Huerth
General information: First Jewish presence: 18th century; peak Jewish population: 92 in 1847; Jewish population in 1933: 90
Summary: It was not until the 18th century that a Jewish settlement was
established in Huerth. The community, which was made up
of cloth merchants, livestock traders and moneylenders, built
a synagogue on Weierstrasse in 1856.
On Pogrom Night, SA troops destroyed the small
synagogue building, after which an artisans’ organization
bought the property and used it as carpenter’s workshop.
The Jewish cemetery was also “aryanized”; the bodies were
exhumed and the site leveled.
In the summer of 1941, Huerth’s remaining 11 Jews were
forcibly moved into a “Jews’ House” on Olbruchstrasse;
and in June and July of 1942, six of them were deported to
Theresienstadt and five to the Minsk Ghetto. All perished.
Three local Jews who were married to Christians survived
the war in Huerth.
In November 1991, a memorial plaque was erected on
Weierstrasse. Since 1996, a signpost has directed passersby
to “the Old Synagogue.”
Author / Sources: Dorothea Shefer-Vanson
Sources: AH, EJL, LJG, SIA, YV
Sources: AH, EJL, LJG, SIA, YV
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia