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{| border="1"
|-
|'''Cassirer'''
|[[Image:Schwientochlowitz2.jpg]]
|
|}
'''Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau'''

 
The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary
history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together
including books written by members of the family, the archives
held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by
members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work
that has been done by [[Michael Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others]], documents
handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer
descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a [[reunion in Berlin in 2002.]] and ten years later in a [[a reunion in London in 2012]]). Progressively
it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an
account highlighting the material already collected here.

 
The early history [[]]
of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see [[here]]).
The modern history, as described by [[Werner Falk]],
begins with[[Markus Cassirer and Jeanette Steinitz]], in Upper Silesia, in
what is now Poland, in a place called [[Schwientochlowitz]] in
or about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population
of
[[14,612 in 1905]]).
Markus Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and
makers of looms.

     
{| border="1"
|-


|} 
[[Markus Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette]].

 
(From the [[Family Trust document, 1890]])

 
Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons
([[Louis]], [[Julius]], [[Eduard]], [[Salo]], [[Moritz]], [[Max]], and [[Isidor]]) and two daughters ([[Rosalie]] and [[Julie]]). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and
moved to [[Breslau]] which was a big and rapidly
growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual
achievements.

 
[[Image:Breslau-cover.jpg]]

 
[[Breslau]] (now Wroclaw, Poland)

 
One family recollection is that
Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a [[slivowitz]]. (a
type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business.
That story may mix up Markus with [[Siegfried Cassirer]] (Markus's brother) who is shown
as having been a Brewer.[[†]] Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way
or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.

     
{| border="1"
|-


|}
Another brewer

 
[[Siegfried Cassirer (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette]] .

 
(From the [[Family Trust document, 1890]])

 
Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together
in a [[Family Trust (established in1890)]]. But they
were not the only brothers. There
was also one who was in the timber industry and lived in Breslau. This"Breslau
uncle" was very interested in the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz
to Breslau, he would find jobs for them in the timber trade.
Only one of them was sent to university.

       
{| border="1"
|-
|
Three of the Cassirer brothers, from left [[Max]], [[Isidor]] and [[Salo]][[]] Cassirer


|
Salomon ([[Salo]]) Cassirer in earlier days


|} 
[[Image:Cassirer-OnclesW.jpg]]

 
Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Julius]], [[Eduard]], [[Louis]], [[Max]], and [[Isidor]] Cassirer, circa 1900

 
[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer]

 
[[Image:Cassirer_Brothers_1.jpg]]

 
Earlier photo of
five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Louis]], [[Isidor]], [[Max]], [[Julius]], [[Eduard]]

 
[Photograph
source: Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]

 
This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the "Gründerjahre" - "the Founder's years". Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin.

 
For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian [[Wanja Abramowski]], near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. [[Julius Cassirer]] was centrally involved in this development. And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin.

 
[[Image:Warschauer_Strasse_1908.jpg]]

 
One part of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908

 
[[Isidor Cassirer]], one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the
timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the
1870's.

     
{| border="1"
|-

Isidor Cassirer

 

Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)


|} 
Isidor then had the bright idea together
with the brother who had been at university to move into the manufacture
of pulp and the even more brilliant idea of starting this pulp
factory where the timber was - in Poland. So they created a big
pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.

 
When the 1914 War came there was great
anxiety whether this factory in Poland would survive. Would there
be fighting? As it happened the fighting never really came across
that part of Poland and when the War ended the factory was in
as good condition as ever. But Germany were on the losing side.
The law of the new Poland provided that Germans could not own
property in Poland. So Isidor and his brother had to sell the
factory. They sold it for 11 million marks to an American consortium.
This was paid across in Switzerland in Swiss currency - a very
nice result.

       
{| border="1"
|-
|[[Image:Isidor_C_Nameplate.jpg]]
|-
|Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer
|} 
Much the same happened to almost all the other
brothers. The brother with whom Isidor had started the factory
in Poland also had already started with another brother a factory
in Czechoslovakia.

 
Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - [[Moritz Cassirer]] - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a sum of money to start out with and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: [[For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.]])

 
Eventually all the other brothers had factories
and other ventures and, as time went on, a good deal of money.
They would never borrow. They met, all of them, every day, at
4 o'clock or so in a cafe in Berlin and there they exchanged views
on their businesses and made arrangements about how to finance
each other in what was effectively a family trust.

 
Isidor was well known in the family for
being technologically very interested. He was one of the first
people in Berlin to have a telephone and [[Betty Cassirer]] would later recall that he
would tease his friends and customers. Because when they came
to the entrance of the business (when he still had the timber
business) - it was a big area that their timber business covered
- and they had to mention their business and their name and they
would let them in, and when they arrived at Isidor's office he
already knew who was coming. And people would say "how does
he know".

 
With wealth comes also the possibility
to make a civic contribution. [[Max Cassirer]] was particularly notable in
this regard.

     
{| border="1"
|-
|
Max Cassirer

 

At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter

 
|}   
Max Cassirer devoted his" leisures"
to the municipal businesses of Berlin, and his wealth to help
his daughter [[Edith Cassirer]] and son-in-law, [[Paul Geheeb]], to create the Odenwaldschule - a very progressive school which, as his grandson
[[Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer]] would recently describe, was intended to become
"the cocoon of a humanistic education". Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. [[One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule]] in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann).

 [[Image:ODENWAlDSCHULE_N1.jpg]] The Odenwaldschule
Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic
Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.

 
The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter [[Marie Charlotte Loewenberg]], in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of [[Julius and Julie Cassirer]] on 17 March 1918:
->Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte

 
''How we spend our Sundays:''

 
''Dear Lotte,''

 
''Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents. My
father says, he’d rather stay home, he can’t
really sleep at the villa, there aren’t enough sofas, but we still have
to go. Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the
children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone
yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper. Now
we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the
soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy,
we’re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It’s usually hen;
Father says he’s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last.
Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to
the phone. There’s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great. Grandfather
says, “I’ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much
Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all”. Grandmother says,
he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others
say almost nothing. Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table. Aunt
Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno. Now comes
dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred,
but that’s all confiscated now. Fritz eats two helpings. Grandmother
urges him to a third. Grandfather says, “The kid will explode now”. Grandmother
says, “Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable”. Father is
called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He’s very angry:
Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up. Grandfather
is very tired. Grandmother says, “It’s not polite to go sleep
when one has company”. But Grandfather goes anyway. The other
guests’ heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father
takes his coat off. Mother says, “That’s ugly!” Father
takes his tie off as well and lies down. Grandmother stays lively and
asks me, “Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?” I say “I’ll
go for a walk with my Anni, it’s too boring here for me!” ''

 
''And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary. More next time. ''

 
''Your, [[Mariechen]]''

 
 
This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation [[click here]]]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph to Eli Ruth.

 
[Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]

 
So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture. As a whole the seven sons and two
daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes
but, with this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described,
became very prominent. However, as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.

             
{| border="1"
|-
!
![[Image:Eduard_Cassirer_Grave_3.jpg]]
![[Image:Jenny_Cassirer_Grave.jpg]]
![[Image:Louis_Cassirer_Grave.jpg]]
|-
|Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer
|Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer
|
|Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer    (all
        in Berlin)
|}
[[Back to Contents]]'''
/ [[Next page: The Breslau Generation]]'''

 
Click here for Cassirers: [[Breslau to Berlin]]; [[Music, Publishing and Art]]; [[Continuing the Entrepeneurship]]; [[Daughters]]; [[The Scattered Generations]]

 
''To see some genealogical sites which have supported this one by listing this in their directories [[click here]]''

to:
 
December 18, 2012, at 08:14 AM by 203.184.43.179 -
Added lines 1-79:
              
{| border="1"
|-
|'''Cassirer'''
|[[Image:Schwientochlowitz2.jpg]]
|
|}
'''Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau'''

 
The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary
history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together
including books written by members of the family, the archives
held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by
members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work
that has been done by [[Michael Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others]], documents
handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer
descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a [[reunion in Berlin in 2002.]] and ten years later in a [[a reunion in London in 2012]]). Progressively
it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an
account highlighting the material already collected here.

 
The early history [[]]
of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see [[here]]).
The modern history, as described by [[Werner Falk]],
begins with[[Markus Cassirer and Jeanette Steinitz]], in Upper Silesia, in
what is now Poland, in a place called [[Schwientochlowitz]] in
or about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population
of
[[14,612 in 1905]]).
Markus Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and
makers of looms.

     
{| border="1"
|-


|} 
[[Markus Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette]].

 
(From the [[Family Trust document, 1890]])

 
Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons
([[Louis]], [[Julius]], [[Eduard]], [[Salo]], [[Moritz]], [[Max]], and [[Isidor]]) and two daughters ([[Rosalie]] and [[Julie]]). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and
moved to [[Breslau]] which was a big and rapidly
growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual
achievements.

 
[[Image:Breslau-cover.jpg]]

 
[[Breslau]] (now Wroclaw, Poland)

 
One family recollection is that
Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a [[slivowitz]]. (a
type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business.
That story may mix up Markus with [[Siegfried Cassirer]] (Markus's brother) who is shown
as having been a Brewer.[[†]] Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way
or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.

     
{| border="1"
|-


|}
Another brewer

 
[[Siegfried Cassirer (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette]] .

 
(From the [[Family Trust document, 1890]])

Changed lines 81-100 from:

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<META NAME="Description" CONTENT="History of
the Cassirer family from Breslau and Berlin to the Holocaust including Ernst Cassirer and the 20th century philosophers, Paul Cassirer and the French Impressionists, Bruno Cassirer and the Cassirer Press, Heinz Cassirer and Max Cassirer. Includes also the next generation. ">
<META NAME="Author"
  (: title Cassirer: from Schwientochlowitz to Breslau:)
  <script language="JavaScript" type="text/JavaScript">
<!
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function MM_openBrWindow(theURL,winName,features) { //v2.0
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<BODY TEXT="#3623ff">
(:table width="888" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="115":)<FONT COLOR="#000000" size="+2">'''Cassirer'''</FONT>
(:cell width="657":)<font color="#000000">%apply=img width="642" height="75"%Resources/Schwientochlowitz2.jpg%%
</font>
(:cell width="102":)<font color="#000000">%apply=img width="96" height="96"%Path
:../../WP04/P04_163A.JPG%%
</font>
to:
Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together
in a [[Family Trust (established in1890)]]. But they
were not
the only brothers. There
was also one who was in
the timber industry and lived in Breslau. This&quot;Breslau
uncle&quot; was very interested in
the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz
to Breslau
, he would find jobs for them in the timber trade.
Only one of them was sent to university.

   
   
{| border
="1"
|-
|
Three of the Cassirer brothers
, from left [[Max]], [[Isidor]] and [[Salo]][[]] Cassirer


|
Salomon
([[Salo]]) Cassirer in earlier days


|} 
[[Image:Cassirer-OnclesW.jpg]]

 
Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left)
: [[Julius]], [[Eduard]], [[Louis]], [[Max]], and [[Isidor]] Cassirer, circa 1900

 
[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer]

Changed lines 110-213 from:
(:tableend:)

<FONT COLOR="#000000" size="+1">'''Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau'''</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary
  history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together
  including books written by members of the family, the archives
  held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by
  members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work
  that has been done by </FONT>[[Path:../acknowledgements.html|Michael
  Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others]]<FONT COLOR="#000000">, documents
  handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer
  descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a </FONT>[[Path:../Berlin2002/index.html|reunion in Berlin in 2002.]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and ten years later in a [[Path:../London2012/index.html| a
  reunion in London in 2012]]). Progressively
  it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an
  account highlighting the material already collected here.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">The early history </font>[[Attach:stories01.html|]]<font color="#000000">
  of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see [[Attach:stories01.html|here]]).
  The modern history, as described by </font>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_251.HTM|Werner
  Falk]]<font color="#000000">,
        begins with</font>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_102.HTM| Markus Cassirer
        and Jeanette  Steinitz]]<font color="#000000">, in Upper Silesia, in
        what is now Poland,  in a place called [[Path:../CEurope/A03.html|Schwientochlowitz]] in
        or  about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population
        of
          [[http://www.literad.de/regional/beuthen.htm|14,612 in 1905]]).
          Markus  Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and
          makers of looms.</font>
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="34%" border="1" height="164":)
(:cellnr height="155" width="49%":)
        <div align="center">%apply=img width="134" height="156"%Path:../../WP04/P04_163B.JPG%%
(:divend:)
     
(:cell height="155" width="51%":)
(:div align="center":)
%apply=img width="128" height="152"%Path:../../WP05/P05_240A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
     
   
(:tableend:)
</div>

&nbsp;


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_102.HTM|Markus
  Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette]].</font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10"> (From the [[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
  Trust document, 1890]])</font>


%block align="left"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons
  (</FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_454.HTM|Moritz]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">) and two daughters (</FONT>[[Path:../../WC04/WC04_072.HTM|Rosalie]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_493.HTM|Julie]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and
  moved to [[Path:../CEurope/A01.html| Breslau]] which was a big and rapidly
  growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual
  achievements. </FONT>


%block align="center"% <FONT
 COLOR="#000000">%apply=img width="175" height="162"%Path:../CEurope/Breslau-cover.jpg%%
</FONT>


%block align="center"% <font
 color="#000000">[[Path:../CEurope/A01.html| Breslau]] (now Wroclaw, Poland)</font>


<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">One family recollection is that
  Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a [[http://www.sljivovica.net/slivovitz.html|slivowitz]]. (a
  type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business.
  That story may mix up Markus with </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_388.HTM|Siegfried
  Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> (Markus's brother) who is shown
  as having been a Brewer.[[#|&dagger;]]</FONT> <FONT
 COLOR="#000000">Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way
  or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.</FONT>
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="21%" border="1" height="138":)
(:cellnr width="52%" height="135":)
      <div align="right">%apply=img width="124" height="133"%Path:../../WP02/P02_439A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
   
(:cell width="48%" height="135":)
(:div align="right":)
%apply=img width="110" height="133"%Path:../../WP02/P02_440A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
   
to:
[[Image:Cassirer_Brothers_1.jpg]]

 
Earlier photo of
five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Louis]], [[Isidor]], [[Max]], [[Julius]], [[Eduard]]

 
[Photograph
source: Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]

Changed lines 121-229 from:
(:tableend:)

<font color="#291A10">Another brewer</font>


<font color="#291A10"> [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_388.HTM|Siegfried Cassirer
    (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette]] .</font>


<font color="#291A10"> (From the [[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
    Trust document, 1890]])</font>
</div>

<font color="#000000">Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together
    in a </font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
    Trust (established in1890)]]</font><font color="#000000">.&nbsp; But they
    were not the only brothers.&nbsp; There
    was also one who was in the timber industry and lived in Breslau.&nbsp;&nbsp; This&quot;Breslau
    uncle&quot; was very interested in the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz
    to Breslau, he would find jobs for them in  the timber trade.
    Only one of them was sent to university.</font>


&nbsp;
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="734" height="60" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="371":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="256" height="337"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160E.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10">Three of the Cassirer brothers, from left </font><FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]]<font color="#291A10">, [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]  and </font><font color="#000000">[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]</font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|]] Cassirer </font>
(:cell width="353":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="211" height="339"%Path:../../WP04/P04_177A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Salomon ([[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]) Cassirer in earlier days </font>
   
(:tableend:)
(:divend:)
%block align="center"% %apply=img width="631" height="491"%Resources/Cassirer-OnclesW.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]], and </font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000">Cassirer, circa 1900 </FONT>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-2">[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer] </font>


%block align="center"% &nbsp;


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="601" height="438"%Resources/Cassirer_Brothers_1.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Earlier photo of
five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]],&nbsp;</font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]</font><font color="#000000">, [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]],</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000"></FONT><font color="#000000">&nbsp;[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]] </font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-2">[Photograph
source:  Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]</font>


%block align="center"% &nbsp;


<FONT COLOR="#000000">This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the &quot;Gr&uuml;nderjahre&quot; - &quot;the Founder's years&quot;. Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin. </FONT>


<font color="#000000">For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian [[http://www.friedrichshain-magazin.de/archiv/fh-4-02/text14.html|Wanja Abramowski]],&nbsp; near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius Cassirer ]]  was centrally involved in this development.</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000">And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin. </FONT>


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="300" height="189"%Resources/Warschauer_Strasse_1908.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">One part  of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908 </font>


[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the
  timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the
1870's.</FONT>


<CENTER>
(:table width="53%" border="0" height="173":)
(:cellnr width="27%":)

%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">%apply=img width="151" height="226"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160C.JPG%%
</font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Isidor Cassirer</font>
       
(:cell width="30%":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="165" height="207"%Path:../../WP04/P04_207A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)</font>
     
(:tableend:)

&nbsp;
    </CENTER>

<FONT COLOR="#000000">Isidor then had the bright idea together
to:
This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the &quot;Gr&uuml;nderjahre&quot; - &quot;the Founder's years&quot;. Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin.

 
For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian [[Wanja Abramowski]], near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. [[Julius Cassirer]] was centrally involved in this development. And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin.

 
[[Image:Warschauer_Strasse_1908.jpg]]

 
One part of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908

 
[[Isidor Cassirer]], one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the
timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the
1870's.

     
{| border="1"
|-

Isidor Cassirer

 

Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)


|} 
Isidor then had the bright idea together
Changed lines 153-156 from:
pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">
When the 1914 War came there was great
to:
pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.

 

When the 1914 War came there was great
Changed lines 165-176 from:
nice result.</FONT>
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="200"
border="0":)
(:cellnr:)%apply=img width="291" height="155"%Resources/
Isidor_C_Nameplate.jpg%%
   
(:cellnr height="18":)<div align="center"><font color="#000000" size="-1">Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer </font>
(:divend:)
   
(:tableend:)
</div>

<FONT COLOR="#000000">
Much the same happened to almost all the other
to:
nice result.

       
{|
border="1"
|-
|[[Image
:Isidor_C_Nameplate.jpg]]
|-
|Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer
|} 
Much
the same happened to almost all the other
Changed lines 177-183 from:
in Czechoslovakia.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">
Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_454.HTM|Moritz Cassirer]] - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a&nbsp;sum&nbsp;of money to start out with&nbsp;and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: [[#|For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.]]) </font>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">
Eventually all the other brothers had factories
to:
in Czechoslovakia.

 

Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - [[Moritz Cassirer]] - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a sum of money to start out with and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: [[For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.]])


Eventually all the other brothers had factories
Changed lines 188-191 from:
each other in what was effectively a family trust.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">
Isidor was well known in the family for
to:
each other in what was effectively a family trust.

 

Isidor was well known in the family for
Changed lines 193-194 from:
people in Berlin to have a telephone and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_254.HTM|Betty
Cassirer]]<FONT COLOR="#000000"> would later recall that he
to:
people in Berlin to have a telephone and [[Betty Cassirer]] would later recall that he
Changed lines 200-236 from:
he know&quot;.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">
With wealth comes also the possibility
to make a civic contribution. </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max
Cassirer]]<FONT COLOR="#000000"> was particularly notable in
this regard.</FONT>


<CENTER>
(:table width
="417" height="261" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="208" height="257":)

%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">%apply=img align="BOTTOM" border="0" width="115" height="162" naturalsizeflag="3"%Path:../../PI04/PI04_166.JPG%%
</font>


%block align="center"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">Max Cassirer </FONT>
     
(:cell width="199":)
(:div align="left":)
%block align="center"% %apply=img width="142" height="200"%Path:../../WP04/P04_166A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter</FONT>
   
(:divend:)
 
(:tableend:)

</CENTER></P>

<CENTER>
</CENTER>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">
Max Cassirer devoted his&quot; leisures&quot;
to:
he know&quot;.

 

With wealth comes also the possibility
to make a civic contribution. [[Max Cassirer]] was particularly notable in
this regard
.

     
{| border
="1"
|-
|
Max Cassirer

 

At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter

 
|} 
 
Max Cassirer devoted his&quot; leisures&quot;
Changed lines 221-316 from:
his daughter </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_104.HTM|Edith Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and son-in-law, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_104.HTM|Paul
Geheeb]]<FONT COLOR="#000000">, to create the Odenwaldschule</FONT> <FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> - a very progressive school which, as his grandson
</FONT>[[Path:../../WC04/WC04_052.HTM|Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> would recently describe, was intended to become
&quot;the cocoon of a humanistic education&quot;. Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. [[Path:../Webp/Odenwaldschule01.html|One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule ]]  in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known  playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann). </FONT>


<CENTER><FONT COLOR="#000000">%apply=img WIDTH="450" HEIGHT="187" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="0" NATURALSIZEFLAG="3"%Resources/ODENWAlDSCHULE_N1.jpg%%
</FONT></CENTER>


<CENTER><FONT COLOR="#000000">The Odenwaldschule</FONT></CENTER>


<FONT COLOR="#000000"> Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic
Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter [[Path:../../WC03/WC03_011.HTM|Marie Charlotte Loewenberg]], in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius and Julie Cassirer ]] on 17 March 1918:</font>
-><font color="#000000">Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte</font>


<font color="#000000">''How we spend our Sundays:''</font>


''<font color="#000000">Dear Lotte,</font>''


