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DP Camps in Schulenburger, Germany
Camps: In Hannover,
Germany, Land Niedersachsen (British). As far as I can tell, there were four
civilian factories where the slave labor worked for the Nazis. This camp seems
to have been named after the street it was on.
150 persons worked for
Haentzche & Klingehoefer, Landstrasse 94.
150 persons worked for W. Sorst, Blech werk
80 persons worked for metallwarenfabrik
Repenschewski
100 persons worked for Schulenburger
Ziegelei
Archives: City archive:
http://www.stadtarchiv-hannover.de
http://www.hannover.de
Am Bokemahle 14-16
30171 Hannover
Tel: 05 11 - 16 84 21 73
Fax: 05 11 - 16 84 65 90
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.nananet.de
Heisterbergallee 8
30453 Hannover
Tel: 05 11 / 6 16 - 2 22 56
Fax: 05 11 / 6 16 - 112 35 71
Gabriele Lehmberg
Team Kultur der Region Hannover
Hildesheimer Strasse 20
30169 Hannover
Tel: 05 11 / 6 16 - 2 22 56 or: 05 11 / 6 16 - 2 20 73
Fax: 05 11 / 6 16 - 112 35 71
Thanks Olga, for helping archive
info about DP camps and life.
I was born in Hannover and
lived with parents and other relatives in the Schulenburg camp,
outside of Hannover. My family was there for about seven years;
we emigrated in 1952 to US. I
asked my Dad and he says it's: Schulenburg--not
Schulenburger; and he did not work in any factories during
his stay; from 1949 to 1951. He remembers it as a small camp
of a few or couple hundred people. It was former German-soldier
training camp with barracks and bunkers. Here are my photos
from camp.
Thanks,
again, Vera Otasevic Scroggins [email protected]
Father, Dusan Otasevic, a Serbian Jugoslav.
My mother, Rosa, was full Italian
My mother, Rosa, was full Italian
Mother and some other relatives full Italians married Serbian ex-soldiers. They hid their Italian backgrounds to some degree and took Serbian last names to stay in camp; afraid they would have to leave since it was full of Baltic, eastern people.
My grandfather is Branko Sretenovic; Godfather is Randjel Stojanovic; and they all had families and wives there.
My father and I
My family
Mom in camp
Back to Hannover page. See also Researching the British Zone.
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