In my recent post about Adolf Michel, I included the letter his son Fred had written to the International Tracing Service after the war in which he expressed obvious anger with his uncle Julius Seligmann for his failure to help learn what had happened to their mutual relatives. This post will shed light on Julius and his relationships with his siblings.
When my cousin Wolfgang first contacted me back in February 2015, he shared with me what he knew of the story of his grandfather Julius Seligmann. Julius was the second child of August Seligmann and Rosa Bergmann and was born February 5, 1877, in Gau-Algesheim. He was the nephew of my great-great-grandfather Bernard Seligmann and first cousin of my great-grandmother Eva Seligman Cohen.
Julius and his younger brother Moritz were for many years in business together in Gau-Algesheim as merchants, but from family lore, Wolfgang learned that after his grandfather married Magdalena Kleissinger on December 1, 1922, and converted to Catholicism, there was a falling out between Julius and his family. Julius was already 45 when he married Magdalena and fifty years old when his younger son Herbert was born in 1927.
Then, according to the book by Ludwig Hellriegel about the Jews of Gau-Algesheim, Julius was forced to close his store in Gau-Algesheim in December 1935 and moved with his wife and sons to Bingen in September, 1939.1 I had speculated back in November 2014 that these actions were somehow connected to Nazi persecution, but Wolfgang did not think so. Although he did not know the details of what happened to Julius and his family or why he ended up leaving Gau-Algesheim in 1939, Wolfgang had heard from his family that Julius had suffered financial hardship after being forced to pay his brother Moritz some kind of financial settlement that led to the move to Bingen, where the family lived with Magdalena’s relatives for some time.
Recently, Wolfgang decided to try and learn more about his grandfather’s life, and he searched the Landesarchiv Speyer, the archives for the Rhine-Palatinate region in Germany. First, he searched online and found that there were court records available regarding a criminal prosecution of his grandfather Julius in 1937. The records themselves were not accessible online, so Wolfgang visited the archives in person and reviewed the many pages of court records there. He was not allowed to copy or photograph the records themselves, but took copious notes and reported back to me what he had learned. Thus, all the information that follows came from Wolfgang’s research of those court records.2
The records provided information not only about the criminal trial in 1937, but also background information about Julius and his life. The records reported that Julius was a good student and was in school through the sixth year at the Bingen schools. From 1897 to 1898, Julius served in the First Hessian Guard Regiment in Darmstadt.
After their father August died in 1909, Julius and his brother Moritz took over the family house as well as their father’s business. But Julius returned to military service on Germany’s behalf during World War I from 1914 through 1918. He was a sergeant in the infantry, battled malaria while in service, and received the Frontkämpferkreuz for his service on the front lines during the war. After the ceasefire, he helped bring the German battalions back to safety.

Honor Cross of World War I or Frontkampferkreuz
PicturePrince [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)%5D
The records indicate that there were many disputes between Julius and Moritz during this time, perhaps relating to Julius’ marriage and conversion or perhaps for unrelated family or business reasons. In May 1929, Julius bought out his brother Moritz of his share of the family home and business for 14,000 Reichmarks. There is a note in the records from a notary from Ingelheim saying this price was too high, that is, that Julius paid more than a fair price. Moritz then left Gau-Algesheim and moved to Koenigstein, and Julius ran the business on his own. But having overpaid for his brother’s half of the business, Julius soon ran into financial difficulties.
Things then got worse after Hitler came to power. The mayor watched to see who went into Julius’ store as he was apparently considered non-Aryan despite his conversion to Catholicism. Under the Nuremberg laws, he was still considered Jewish for he had four Jewish grandparents. As a result of his financial difficulties, Julius was forced to borrow money from a man named Hammen so that he could pay off his debts. As part of the process of obtaining that loan, Julius had to provide a statement of his assets.
Apparently, there was some error in that statement of assets, and that led to Julius being prosecuted for “negligent perjury.” Hammen himself testified that Julius was always a reliable businessperson and thus did not think he had intended to misstate his assets. There were also other witnesses who testified to Julius’ good character. Nevertheless, Julius was convicted and sentenced to prison from September 16, 1937 until April 16, 1938. A request for clemency was rejected. One has to wonder whether an “Aryan” business owner would have been treated as harshly as one who was born Jewish.
After being released from prison, Julius was forced to sell the family home because of financial difficulties. That led to further legal problems. Julius sold the house in April 1938 to Philip Wendelin Rohleder, a toolmaker. Rohleder had visited Julius in prison accompanied by Magdalena to convince him to sell the house. Julius agreed, but later claimed that Rohleder never paid the agreed-to price and that he was a Nazi and had told Julius he didn’t need to pay him at all. Rohleder denied this and said that he had to pay off some of Julius’ creditors and that’s why Julius had not received the whole purchase price. This dispute was not resolved until 1959 when Rohleder finally agreed to pay Julius 5000 Deutschmarks as a settlement.
Putting all this together, the story of Julius Seligmann now is more complete. Disputes between Julius and Moritz may have been the first step towards Julius’ financial problems. Overpaying his brother Moritz for the house and business in Gau-Algesheim left Julius financially vulnerable in 1929. Then the Nazis came to power, and despite his conversion to Catholicism, Julius was treated as a Jewish business owner and thus suffered as a result of the Nuremberg laws. Forced to borrow money, he became entangled in what to my mind appear to be trumped up charges as a way of getting him out of business completely. That then led to the sale of his house for less than its worth and thus his family’s need to leave Gau-Algesheim and seek help from his wife’s family in Bingen.