''<font color="#000000">Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents. &nbsp;My
        father says, he&rsquo;d rather stay home, he can&rsquo;t
  really sleep at the villa, there aren&rsquo;t enough sofas, but we still have
  to go.&nbsp; Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the
  children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone
  yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper.&nbsp; Now
  we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the
  soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy,
  we&rsquo;re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It&rsquo;s usually hen;
  Father says he&rsquo;s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last.
  Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to
  the phone. There&rsquo;s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great.  Grandfather
  says, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much
  Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all&rdquo;. Grandmother says,
  he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others
  say almost nothing.&nbsp; Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table.&nbsp; Aunt
  Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno.&nbsp; Now comes
  dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred,
  but that&rsquo;s all confiscated now.&nbsp; Fritz eats two helpings.&nbsp; Grandmother
  urges him to a third.&nbsp; Grandfather says, &ldquo;The kid will explode now&rdquo;.&nbsp; Grandmother
  says, &ldquo;Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable&rdquo;. Father is
  called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He&rsquo;s very angry:
  Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up.&nbsp; Grandfather
  is very tired.&nbsp; Grandmother says, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not polite to go sleep
  when one has company&rdquo;.&nbsp; But Grandfather goes anyway.&nbsp; The other
  guests&rsquo; heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father
  takes his coat off.&nbsp; Mother says, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s ugly!&rdquo; Father
  takes his tie off as well and lies down.&nbsp; Grandmother stays lively and
  asks me, &ldquo;Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?&rdquo; I say &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
  go for a walk with my Anni, it&rsquo;s too boring here for me!&rdquo; </font>''


''<font color="#000000">And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary.&nbsp; More next time. </font>''


''<font color="#000000">Your, [[Path:../../WC03/WC03_011.HTM|Mariechen]]</font>''

<font color="#000000">This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation [[#|click here]]]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph  to Eli Ruth. </font>


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="450" height="318"%Path:../../WP05/P05_140B.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-1"> [Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]</font>


%block align="left"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture. As a whole the seven sons and two
    daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes
    but, with this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described,
    became very prominent. However,  as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.</FONT>
(:table width="1185" height="121" border="0" cellspacing="2":)
  <tr>
    <th width="278" scope="col">%apply=img width="299" height="298"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160A.JPG%%
</th>
    <th width="245" scope="col">%apply=img width="194" height="322"%Path:../Cassirer/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave_3.jpg%%
</th>
    <th width="202" scope="col">%apply=img width="150" height="320"%Path:../Cassirer/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave/Jenny_Cassirer_Grave.jpg%%
</th>
    <th width="442" scope="col">%apply=img width="370" height="306"%Path:../Cassirer/Louis_Cassirer_Grave.jpg%%
</th>
  </tr>
(:cellnr:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer </font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer </font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (all
        in Berlin) </font>
to:
his daughter [[Edith Cassirer]] and son-in-law, [[Paul Geheeb]], to create the Odenwaldschule - a very progressive school which, as his grandson
[[Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer]] would recently describe, was intended to become
&quot;the cocoon of a humanistic education&quot;. Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. [[One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule]] in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann).

 [[Image:ODENWAlDSCHULE_N1.jpg]] The Odenwaldschule
Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic
Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.

 
The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter [[Marie Charlotte Loewenberg]], in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of [[Julius and Julie Cassirer]] on 17 March 1918:
->Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte

 
''How we spend our Sundays:''

 
''Dear Lotte,''

 
''Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents. My
father says, he&rsquo;d rather stay home, he can&rsquo;t
really sleep at the villa, there aren&rsquo;t enough sofas, but we still have
to go. Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the
children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone
yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper. Now
we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the
soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy,
we&rsquo;re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It&rsquo;s usually hen;
Father says he&rsquo;s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last.
Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to
the phone. There&rsquo;s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great. Grandfather
says, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much
Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all&rdquo;. Grandmother says,
he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others
say almost nothing. Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table. Aunt
Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno. Now comes
dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred,
but that&rsquo;s all confiscated now. Fritz eats two helpings. Grandmother
urges him to a third. Grandfather says, &ldquo;The kid will explode now&rdquo;. Grandmother
says, &ldquo;Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable&rdquo;. Father is
called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He&rsquo;s very angry:
Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up. Grandfather
is very tired. Grandmother says, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not polite to go sleep
when one has company&rdquo;. But Grandfather goes anyway. The other
guests&rsquo; heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father
takes his coat off. Mother says, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s ugly!&rdquo; Father
takes his tie off as well and lies down. Grandmother stays lively and
asks me, &ldquo;Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?&rdquo; I say &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
go for a walk with my Anni, it&rsquo;s too boring here for me!&rdquo; ''

 
''And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary. More next time. ''

 
''Your, [[Mariechen]]''

 
 
This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation [[click here]]]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph to Eli Ruth.

Changed lines 282-305 from:
(:tableend:)

%block align="left"% [[Attach:stories.html|'''Back to Contents''']]'''<FONT COLOR="#000000">
/ </FONT>[[Attach:stories02_1a.html|Next page: The Breslau Generation
]]'''


Click here for Cassirers:&nbsp; &nbsp;[[Attach:stories02_1a.html|Breslau
    to Berlin]]; [[Attach:stories02_1b
.html|Music, Publishing and Art]]; [[Attach:stories02_1c.html|Continuing
    the Entrepeneurship]]; [[Attach:stories02_1d.html|Daughters]]; [[Attach:stories02_2.html|The
Scattered Generations]]


''To see some genealogical sites which have supported this one by listing
this in their directories [[Path:../Webp/genealogical_directories.html|click here]]''


Type
MIME Type text/html
Resource Type Document
Location
Full URL http://meta-studies
.net/genealogy/ZDocs/Stories/stories02.html
Scheme http
Host meta
-studies.net
Path /genealogy/ZDocs/Stories/stories02
.html
Filename stories02
.html
to:
[Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]

 
So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture
. As a whole the seven sons and two
daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes
but, with
this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described,
became very prominent
. However, as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.

             
{| border="1"
|
-
!
![[Image:Eduard_Cassirer_Grave_3
.jpg]]
![[Image:Jenny_Cassirer_Grave
.jpg]]
![[Image:Louis_Cassirer_Grave
.jpg]]
|-
|Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer
|Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer
|
|Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer    (all
        in Berlin)
|}
[[Back to Contents]]'''
/ [[Next page: The Breslau Generation]]'''

 
Click here for Cassirers: [[Breslau to Berlin]]; [[Music, Publishing and Art]]; [[Continuing the Entrepeneurship]]; [[Daughters]]; [[The Scattered Generations]]

 
''To see some genealogical sites which have supported this one by listing this in their directories [[click here]]''

 
December 18, 2012, at 08:13 AM by 203.184.43.179 -
Changed lines 1-139 from:
Cassirer: from Schwientochlowitz to Breslau
Cassirer
Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau

The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together including books written by members of the family, the archives held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work that has been done by Michael Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others, documents handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a reunion in Berlin in 2002. and ten years later in a a reunion in London in 2012). Progressively it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an account highlighting the material already collected here.

The early history of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see here). The modern history, as described by Werner Falk, begins with Markus Cassirer and Jeanette Steinitz, in Upper Silesia, in what is now Poland, in a place called Schwientochlowitz in or about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population of 14,612 in 1905). Markus Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and makers of looms.



 

Markus Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette.

(From the Family Trust document, 1890)

Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons (Louis, Julius, Eduard, Salo, Moritz, Max, and Isidor) and two daughters (Rosalie and Julie). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and moved to Breslau which was a big and rapidly growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual achievements.



Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland)

One family recollection is that Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a slivowitz. (a type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business. That story may mix up Markus with Siegfried Cassirer (Markus's brother) who is shown as having been a Brewer.† Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.



Another brewer

Siegfried Cassirer (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette .

(From the Family Trust document, 1890)

Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together in a Family Trust (established in1890).  But they were not the only brothers.  There was also one who was in the timber industry and lived in Breslau.  This"Breslau uncle" was very interested in the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz to Breslau, he would find jobs for them in the timber trade. Only one of them was sent to university.

 



Three of the Cassirer brothers, from left Max, Isidor and Salo Cassirer



Salomon (Salo) Cassirer in earlier days



Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): Julius, Eduard, Louis, Max, and Isidor Cassirer, circa 1900

[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer]

 



Earlier photo of five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): Louis, Isidor, Max,  Julius, Eduard

[Photograph source: Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]

 

This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the "Gründerjahre" - "the Founder's years". Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin.

For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian Wanja Abramowski,  near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. Julius Cassirer was centrally involved in this development. And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin.



One part of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908

Isidor Cassirer, one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the 1870's.



Isidor Cassirer



Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)

 

Isidor then had the bright idea together with the brother who had been at university to move into the manufacture of pulp and the even more brilliant idea of starting this pulp factory where the timber was - in Poland. So they created a big pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.

When the 1914 War came there was great anxiety whether this factory in Poland would survive. Would there be fighting? As it happened the fighting never really came across that part of Poland and when the War ended the factory was in as good condition as ever. But Germany were on the losing side. The law of the new Poland provided that Germans could not own property in Poland. So Isidor and his brother had to sell the factory. They sold it for 11 million marks to an American consortium. This was paid across in Switzerland in Swiss currency - a very nice result.


Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer
Much the same happened to almost all the other brothers. The brother with whom Isidor had started the factory in Poland also had already started with another brother a factory in Czechoslovakia.

Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - Moritz Cassirer - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a sum of money to start out with and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.)

Eventually all the other brothers had factories and other ventures and, as time went on, a good deal of money. They would never borrow. They met, all of them, every day, at 4 o'clock or so in a cafe in Berlin and there they exchanged views on their businesses and made arrangements about how to finance each other in what was effectively a family trust.

Isidor was well known in the family for being technologically very interested. He was one of the first people in Berlin to have a telephone and Betty Cassirer would later recall that he would tease his friends and customers. Because when they came to the entrance of the business (when he still had the timber business) - it was a big area that their timber business covered - and they had to mention their business and their name and they would let them in, and when they arrived at Isidor's office he already knew who was coming. And people would say "how does he know".

With wealth comes also the possibility to make a civic contribution. Max Cassirer was particularly notable in this regard.



Max Cassirer



At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter

Max Cassirer devoted his" leisures" to the municipal businesses of Berlin, and his wealth to help his daughter Edith Cassirer and son-in-law, Paul Geheeb, to create the Odenwaldschule - a very progressive school which, as his grandson Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer would recently describe, was intended to become "the cocoon of a humanistic education". Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann).


The Odenwaldschule
Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.

The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter Marie Charlotte Loewenberg, in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of Julius and Julie Cassirer on 17 March 1918:

Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte

How we spend our Sundays:

Dear Lotte,

Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents.  My father says, he’d rather stay home, he can’t really sleep at the villa, there aren’t enough sofas, but we still have to go.  Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper.  Now we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy, we’re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It’s usually hen; Father says he’s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last. Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to the phone. There’s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great. Grandfather says, “I’ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all”. Grandmother says, he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others say almost nothing.  Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table.  Aunt Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno.  Now comes dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred, but that’s all confiscated now.  Fritz eats two helpings.  Grandmother urges him to a third.  Grandfather says, “The kid will explode now”.  Grandmother says, “Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable”. Father is called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He’s very angry: Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up.  Grandfather is very tired.  Grandmother says, “It’s not polite to go sleep when one has company”.  But Grandfather goes anyway.  The other guests’ heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father takes his coat off.  Mother says, “That’s ugly!” Father takes his tie off as well and lies down.  Grandmother stays lively and asks me, “Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?” I say “I’ll go for a walk with my Anni, it’s too boring here for me!”

And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary.  More next time.

Your, Mariechen

This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation click here]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph to Eli Ruth.



[Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]

So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture. As a whole the seven sons and two daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes but, with this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described, became very prominent. However, as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.


Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer    (all in Berlin)
Back to Contents / Next page: The Breslau Generation

Click here for Cassirers:  Breslau to Berlin; Music, Publishing and Art; Continuing the Entrepeneurship; Daughters; The Scattered Generations

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<META NAME="Description" CONTENT="History of the Cassirer family from Breslau and Berlin to the Holocaust including Ernst Cassirer and the 20th century philosophers, Paul Cassirer and the French Impressionists, Bruno Cassirer and the Cassirer Press, Heinz Cassirer and Max Cassirer. Includes also the next generation. ">
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  (: title Cassirer: from Schwientochlowitz to Breslau:)
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<BODY TEXT="#3623ff">
(:table width="888" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="115":)<FONT COLOR="#000000" size="+2">'''Cassirer'''</FONT>
(:cell width="657":)<font color="#000000">%apply=img width="642" height="75"%Resources/Schwientochlowitz2.jpg%%
</font>
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<FONT COLOR="#000000" size="+1">'''Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau'''</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary
  history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together
  including books written by members of the family, the archives
  held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by
  members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work
  that has been done by </FONT>[[Path:../acknowledgements.html|Michael
  Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others]]<FONT COLOR="#000000">, documents
  handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer
  descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a </FONT>[[Path:../Berlin2002/index.html|reunion in Berlin in 2002.]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and ten years later in a [[Path:../London2012/index.html| a
  reunion in London in 2012]]). Progressively
  it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an
  account highlighting the material already collected here.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">The early history </font>[[Attach:stories01.html|]]<font color="#000000">
  of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see [[Attach:stories01.html|here]]).
  The modern history, as described by </font>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_251.HTM|Werner
  Falk]]<font color="#000000">,
        begins with</font>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_102.HTM| Markus Cassirer
        and Jeanette  Steinitz]]<font color="#000000">, in Upper Silesia, in
        what is now Poland,  in a place called [[Path:../CEurope/A03.html|Schwientochlowitz]] in
        or  about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population
        of
          [[http://www.literad.de/regional/beuthen.htm|14,612 in 1905]]).
          Markus  Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and
          makers of looms.</font>
(:div align="center":)
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(:cellnr height="155" width="49%":)
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(:divend:)
     
(:cell height="155" width="51%":)
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%apply=img width="128" height="152"%Path:../../WP05/P05_240A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
     
