Stamp shop - Philipp Kosack
Franz Müller & Kramer, Mechanical Woolen Weaving Mill
In 1840, Franz Wilhelm Müller founded a textile printing shop at Elsterstrasse 11 in Greiz, which was later joined by a mechanical weaving mill. In 1881, the founder's son took Hugo Kramer on as a personally liable partner in the company, which from then on called itself Franz Müller & Kramer“. Hans (*1893) and Willy Kramer (*1892) followed in their father's footsteps and also became partners in the company. When the pressure on the Jewish businessmen became too great for the Kramers, they left the company in 1938 and emigrated from Germany.
Cigar store - Jehuda Neumann
In the address book of the city of Düsseldorf from 1902 is the following entry - J. Neumann (Inh. Berthold Neumann and Wwe. Julie Neumann,Berlin) Cigarrengeschäft, Communicationsstra;e 9.
Department store - Louis Landauer
The Landauer department store was directly adjacent to the town hall. Leo David, from Stettin, was the last Jewish owner of the department store. In the course of Aryanization, the department store was reopened as " Deutsches Geschäft " ( Stöckler & Co ) on March 1, 1936.
Shoe store - Mathias Koschland
In the address book of the city of Fürth from the year 1886 the following entry is found: - Koschland Mathias, merchant, retail trade with shoemaker articles, Gustavstr. 26
.Academic Antiquarian Bookshop - Fraenkel & Co
Eduard Fraenkel and his son Siegbert Martin founded the „ Akademisches Antiquariat Eduard Fraenkel“ at Artilleriestrasse 13 in Berlin on January 1, 1905. One year after the resignation of Eduard Fraenkel, Josef Altmann joined the antiquarian bookshop on January 1, 1914 as a co-owner, which from then on bore the name Akademisches Antiquariat Fraenkel & Co.“. In 1919, Siegbert Martin Fraenkel decided to leave the business and founded a new company under the name „S. Martin Fraenkel, Fachunternehmen für Buch- und Kunstversteigerungen“ a new company at Lützowstrasse 14.