It is a sad story in so many ways. By marrying a Catholic woman, Julius lost the support of his family and the Jewish community of Gau-Algesheim. Then, despite being a hero for the German army in World War I, he was essentially treated as unworthy by the government in the Nazi era. He lost his family of origin, the family business and home, and his home community. At age 62 he was forced to move with his wife and two teenaged sons to Bingen and live with his in-laws.
But Julius was a survivor. He lived to 90 years old and was killed in a car accident coming home from church on March 28, 1967, three days before the first birthday of his grandson Wolfgang, who has now preserved the story of his grandfather Julius.
- Ludwig Hellriegel, Die Geschichte der Gau-Algesheimer Juden (1986, revised 2008)[The History of the Jews of Gau-Algesheim]. ↩
- References to the records can be found at http://www.archivdatenbank.lha-rlp.de/ under Landesarchiv Speyer, Justizvollzuganstalt Mainz, Bestand J 85, Findbuch, Akten, 03 Gefangene, Strafprozess 6142, Julius Seligmann, 367/37; Bestand J 83, Findbuch, Akten, 02 Gefangene, Gefangenepersonalakten, Sachakten 3142, Seligmann, Julius; Bestand J 10, Findbuch, Akten, 12 Prozessurteil und -akten, Zivilprozess 298 Seligmann, Julius. ↩
My goodness Amy, what a heroic and courageous account which was Julius Seligmann’s life. I want it to be made into a film! Well done to Wolfgang for sharing his grandfather’s story. There was discord with Julius’s brother Moritz but Julius was an absolute survivor. So sad fate turned against him after the Weimar period. Interesting historically about the Frontkämpferkreuz and his military service too.
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Thank you, Shirley. I agree—Julius lived a life filled with challenges and somehow endured. Wolfgang did a wonderful job of researching to fill in the gaps in his grandfather’s life story.
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Julius does appear to have been a survivor even after all the things he went through. Kudos to Wolfgang for doing the research in the Landesarchiv Speyer.
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I know—it’s so wonderful to have a fellow researcher on the ground in Germany!
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I wonder if his concussion caused part of the problem and perhaps a change of behavior. But his survival through it all shows he did have support of his wife’s family. Whereas the Hewish side of his family had none.
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Yes, it’s rather shameful. Of course, it likely still happens in some Jewish families today where they sit shiva for a child who marries someone not Jewish.
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It goes both ways. I had a friend whose wife’s family kicked her out when they found out she planned to marry someone Jewish. 1980s. But was still shocking.
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Yes, sadly hate goes both ways.
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I see so many parallels in your sad story about Julius Seligmann and the one about Anna and her son Anna von Waldenfels. Very interesting post, Amy!
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Yes, I am afraid these stories were all too common. And probably still are.
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What a wonderful followup to the original posting. Kudo’s to Wolfgang for his great thorough note taking. It is so amazing the amount of information that is actually out there to be found. Such insight into your families history. I was curious too if perhaps the concussion had some affect. Magdalena was a great support to him as well as a possible life saver during that time period too.
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It was interesting that the court records mentioned the concussion and the seizures, leaving the implication that there was some relevance to those facts. And it is quite remarkable that Magdalena stood by him despite all the personal and economic struggles when as a non-Jew, she might have been safer without him.
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That is true too, about Magdalena, I had not thought in those terms. Good point 🙂
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I love how you are collaborating with relatives to bring your family’s stories to light.
Julius sounds like a good man who endured much. I am glad he had support from his wife and her family.
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That’s my favorite part of family history research—finding and working with cousins I never even knew I had. Such a gift! Thanks, Su.
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Wow! What a story, Amy. I was particularly struck by the fact that Julius’ legal battle for financial remuneration from Rohleder spanned WWII and wasn’t settled until 1959.
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And really I was surprised that to see that there ever was a settlement!
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I know—can you imagine her persistence and that of her lawyer? Quite impressive.
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Amy,
Your storytelling brings life to our history. Julius story is both one of resilience and sadness. He is a survivor in part because of the support he received from his wife’s family. In my retirement, I am working with Jewish and secular organizations to help build resilient children/adults. Julius’ story shows how resilience and well-being can overcome tragedy and crisis. Thanks for sharing.
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Hi Ken! Thank you so much, and what a great project you are working with. That is such important work. And PS—supposedly I should be hearing from Ava Cohn sometime soon. Not sure I even remembered what I’d asked her!
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Thank you!!
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It was a life well lived, wasn’t it? I love these stories, Amy!
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I am not sure. He lost so much—perhaps he didn’t think so.
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Sorry, not really what I meant. It was a life rich in experience, in some ways not dissimilar to my own. Although there is much I have lost materially, I am enriched by all I have seen and learned. I did not mean to offend…
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No offense taken! I just have some doubts about how much joy Julius experienced. I hope you have had a lot more joy and a lot less pain in your life, Frederick.
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This story leaves me speechless. All those twists and turns. Says a lot about Nazism, for sure. Ugh.
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A lot about hate—all kinds of hate. 😦
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Yes, for sure. Even though he survived, what a tragic life.
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I imagine he felt a lot of anger and a lot of sadness.
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Yes, I imagine so.
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