   
(:tableend:)
</div>

&nbsp;


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_102.HTM|Markus
  Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette]].</font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10"> (From the [[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
  Trust document, 1890]])</font>


%block align="left"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons
  (</FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_454.HTM|Moritz]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">) and two daughters (</FONT>[[Path:../../WC04/WC04_072.HTM|Rosalie]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_493.HTM|Julie]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and
  moved to [[Path:../CEurope/A01.html| Breslau]] which was a big and rapidly
  growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual
  achievements. </FONT>


%block align="center"% <FONT
 COLOR="#000000">%apply=img width="175" height="162"%Path:../CEurope/Breslau-cover.jpg%%
</FONT>


%block align="center"% <font
 color="#000000">[[Path:../CEurope/A01.html| Breslau]] (now Wroclaw, Poland)</font>


<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">One family recollection is that
  Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a [[http://www.sljivovica.net/slivovitz.html|slivowitz]]. (a
  type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business.
  That story may mix up Markus with </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_388.HTM|Siegfried
  Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> (Markus's brother) who is shown
  as having been a Brewer.[[#|&dagger;]]</FONT> <FONT
 COLOR="#000000">Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way
  or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.</FONT>
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="21%" border="1" height="138":)
(:cellnr width="52%" height="135":)
      <div align="right">%apply=img width="124" height="133"%Path:../../WP02/P02_439A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
   
(:cell width="48%" height="135":)
(:div align="right":)
%apply=img width="110" height="133"%Path:../../WP02/P02_440A.JPG%%
(:divend:)
   
 
(:tableend:)

<font color="#291A10">Another brewer</font>


<font color="#291A10"> [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_388.HTM|Siegfried Cassirer
    (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette]] .</font>


<font color="#291A10"> (From the [[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
    Trust document, 1890]])</font>
</div>

<font color="#000000">Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together
    in a </font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../Cassirer/index.html|Family
    Trust (established in1890)]]</font><font color="#000000">.&nbsp; But they
    were not the only brothers.&nbsp; There
    was also one who was in the timber industry and lived in Breslau.&nbsp;&nbsp; This&quot;Breslau
    uncle&quot; was very interested in the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz
    to Breslau, he would find jobs for them in  the timber trade.
    Only one of them was sent to university.</font>


&nbsp;
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="734" height="60" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="371":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="256" height="337"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160E.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#291A10">Three of the Cassirer brothers, from left </font><FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]]<font color="#291A10">, [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]  and </font><font color="#000000">[[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]</font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|]] Cassirer </font>
(:cell width="353":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="211" height="339"%Path:../../WP04/P04_177A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Salomon ([[Path:../../WC03/WC03_314.HTM|Salo]]) Cassirer in earlier days </font>
   
(:tableend:)
(:divend:)
%block align="center"% %apply=img width="631" height="491"%Resources/Cassirer-OnclesW.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]], and </font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000">Cassirer, circa 1900 </FONT>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-2">[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer] </font>


%block align="center"% &nbsp;


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="601" height="438"%Resources/Cassirer_Brothers_1.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Earlier photo of
five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_255.HTM|Louis]],&nbsp;</font><font color="#291A10">[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor]]</font><font color="#000000">, [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max]],</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000"></FONT><font color="#000000">&nbsp;[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius]], [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_106.HTM|Eduard]] </font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-2">[Photograph
source:  Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]</font>


%block align="center"% &nbsp;


<FONT COLOR="#000000">This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the &quot;Gr&uuml;nderjahre&quot; - &quot;the Founder's years&quot;. Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin. </FONT>


<font color="#000000">For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian [[http://www.friedrichshain-magazin.de/archiv/fh-4-02/text14.html|Wanja Abramowski]],&nbsp; near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius Cassirer ]]  was centrally involved in this development.</font> <FONT COLOR="#000000">And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin. </FONT>


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="300" height="189"%Resources/Warschauer_Strasse_1908.jpg%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">One part  of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908 </font>


[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_098.HTM|Isidor Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000">, one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the
  timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the
1870's.</FONT>


<CENTER>
(:table width="53%" border="0" height="173":)
(:cellnr width="27%":)

%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">%apply=img width="151" height="226"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160C.JPG%%
</font>


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Isidor Cassirer</font>
       
(:cell width="30%":)

%block align="center"% %apply=img width="165" height="207"%Path:../../WP04/P04_207A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)</font>
     
(:tableend:)

&nbsp;
    </CENTER>

<FONT COLOR="#000000">Isidor then had the bright idea together
with the brother who had been at university to move into the manufacture
of pulp and the even more brilliant idea of starting this pulp
factory where the timber was - in Poland. So they created a big
pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">When the 1914 War came there was great
anxiety whether this factory in Poland would survive. Would there
be fighting? As it happened the fighting never really came across
that part of Poland and when the War ended the factory was in
as good condition as ever. But Germany were on the losing side.
The law of the new Poland provided that Germans could not own
property in Poland. So Isidor and his brother had to sell the
factory. They sold it for 11 million marks to an American consortium.
This was paid across in Switzerland in Swiss currency - a very
nice result.</FONT>
(:div align="center":)
(:table width="200" border="0":)
(:cellnr:)%apply=img width="291" height="155"%Resources/Isidor_C_Nameplate.jpg%%
   
(:cellnr height="18":)<div align="center"><font color="#000000" size="-1">Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer </font>
(:divend:)
   
(:tableend:)
</div>

<FONT COLOR="#000000">Much the same happened to almost all the other
brothers. The brother with whom Isidor had started the factory
in Poland also had already started with another brother a factory
in Czechoslovakia.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_454.HTM|Moritz Cassirer]] - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a&nbsp;sum&nbsp;of money to start out with&nbsp;and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: [[#|For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.]]) </font>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">Eventually all the other brothers had factories
and other ventures and, as time went on, a good deal of money.
They would never borrow. They met, all of them, every day, at
4 o'clock or so in a cafe in Berlin and there they exchanged views
on their businesses and made arrangements about how to finance
each other in what was effectively a family trust.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">Isidor was well known in the family for
being technologically very interested. He was one of the first
people in Berlin to have a telephone and </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_254.HTM|Betty
Cassirer]]<FONT COLOR="#000000"> would later recall that he
would tease his friends and customers. Because when they came
to the entrance of the business (when he still had the timber
business) - it was a big area that their timber business covered
- and they had to mention their business and their name and they
would let them in, and when they arrived at Isidor's office he
already knew who was coming. And people would say &quot;how does
he know&quot;.</FONT>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">With wealth comes also the possibility
to make a civic contribution. </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_103.HTM|Max
Cassirer]]<FONT COLOR="#000000"> was particularly notable in
this regard.</FONT>


<CENTER>
(:table width="417" height="261" border="0":)
(:cellnr width="208" height="257":)

%block align="center"% <font color="#000000">%apply=img align="BOTTOM" border="0" width="115" height="162" naturalsizeflag="3"%Path:../../PI04/PI04_166.JPG%%
</font>


%block align="center"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">Max Cassirer </FONT>
     
(:cell width="199":)
(:div align="left":)
%block align="center"% %apply=img width="142" height="200"%Path:../../WP04/P04_166A.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter</FONT>
   
