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Topic: Brzeg Dolny Dyhernfurth


  
  Roger Moorhouse   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Though the Tabun plant had already been in existence for a number of years by 1942, its expansion from that date was facilitated by the establishment of a combination of ZAL and KZ.
Though Jewish forced labourers were initially used, Dyhernfurth II soon developed to house some 3,000 KZ inmates, predominantly Polish and Hungarian Jews, who were to build the necessary expansion to the Tabun plant.
Given the sensitive nature of the work at Dyhernfurth, it is also claimed that both KZ sites were sealed, thus meaning, once one was in, one was in "for life".
www.bi-secureserver.net /web/rogermoorhouse/article1.html   (2433 words)

  
 Brzeg Dolny - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of Brzeg Dolny on a map of Poland
Brzeg Dolny (German: Dyhernfurth) is a town in the Lower Silesian Voivodship of southern Poland.
It is located 31 kilometers north-west of Wrocław on the Odra river, and is the site of a large chemical complex, Rokita SA.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Brzeg_Dolny   (88 words)

  
 SILRL (SILESIAN / SCHLESIEN Research List) - Current Listings - START HERE
Partitions of Poland early changed the name of its locale to Germanic Prussia and the name was changed to Dyhernfurth after the nobleman who bought the town.
World War II changed the western border of Poland again and it was returned to it's former name of Brzeg Dolny.
Brzeg Dolny can be found near the city of Wolow and Wroclaw on the map.
www.feefhs.org /de/sil/silrl/silrl.html   (3419 words)

  
 Wolów county (Poland)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
In Brzeg Dolny, NW of Wroc³aw, in Wo³ów county, the relationship between CoA and flag is a very interesting one.
The city was given the name of Dyhernfurth ("Dyhrn's Ford") and the CoA, almost exactly the same it has now.
The flag has background gules, divided by a diagonal belt argent.
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/pl-ds-wo.html   (279 words)

  
 International Jewish Cemetery Project - Poland W-X-Y-Z   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
WROCLAW {10322} BOOK: Der alte juedische Friedhof in Wroclaw (Breslau) by Maciej Lagiewski, published by Architektur-Museum in Wroclaw, 1988 Although Jews lived in the town since 1345 it was 400 years before they had a cemetery there.
Before then, their dead were transported to Brzeg Dolny (Dyhernfurth), in Krotoszyn (Krotoschin), Glogow (Glogau), Rawicz (Rawitsch), Leszno (lissa) or Biala Prudnicka (Zuelz) In 1760 they were given permission for a cemetery.
The book gives a detailed history of the community and points out that about 12,000 gravesstones are missing inscriptions or have instriptions no longer legible.
www.jewishgen.org /cemetery/e-europe/pol-w-z.html   (15114 words)

  
 NYPL, Letters To Sala
Auschwitz: Death camp to which Sala’s parents, Chana and Joseph Garncarz, were sent in August 1942, and to which her mentor and friend, Ala Gertner, and Ala’s husband, Bernhard Holtz, were sent in August 1943
Dyhernfurth [now Brzeg Dolny, Poland]: Former Schmelt labor camp to which Sala’s boyfriend, Harry Haubenstock, was sent in December 1942
Neusalz [now Nowy Sol, Poland]: Schmelt labor camp to which Sala’s sisters Raizel and Blima Garncarz were sent in August 1942
www.nypl.org /research/chss/sala/campsmap.html   (219 words)

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