Health

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Care and Welfare
Care and Welfare~Health
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Martha Wygodzinski (1869-1943), the first female doctor in the hospital "Am Urban

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Martha Hedwig Wygodzinski, born in Berlin on July 2, 1869, was a German politician (SPD) and the first female member of the „Berlin Medical Society“. Together with her three sisters, she grew up as the daughter of Nanny and Max Wÿgodzinski in a large, middle-class Jewish family in Berlin-Tiergarten. The father was founder of the "Israelitischen Lehrerinnenheims".

Hospital "Am Urban" (new building, 1970 - today) with memorial plaque (1988) and open-air exhibition (2020)

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The clinic "Am Urban" (called "KAU" for short, official name: "Vivantes Klinikum Am Urban", colloquially also: "Urban Hospital") is the only hospital in the Berlin district of Kreuzberg and has been operated by the state-owned Berlin hospital operator Vivantes since 2001.

Albert Fraenkel (1848-1916), founding director of the hospital "Am Urban

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Albert Fraenkel (* 10.3.1848 Frankfurt (Oder); † 6.7.1916 Berlin-Grunewald) was a German internist and bacteriologist. He was born the son of the Jewish ironmonger David Fraenkel. His mother was the niece of Ludwig Traube, a professor of internal medicine. [...]

Sanatorium-cure center - Dr. Würzburger

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The origin of the sanatoriums Mainschloss and Herzogh he lies back in the year 1861.damals founded the am  17.12.1816  born son of the Bayreuth merchant Jacob Würzburger and his wife Philippine, née. Romberg -  Dr. Simon Würzburger in Bayreuth in the Dammallee the "Asylum für nerves and gemütskranke Israeliten ". In the 1870s, the asylum moved to the house at Erlangerstrasse 19. In 1894, the newly built private sanatorium „Herzoghöhe“ was opened in the Herzoghöhe corridor by Dr. med.Simon Würzburger together with his son Dr. Albert Würzburger.

The Krautheim crib

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In 1911, in fulfillment of the will of her late husband Nathan Krautheimer, Martha Krautheimer (1875-1967) donated the necessary funds for the establishment of a nursery at Maistraße 18 in Fürth's Oststadt. Infants and toddlers were cared for here to relieve the burden on working women. The Krautheimer nursery continued to exist after the emigration and persecution of the Stfiter family and the erasure of the founder's name during the Nazi era until 1966.

Nathan Pen

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The Fürth lawyer and patron of the arts Alfred Louis Nathan (1870-1922) donated a maternity and infant home to the city of Fürth in memory of his parents Amalie and Sigmund Nathan. The clinic opened in 1909. The goal of the facility was to reduce the high infant mortality rate in Fürth's industrial city and to make childbirth easier for women. During National Socialism, the Jewish donor's name was erased and the honorary memorials to the donor family were removed. The clinic existed in the historic building until 1967, when it was transferred to the Fürth Clinic. Alfred L.

Anna Stern, née Oppenheimer

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The wife of banker Julius Stern, Anna Stern, née Oppenheimer, is a major benefactor of Hanau, especially during World War I: she invests a great deal of her time in providing food and medical care for the troops and is one of the leading forces of the Vaterländischer Frauenverein. 

Birthday: 3/14/1874

Dedication: 6/9/1925

Place of origin: Hanover