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Adolph Freudenberg

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Adolph Freudenberg

Birth
Zerbst, Landkreis Anhalt-Bitterfeld, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
Death
1937 (aged 73–74)
Zerbst, Landkreis Anhalt-Bitterfeld, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
Burial
Zerbst, Landkreis Anhalt-Bitterfeld, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Adolph Freudenberg (1863-1937) was a banker in Zerbst. He died just prior to the Holocaust.

Biography:
The tombstones of Adolph Freudenberg, Bertha and Gustav Freudenberg stand close together on the Zerbster Jewish cemetery. The banker Adolph Freudenberg (1863-1937), originally from Barby on the Elbe, owned the well-known Zerbster Bank J. Rothenstein. Beyond financial affairs, he was valued in Zerbst for his wisdom and wisdom. He was called "Nathan the Wise". The increasing marginalization, humiliation and ostracism that he had to experience during the last years of his life hit him hard. (Source: http://www.juedischegrabsteine-anhalt.de/_lebenswege/Adolph_B_G_Freudenberg.html)

His wife Ida Freudenberg, b. Hammerschlag (1878-1942) was deported in 1942 and was probably murdered in Auschwitz in the same year. "Stay healthy u. Do not forget me, "she writes on 10 July 1942 from Magdeburg Gestapo prison to her children. Adolph Freudenberg's brother Gustav died in Barby a few days after the November Pogrom in 1938. A burial in his hometown denied the authorities. His body and the remains of his wife Bertha, who died in 1937, were transferred to Zerbst by a brave carpenter in a horse-drawn carriage and buried here. (Source: http://www.juedischegrabsteine-anhalt.de/_lebenswege/Adolph_B_G_Freudenberg.html)

Burial:
Zerbst Jewish cemetery in Germany.

.
Adolph Freudenberg (1863-1937) was a banker in Zerbst. He died just prior to the Holocaust.

Biography:
The tombstones of Adolph Freudenberg, Bertha and Gustav Freudenberg stand close together on the Zerbster Jewish cemetery. The banker Adolph Freudenberg (1863-1937), originally from Barby on the Elbe, owned the well-known Zerbster Bank J. Rothenstein. Beyond financial affairs, he was valued in Zerbst for his wisdom and wisdom. He was called "Nathan the Wise". The increasing marginalization, humiliation and ostracism that he had to experience during the last years of his life hit him hard. (Source: http://www.juedischegrabsteine-anhalt.de/_lebenswege/Adolph_B_G_Freudenberg.html)

His wife Ida Freudenberg, b. Hammerschlag (1878-1942) was deported in 1942 and was probably murdered in Auschwitz in the same year. "Stay healthy u. Do not forget me, "she writes on 10 July 1942 from Magdeburg Gestapo prison to her children. Adolph Freudenberg's brother Gustav died in Barby a few days after the November Pogrom in 1938. A burial in his hometown denied the authorities. His body and the remains of his wife Bertha, who died in 1937, were transferred to Zerbst by a brave carpenter in a horse-drawn carriage and buried here. (Source: http://www.juedischegrabsteine-anhalt.de/_lebenswege/Adolph_B_G_Freudenberg.html)

Burial:
Zerbst Jewish cemetery in Germany.

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