(:divend:)
 
(:tableend:)

</CENTER></P>

<CENTER>
</CENTER>


<FONT COLOR="#000000">Max Cassirer devoted his&quot; leisures&quot;
to the municipal businesses of Berlin, and his wealth to help
his daughter </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_104.HTM|Edith Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> and son-in-law, </FONT>[[Path:../../WC02/WC02_104.HTM|Paul
Geheeb]]<FONT COLOR="#000000">, to create the Odenwaldschule</FONT> <FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> - a very progressive school which, as his grandson
</FONT>[[Path:../../WC04/WC04_052.HTM|Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer]]<FONT
 COLOR="#000000"> would recently describe, was intended to become
&quot;the cocoon of a humanistic education&quot;. Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. [[Path:../Webp/Odenwaldschule01.html|One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule ]]  in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known  playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann). </FONT>


<CENTER><FONT COLOR="#000000">%apply=img WIDTH="450" HEIGHT="187" ALIGN="BOTTOM" BORDER="0" NATURALSIZEFLAG="3"%Resources/ODENWAlDSCHULE_N1.jpg%%
</FONT></CENTER>


<CENTER><FONT COLOR="#000000">The Odenwaldschule</FONT></CENTER>


<FONT COLOR="#000000"> Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic
Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.</FONT>


<font color="#000000">The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter [[Path:../../WC03/WC03_011.HTM|Marie Charlotte Loewenberg]], in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of [[Path:../../WC02/WC02_105.HTM|Julius and Julie Cassirer ]] on 17 March 1918:</font>
-><font color="#000000">Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte</font>


<font color="#000000">''How we spend our Sundays:''</font>


''<font color="#000000">Dear Lotte,</font>''


''<font color="#000000">Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents. &nbsp;My
        father says, he&rsquo;d rather stay home, he can&rsquo;t
  really sleep at the villa, there aren&rsquo;t enough sofas, but we still have
  to go.&nbsp; Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the
  children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone
  yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper.&nbsp; Now
  we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the
  soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy,
  we&rsquo;re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It&rsquo;s usually hen;
  Father says he&rsquo;s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last.
  Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to
  the phone. There&rsquo;s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great.  Grandfather
  says, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much
  Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all&rdquo;. Grandmother says,
  he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others
  say almost nothing.&nbsp; Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table.&nbsp; Aunt
  Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno.&nbsp; Now comes
  dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred,
  but that&rsquo;s all confiscated now.&nbsp; Fritz eats two helpings.&nbsp; Grandmother
  urges him to a third.&nbsp; Grandfather says, &ldquo;The kid will explode now&rdquo;.&nbsp; Grandmother
  says, &ldquo;Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable&rdquo;. Father is
  called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He&rsquo;s very angry:
  Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up.&nbsp; Grandfather
  is very tired.&nbsp; Grandmother says, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not polite to go sleep
  when one has company&rdquo;.&nbsp; But Grandfather goes anyway.&nbsp; The other
  guests&rsquo; heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father
  takes his coat off.&nbsp; Mother says, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s ugly!&rdquo; Father
  takes his tie off as well and lies down.&nbsp; Grandmother stays lively and
  asks me, &ldquo;Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?&rdquo; I say &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
  go for a walk with my Anni, it&rsquo;s too boring here for me!&rdquo; </font>''


''<font color="#000000">And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary.&nbsp; More next time. </font>''


''<font color="#000000">Your, [[Path:../../WC03/WC03_011.HTM|Mariechen]]</font>''

<font color="#000000">This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation [[#|click here]]]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph  to Eli Ruth. </font>


%block align="center"% %apply=img width="450" height="318"%Path:../../WP05/P05_140B.JPG%%


%block align="center"% <font color="#000000" size="-1"> [Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]</font>


%block align="left"% <FONT COLOR="#000000">So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture. As a whole the seven sons and two
    daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes
    but, with this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described,
    became very prominent. However,  as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.</FONT>
(:table width="1185" height="121" border="0" cellspacing="2":)
  <tr>
    <th width="278" scope="col">%apply=img width="299" height="298"%Path:../../WP04/P04_160A.JPG%%
</th>
    <th width="245" scope="col">%apply=img width="194" height="322"%Path:../Cassirer/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave_3.jpg%%
</th>
    <th width="202" scope="col">%apply=img width="150" height="320"%Path:../Cassirer/Eduard_Cassirer_Grave/Jenny_Cassirer_Grave.jpg%%
</th>
    <th width="442" scope="col">%apply=img width="370" height="306"%Path:../Cassirer/Louis_Cassirer_Grave.jpg%%
</th>
  </tr>
(:cellnr:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer </font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer </font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font>
(:cell:)<font color="#000000">Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (all
        in Berlin) </font>
 
(:tableend:)

%block align="left"% [[Attach:stories.html|'''Back to Contents''']]'''<FONT COLOR="#000000">
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    to Berlin]]; [[Attach:stories02_1b.html|Music, Publishing and Art]]; [[Attach:stories02_1c.html|Continuing
    the Entrepeneurship]]; [[Attach:stories02_1d.html|Daughters]]; [[Attach:stories02_2.html|The
Scattered Generations]]


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Cassirer: from Schwientochlowitz to Breslau
Cassirer
Boom in the Founder Years: From Schwientochlowitz to Breslau

The Cassirer family has a long and extraordinary history. There are sources from which it can be pieced together including books written by members of the family, the archives held by Yale University, the Geheeb archives, recollections by members of the family caught in interviews, the genealogical work that has been done by Michael Gabelle, Niels Waller, and others, documents handed down in the family, and the living memories of Cassirer descendants (brought together now, twice,first in a reunion in Berlin in 2002. and ten years later in a a reunion in London in 2012). Progressively it is hoped to bring more of this material together here. What follows is an account highlighting the material already collected here.

The early history of the Cassirer ancestors has already been sketched (see here). The modern history, as described by Werner Falk, begins with Markus Cassirer and Jeanette Steinitz, in Upper Silesia, in what is now Poland, in a place called Schwientochlowitz in or about the 1860's. (Schwientochlowitz was a small village with a population of 14,612 in 1905). Markus Cassirer and Jeanette are shown as being cloth merchants and makers of looms.



 

Markus Cassirer (1801-1880) and his wife Jeanette.

(From the Family Trust document, 1890)

Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had seven sons (Louis, Julius, Eduard, Salo, Moritz, Max, and Isidor) and two daughters (Rosalie and Julie). The sons all moved away from the country as they grew up and moved to Breslau which was a big and rapidly growing city of Germany - with a strong history of economic, cultural and intellectual achievements.



Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland)

One family recollection is that Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had a country pub where they made a slivowitz. (a type of plum brandy) according to their own recipe as part of their business. That story may mix up Markus with Siegfried Cassirer (Markus's brother) who is shown as having been a Brewer.† Alternatively, and equally credibly, both brothers in one way or another shared skill in and adopted the brewer's craft.



Another brewer

Siegfried Cassirer (1812-1897) and his wife Henriette .

