Max Diamant
Max Diamant came from a Jewish working-class family from Łódź. He was a journalist, trade unionist and socialist or social democratic party functionary in Germany and in exile in Western Europe and Mexico.
Parents: Michail Diamant (born 1888 Turobin Krasnostavski, Cholmsk district - shot in Leningrad in 1937) and Anna Diamant, née Neumann (born 1886 - disappeared in the GULAG in 1942)
Siblings: Arnold (b. 1922 in Zeitz - 1981 in San Francisco USA), one brother died as a child
Dr. Hans Bab
Seed and spirit dealer - Israel Friedländer
The following entry can be found in the address book of the city of Posen from 1875: Friedländer Israel, Saaten- und Spiritushändler, Kleine Gerberstraße 11. - Israel Friedländer, born 1841 - died 1922 was married to Betty, née Kaliphary. One of their daughters, Lea, born on October 9, 1868 in Posen, was married to Alfred Feilchenfeld, born in 1860, headmaster of the Israelite secondary school in Fürth from 1900 until his death in 1923. The couple had six children: all of them were able to emigrate in time.
Residence of the composer Paul Ottenheimer
From 1914 to 1918, Paul Ottenheimer (born in Stuttgart in 1873, died in Darmstadt in 1951) lived in this place and worked as court conductor at the former court theater in Darmstadt. On June 2, 1914, he was awarded the title of "Hofrat" and on March 13, 1917, the Knight's Cross of the Order of Ludwig.
Eduard Pfeiffer
With great personal commitment to the creation of housing and other social facilities, the banker, reformer and cooperative Pfeiffer contributed with major projects between 1875 and 1915 to ensuring that Stuttgart remained a community without major social problems even during industrialization.
Apartment Fred Uhlman
Artist and writer, the only surviving member of his family. In his autobiography „The Making of an Englishman“, which was published in London in 1960 but not translated into German until 1992 after his death, he describes his life, his origins and family, and his transformation into an Englishman alongside his wife, Lady Diana Croft, whom he met in April 1936.
Käte Hamburger
Käte Hamburger (1896–1992) was an important Germanist and literary theorist who habilitated at the Technical University of Stuttgart after her exile in Sweden and subsequently worked there as an unpaid professor.
Editorial office Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt, workplace of Jella Lepman, née Lehmann
In the 1920s, Jella Lepman, née Lehmann, worked as the first female editor of the liberal Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt. She wrote articles on social policy and established the supplement „Die Frau in Haus, Beruf und Gesellschaft“ in 1927. A special edition of the newspaper was published for the opening of the Tagblatt Tower on November 5, 1928. For this, Jella Lepman wrote the article "Die Stuttgarterin von heute".
Jewish Art Community (Stuttgart)
- The Stuttgart Jüdische Kunstgemeinschaft was founded in 1933 as a department of the Jüdisches Lehrhaus in Stuttgart by the musicologist Karl Adler . His brother-in-law Leopold Marx, a writer, and Otto Hirsch, a lawyer, were also involved in its founding.
- It only existed for five years from 1933 to 1938, before the November pogroms put an end to Jewish cultural work in Stuttgart.
Residence Käthe Loewenthal
Painter, Adolf Hölzel pupil; numerous exhibitions