Stefan Thomas BITTNER

Stefan Thomas BITTNER

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Stefan Thomas BITTNER

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt 21. Dezember 1887 Dittersbach, Zwittau, Czechoslovakia nach diesem Ort suchen
Bestattung Börtlingen, Baden-Württemburg, Germany nach diesem Ort suchen
Taufe 26. Dezember 1887 Dittersbach, Zwittau, Czechoslovakia nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 25. September 1961 Börtlingen, Baden-Württemburg, Germany nach diesem Ort suchen
Heirat 10. Februar 1914 Laubendorf, Zwittau, Czechoslovakia nach diesem Ort suchen

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
10. Februar 1914
Laubendorf, Zwittau, Czechoslovakia
Stefanie NEUDERT BITTNER

Notizen zu dieser Person

Stefan (house # 54) was the town Mayor from 1919till 1938.
Stefan his wife, daughter, and his daughters husband Paul where kicked out of house and land in Dittersbach Czechoslovakia by Czech soldiers on 3 July 1946. They first spent 14 days in Landskron as political refugees, here they had to verify their German heritage and all of their belongings were searched for valuables that belonged to the Czechoslovakian people. Basically all they had was the clothes they whore and a small suit case, each, with changes of clothes. Anything else of value, jewelry, money or things of high value they had tried to take with them was confiscated as Czech property. The next refugee transfer point they were herded to, like cattle on trains, was Falrik Schuster (? spelling). Here they had to wait for Germany, their mother land, to allow them passage into her boarders while their genealogy was being verified. Here again they were searched for valuables, but this time more intensively, all wedding bands and family heirlooms were also taken.

Baptized in the Frankfurt Germany Temple by Danny W. Mix with son Niko Mix as proxy on 4 Jun 2005.

Stefan his wife, daughter, and his daughters husband Paul where kicked out of house and land in Dittersbach Czechoslovakia by Czech soldiers on 3 July 1946. They first spent 14 days in Landskron as political refugees, here they had to verify their German heritage and all of their belongings were searched for valuables that belonged to the Czechoslovakian people. Basically all they had was the clothes they whore and a small suit case, each, with changes of clothes. Anything else of value, jewelry, money or things of high value they had tried to take with them was confiscated as Czech property. The next refugee transfer point they were herded to, like cattle on trains, was Falrik Schuster (? spelling). Here they had to wait for Germany, their mother land, to allow them passage into her boarders while their genealogy was being verified. Here again they were searched for valuables, but this time more intensively, all wedding bands and family heirlooms were also taken.

Datenbank

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Hochgeladen 2006-04-10 13:31:24.0
Einsender user's avatar Danny Mix
E-Mail danny.mix@freenet.de
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