After
the rebuilding of Schneidemühl in the wake of the
Great Fire of 1834 and after the elimination of the
old ghetto, many Jewish families began to live on
and around the town's squares and its adjoining
streets. An examination of the Schneidemühl City
Directory of 1896 reveals how the new Jewish
burghers clustered there as a result of the
commercial upswing, brought about by the unification
of the German Reich in 1871.
Nearly one third of the houses on Neuer Markt, Mühlenstrasse, Friedrichstrasse, Posenerstrasse, Wilhelmstrasse were Jewish owned, while some had only Jewish tenants. This was Schneidemühl's Jewish heart. Ironically, the occupations that had been forced upon Jews over the centuries now helped them to excel—often to become leaders in their field—and to climb the ladders of success in this era of industrial capitalism. Fin-de-siècle Schneidemühl could boast of a petit bourgeoisie that then included some of the wealthiest and best-known Jewish families. These
surviving calling cards (below) from the last
decades of the 19th and the early 20th century make
for interesting reading.
(Excerpted from the recently
published book
History of the Jewish Community of Schneidemühl: 1641 to the Holocaust) |
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