Wholesale of raw products - Max Koppel
The address book of the city of Bielefeld from 1927 contains the following entry: Koppel Max, Roh-Produkten-Großhandlung, Arndtstra;e 4, Bielefeld.
Max Koppel was born on March 31, 1883 in Iserlohn. He ran a raw products wholesale business in Bielefeld. On January 29, 1940, he and his wife Ida moved to Berlin. From there Koppel was deported to Piaski on March 28, 1942 and murdered.
Metal Goods Factory - H. Rosenbund
Laundry tax business - Heinemann & Simon
Weaving goods - Department store - Siegfried Cohn
Banking and bills of exchange - S. Rosenbusch
Salomon Rosenbusch was married to Jeanette Rosenbusch,née Ochs.The couple had two sons - Bernhard Rosenbusch and Alphons Rosenbusch.They all found their final resting place at the Jüdische Friedhof Augsburg, Haunstetter Straße.
Book and picture shop,Baroque frame factory - Rubinstein brothers
In the address book of the city of Vienna from the year 1893 the following entry can be found: Rubinstein Gebrüder, Buch-u. Bilderhdl. u. Barockrahmenfabrik,VII Neubaug.29,- Rubinstein Josef, Buchhdl., E.,Gebrüder Rubinstein VII Neubaug.29, - Rubinstein Salomon, E., Ges. d. Gebrüder Rubinstein VII Neubaug.29The Hungarian-born brothers Josef and Salomon Rubinstein ran, among other things, a book publishing house that published Karl May's colportage novels from 1890 to 1895 in various linguistic translations (Czech, Polish, Slovenian, Spanish, Italian and Dutch).
Bookstore and publishing house M. Poppelauer
On May 22, 1860, Moritz Poppelauer (1824-1880) founded the bookstore M. Poppelauer and soon expanded it to include a publishing house. After his death, the business remained in the family and was continued from 1894 by his son-in-law Jacob Saenger, who died on February 14, 1939, eight weeks after the Nazis closed the business. The internationally known bookstore with an attached antiquarian bookshop specialized in Hebraica and Judaica and also sold Jewish ritual items, especially on the holidays.
Kersten & Tuteur, The House of Fashions
The fashion house was considered one of the top fashion addresses in Berlin until the 1930s and was known for its attractive window displays. The graphic artist and illustrator Ernst Deutsch was hired for the company's marketing. Around 1912, he designed advertising slips and advertising stamps that gave an impression of the elegant style of fashion. Some of the advertising slips are also on display in the JMB's permanent exhibition. The former business house of Kersten & Tuteur is one of the few historical buildings in Leipzigerstraße that has been preserved.