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Residence
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Residence
Residence~Apartment/Flat
Term ID
placeCat802

Residence Dr. Willy Katz

Complete profile
50

Dr. Willy Katz was the only Jewish doctor licensed to provide medical care for Dresden Jews from 1939 to 1945. He was therefore allowed to keep his practice and apartment at Borsbergstrasse 14, and continued to practice after 1945.
Dr. Katz is mentioned several times in Victor Klemperer's diaries "I will bear witness to the last".

Victor Klemperer's house

Complete profile
50

Home of Victor Klemperer, academic at the TU Dresden and later a member of the Kulturbund radio station. Known for his book "LTI, die Sprache der Dritten Reiches", and his diaries "Ich werde Zeugnis ablegen bis zum letzen" and "Das kleinere Uebel"

The house was built in 1934. Victor Klemperer and his wife were forced to move out in 1940 and were able to return in the summer of 1945.

Goldfisch, Alfred

Complete profile
90

Alfred Goldfisch was born in Stuttgart on June 2, 1874. His parents were the Ulm textile merchant Hermann Goldfisch and his wife Johanna, née Wartenberg. Alfred Goldfisch was an authorized signatory of the Aufhäuser-Bank in Munich. On November 6, 1905, Alfred Goldfisch married Frieda Heumann, who was born in Laupheim on October 19, 1879. On June 1, 1918, the couple moved from Wiesbaden to Munich. On April 27, 1938, Alfred Goldfisch was sentenced to 1 year and 3 months in prison in a trial on suspicion of racial defilement.

Villa Quarch - today Villa Arite

Complete profile
80

The villa was built and used around 1850 by the Jewish furrier Edmund Wilhelm Quarch (Rauchwarenzurichterei und Färberei Rödiger & Quarch GmbH- Leipzig). Rauchwarenzurichterei und Färberei Rödiger & Quarch was founded in 1843 and taken over by the company Thorer & Co. at the beginning of the First World War.

Goldschmidt House

Complete profile
90

The Goldschmidt House was built in 1538 in the old town of Warburg. It is located near the former synagogue of the Jewish community of Warburg.

The house was founded by the Asshoeer family and was owned by them until 1722. 

Jacob Schapiro - Villa 'Gabi Nora' / today Villa Capravi

Complete profile
90

Jacob Schapiro – Villa ‚Gabi Nora‘

Jacob Schapiro (b. November 6 1885 in Odessa; d. April 17 1942 in New York) was a Jewish car dealer, cab entrepreneur and stock speculator in Berlin. For a time, he was the largest car dealer in Germany.

The villa on the beach promenade was built around 1910 in the colonial style of German West Africa. The villa bore the name of his daughter ‚Gabi Nora‘ until 1936.

Jacob Schapiro was forced to sell the villa due to Nazi reprisals.

Villa Oechsler - Delbrückstraße 5

Complete profile
90

The villa was built in 1883 in the center of Heringsdorf. The owner was the Kommerzienrat Hermann Berthold, master mechanic and founder of Berthold Messing AG from Berlin.

In 1905, the Berlin banker Hans von Bleichröder, son of Bismarck's banker Gerson von Bleichröder, bought the villa. Gerson von Bleichröder was ennobled in 1872 as the second Jew in Prussia. As a representative of the Rothschild banks in the financial center of Berlin, he was one of the most important private bankers of his time.

Benoit Oppenheim - Villa Oppenheim Heringsdorf

Complete profile
100

The Villa Oppenheim at Delbrückstra e 11 in Heringsdorf is one of the best-known examples of the villas on the island of Usedom.

It was built in 1883 as a summer villa for the family of the banker Benoît Oppenheim sen. (1842–1931). It is no longer possible to say for certain who planned the neoclassical white building on the beach promenade, which is adorned with four Corinthian columns, but it is possible that the building was designed by the Berlin architect Hermann von der Hude.