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2008/01/22 20:55:58
mstulken
Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars
Datum 2008/01/22 21:43:49
Christopher Grote
Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars
2008/01/22 20:55:58
mstulken
Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars
Betreff 2008/01/22 21:43:49
Christopher Grote
Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars
2008/01/21 16:44:58
Annette Sweetman
Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars
Autor 2008/01/22 21:43:58
Annette Sweetman
[OL] Hellmann

Re: [OL] Olderburg during the Wars

Date: 2008/01/22 21:17:06
From: Annette Sweetman <bubs(a)nc.rr.com>

I recently was trying to ask old relatives if they remember trivia information on my ancestors....

My grandfather and his two brothers, all from Visbek/Damme, came to the US in 1931 for the 'opportunities' here. However, when the war was coming up in Germany, my grandfather's one brother decided the opportunities weren't that great, and that he would be better off in Germany. So he went back, fought and he died in the war. My grandfather stayed in the US and lived until he was 90!

Also during the second war, my grandmother sent tobacco to her sister, a nun, somewhere around there and in Cologne. She labeled it candy! It was so her sister could pay off the guards (Nazis I think) for protection.

I'm enjoying these stories, so I thought I would give my very meager 2 cents.

Annette

mstulken(a)wi.net wrote:
Thank you, Gerold, for a most interesting "eyewitness" account.

How tragic that you lost your father!

Marilyn

Hello,
I'm quite impressed by your discussion on this subject.

I'm still living in Oldenburg and was born in 1935. As far as I know

-except for the town of Friesoythe, there was no major military ground -
combat in the duchy of Oldenburg
-british and US planes dropped a lot of bombs on Wilhelmshaven - one of
the
major sea-ports of the 'Reich'.
-some bombs were dropped on Delmenhorst and Oldenburg.

As mentioned by others already, there was a small jewish population, which
suffered enormously. But it is not true, that the only remaining jewish
graveyard of Germany is to be found in Wittmund . There are other ones,
one of  them
being in Wildeshausen.

It might not be obvious to Americans, that the population of Oldenburg
(town
and duchy) grew by approx. 50 % within one year after world war II,
because
of all the people either fleeing or being expulsed from the eastern
provinces
of Germany. This also caused a significant mixup in religion. Up to  the
end
of 1945, southern Oldenburg was almost 98 percent catholic, the northern
Oldenburg 98 percent lutheran. The 'Fluechtlinge' as we called them,
reduced  this
predominance of one religion in either part significantly.

After the end of WW II,  some canadian troops occupied part of our  house.
The chief of the group had emigrated to Canada in the 1930th. His brother
was
fighting with the german army.

By the way, my father died in Berlin, May 3, 1945.

Gerold Diers







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