Dina and Martin Eisenhardt's residence
Dina Eisenhardt, née Baumblatt (born March 11, 1879; died 1942) was originally from Schweinfurt. She married the merchant Martin Eisenhardt. They were last registered at Rosenstraße 36. This was the location of the Jewish Hospital, which served as a Jewish house. Her husband, the merchant Martin Wilhelm Eisenhardt (born September 15, 1877 in Berlin; date of death unknown) had lived in Frankfurt (Oder) since 1919. In 1919 they lived at Richtstraße 51 and in 1925 at Grenadierstraße 2 (today Goethestraße). Most recently, the couple was registered at Rosenstraße 36.
Residence of the Jacob, Mayer and Stein families
- HERE LIVED ILBERT JACOB JG. 1900 DEPORTED 1942 GHETTO WARSAW .
- HERE LIVED PAULINE JACOB GEB. JACOBSOHN JG. 1874 DEPORTED 1942 GHETTO WARSHAU
- HERE LIVED MARGOT MAYER GEB. STEIN JG. 1905 DEPORTED DIRECTION EAST DEAD 1942
- HERE LIVED RUDOLF MAYER JG. 1903 DEPORTED 1942 AUSCHWITZ KILLED 1943
- HERE LIVED WILLY STEIN GEB. SALOMON JG. 1883 DEPORTED FATE UNKNOWN
- HERE LIVED WILLY STEIN JG. 1880 DEPORTED CHICKSAL UNKNOWN
Residence of Rosa and Ludwig Warschauer
Here lived Ludwig Warschauer, born on April 18, 1896 in Wittstock and wife Rosa Warschauer, née Borchardt, born on February 10, 1890 in Zippnow (Poland). Both were taken into 'protective custody' until 6.12.1938 in Sachsenhausen and deported to Theresienstadt on 16.6.1943. On 9.10.1944 they were deported to Auschwitz and murdered there.
Residence of the Finkelstein and Borgenicht families
Mrs. Fanny Finkelstein, née Gross, born 1882, deported to Poland, fate unknown, mass shooting in October 1941 in Nadworna
.Mr. Moritz Finkelstein, husband of Fanny Finkelstein, born 1880, born in Boryslaw/Galicia, fate unknown
Residential house Goldschmidt with gatehouse
Dwelling house Goldschmidt with gatehouse
Residential house Goldschmidt with gatehouse
Residence of the Schutzjuden Levin Moses, arms dealer
Levin Moses (about 1721-1808) was the first Schutzjude who was allowed to settle in Luckenwalde. The acquisition of a house was only possible because Frederick the Great wanted to advance his porcelain manufactory.In order to receive a privilege, each Jew had to purchase porcelain for 300 thalers and export it abroad.
Rindenau family home
Mrs. Dora Rindenau was born Dora Preminger in 1883 and deported to Riga at the age of 59. Her further fate, as well as that of her children Berta and Philipp Rindenau, is unknown. Berta Rindenau was committed to the Teupitz sanatorium and nursing home in 1938 at the age of 19. In 1942 she was also deported to Riga. Her brother Philipp, one year younger, was deported to Poland in 1938. From there he was able to escape to the Soviet Union in 1939.
Gerhard Boche residence
Gerhard Boche was born in 1921 and arrested in 1944 because of "wehrkraftzersetzender Äußerungen", sentenced to death at the age of 23 and executed in 1944 in Berlin-Plötzensee. The rest of his family also suffered severely during the Nazi regime.
Schneider family home
Mr. Leo Schneider, born in 1894, was arrested in 1935 for insulting the Führer and beaten to death in Berlin-Moabit prison. His wife Hanna Schneider, born in Berlin in 1895, was deported to Poland as a stateless person in 1938. On September 21, 1942, the Day of Atonement, she was shot in Vilna. The son of the two, Max Schneider, born in 1922, was deported to Poland in 1938. In 1939, he emigrated to Palestine and thus survived the Holocaust.