizable as such today. Gravestones are not preserved.
On site, a memorial stone on the field path between Stahlenend and Hochneukircher Weg reminds of the former Jewish cemetery.
The site is now a registered ground monument.
Jewish cemetery Wickrath
The Jewish cemetery "Roßweide" was established in the 1840s. It replaced an older Jewish cemetery in Wickrath, the exact location of which can no longer be determined today. The burial ground also served Jews from Wickrathberg, Beckrath and Henrath as a final resting place.
The first burial took place here in 1845, the last in 1942.
Jewish cemetery Rheindahlen
The Jewish Cemetery is located in the Rheindahlen district of Mönchengladbach (North Rhine-Westphalia) on Hardter Straße and is located directly opposite the former municipal cemetery, which is now a park. It replaced an older Jewish burial ground "am Jüddeberg", which was leveled in 1954.
The former burial ground on Hardter Straße has a size of 381 m². Due to repeated desecrations during the Nazi era and the theft of several gravestones, the original state of occupancy can no longer be traced today.
Jewish cemetery "Am Düvel
The Jewish cemetery "am Düvel" is located in today's district of Giesenkirchen-Schelsen. It is located directly in the triangle where the Konstantinstraße meets the Mülforter Straße and continues in the Liedberger Straße.
The cemetery was occupied in the period from 1876 to 1902. It is amazing that the small Jewish community in Giesenkirchen-Schelsen had its own, albeit with 474 m² quite small, burial ground. A total of nine gravestones have been preserved. During the National Socialist rule, no further gravestones seem to have been removed.
Jewish cemetery Odenkirchen
In 1840 the cemetery was established at the lower Kamphausener Straße. The 881 m² large area can hardly be seen from the outside today. The cemetery replaced an older Jewish cemetery in Odenkirchen. This is said to have been located nearby at the Hohlweg on the side of the Kölner Straße. The burial area of the cemetery is divided into two parts. The older part is not on the right side of the entrance. Here people were buried until the end of the 1880s. The younger part of the cemetery was used for burials from 1890 until about 1950. After that the cemetery was declared closed.