(From the Family Trust document, 1890)

Siegfried and Markus would eventually be connected together in a Family Trust (established in1890).  But they were not the only brothers.  There was also one who was in the timber industry and lived in Breslau.  This"Breslau uncle" was very interested in the sons and, as they came from Swientochlowitz to Breslau, he would find jobs for them in the timber trade. Only one of them was sent to university.

 



Three of the Cassirer brothers, from left Max, Isidor and Salo Cassirer



Salomon (Salo) Cassirer in earlier days



Five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): Julius, Eduard, Louis, Max, and Isidor Cassirer, circa 1900

[Date: before 1904, photograph source: Neils Waller, identification of brothers by Claude Cassirer]

 



Earlier photo of five of the Cassirer brothers (from left): Louis, Isidor, Max,  Julius, Eduard

[Photograph source: Claude Cassirer; identifications written on back of photograph]

 

This was the time directly after the war with France and the unification of the Reich and a time of tremendous economic boom, which they called the "Gründerjahre" - "the Founder's years". Being in the timber trade was very profitable because there was a lot of building going on, especially in Berlin.

For the Cassirer brothers a move to Berlin promised great opportunity. Available evidence suggests the Cassirers began their commercial activities in Berlin in the vicinity of the Warsaw Road (whose southern end, up to 1886, formed the eastern boundary of urban Berlin). According to historian Wanja Abramowski,  near the southern end- close to what is now Warsaw Place - stood a water company, and all around were the timber yards of the brothers Cassirer. There was a constant stream of immigrants creating demand for accommodation, providing labour for increasing numbers of new enterprises, with consequent investment and rising property prices. Between 1887 and 1889 the first dwelling houses developed there, while the land development at the northern end began in 1896. Julius Cassirer was centrally involved in this development. And so the brothers also started to speculate in building and they built big apartment houses in Berlin.



One part of the Warsaw Road (Warschauer Strasse) in 1908

Isidor Cassirer, one of these seven sons, was typical of them. He went into the timber trade and made some money, and then moved to Berlin from Breslau in the 1870's.



Isidor Cassirer



Second wife Lydia (ne Kopelanski)

 

Isidor then had the bright idea together with the brother who had been at university to move into the manufacture of pulp and the even more brilliant idea of starting this pulp factory where the timber was - in Poland. So they created a big pulp factory in Bratislava And this made him a millionaire.

When the 1914 War came there was great anxiety whether this factory in Poland would survive. Would there be fighting? As it happened the fighting never really came across that part of Poland and when the War ended the factory was in as good condition as ever. But Germany were on the losing side. The law of the new Poland provided that Germans could not own property in Poland. So Isidor and his brother had to sell the factory. They sold it for 11 million marks to an American consortium. This was paid across in Switzerland in Swiss currency - a very nice result.


Name plate from the office door of Isidor Cassirer
Much the same happened to almost all the other brothers. The brother with whom Isidor had started the factory in Poland also had already started with another brother a factory in Czechoslovakia.

Family accounts recall only one of the brothers - Moritz Cassirer - who did not show much interest in the business affairs of the family and rather, as it is remembered, was more interested in playing cards. So the family decided to give him a sum of money to start out with and sent him off to America in the hope that he would make something of himself in the new country. (There, he settled in New York where he remained proud of his family background and German origins: For more on the story of Moritz and his descendants, click here.)

Eventually all the other brothers had factories and other ventures and, as time went on, a good deal of money. They would never borrow. They met, all of them, every day, at 4 o'clock or so in a cafe in Berlin and there they exchanged views on their businesses and made arrangements about how to finance each other in what was effectively a family trust.

Isidor was well known in the family for being technologically very interested. He was one of the first people in Berlin to have a telephone and Betty Cassirer would later recall that he would tease his friends and customers. Because when they came to the entrance of the business (when he still had the timber business) - it was a big area that their timber business covered - and they had to mention their business and their name and they would let them in, and when they arrived at Isidor's office he already knew who was coming. And people would say "how does he know".

With wealth comes also the possibility to make a civic contribution. Max Cassirer was particularly notable in this regard.



Max Cassirer



At the Odenwaldschule with his granddaughter

Max Cassirer devoted his" leisures" to the municipal businesses of Berlin, and his wealth to help his daughter Edith Cassirer and son-in-law, Paul Geheeb, to create the Odenwaldschule - a very progressive school which, as his grandson Heinrich (Henry) Cassirer would recently describe, was intended to become "the cocoon of a humanistic education". Much has been written about the Odenwaldschule, how it managed to survive in Nazi Germany for a time. One account of the experience of the Odenwaldschule in 1922 is offered by Klaus Mann, the well-known playwright and author (and son of Nobel Prize for literature winner, Thomas Mann).


The Odenwaldschule
Max Cassirer was a member of the Democratic Party and became a notable city council man in Berlin Charlottenburg.

The sons and daughters made one large extended family which met, argued, teased and dined regularly. All were doing interesting things and the wives and children formed a constant and complex social network. Yet, of course, the reality was not so tranquil. There was after all the strong but humorous Cassirer personality in full play. One gets a sense of it from the letter below, by granddaughter Marie Charlotte Loewenberg, in the newspaper published on the occasion of the golden anniversary of Julius and Julie Cassirer on 17 March 1918:

Letter from MARIECHEN LOWENBERG to her friend Lotte

How we spend our Sundays:

Dear Lotte,

Sundays were spend mostly with our dear grandparents.  My father says, he’d rather stay home, he can’t really sleep at the villa, there aren’t enough sofas, but we still have to go.  Around half-past three everyone has gathered; usually one of the children is missing due to a cold or such. Uncle Bruno is usually late. Everyone yells at him, but he stays calm and silently reaches for the paper.  Now we go to the dining room. Aunt Else is called to the phone. Mutti serves the soup. Father always wants two bowls, grandfather tells him not to be so greedy, we’re not in Pomerania. Then comes the roast. It’s usually hen; Father says he’s sick of it already. Grandfather is always served last. Grandmother says he can wait, the guests come first. Aunt Else is called to the phone. There’s always compote, 4 kinds, they taste great. Grandfather says, “I’ve already forbidden you a hundred times to put so much Kompott on the table, what will we do with it all”. Grandmother says, he should mind his own business, as it has nothing to do with him. The others say almost nothing.  Fritz and Robert kick each other under the table.  Aunt Else whispers about the Liebermanns and so on with Uncle Bruno.  Now comes dessert, always warm, there used to be such lovely ices, which we much preferred, but that’s all confiscated now.  Fritz eats two helpings.  Grandmother urges him to a third.  Grandfather says, “The kid will explode now”.  Grandmother says, “Just let him eat, the boy looks so miserable”. Father is called to the phone, a patient needs to talk to him. He’s very angry: Not even on Sundays will that gang leave him in peace. Now everyone gets up.  Grandfather is very tired.  Grandmother says, “It’s not polite to go sleep when one has company”.  But Grandfather goes anyway.  The other guests’ heads are nodding, too, by now: they lean on each other. Father takes his coat off.  Mother says, “That’s ugly!” Father takes his tie off as well and lies down.  Grandmother stays lively and asks me, “Well, Miekchen, and what are you up to?” I say “I’ll go for a walk with my Anni, it’s too boring here for me!”

And I go. Dear Lotte! I must close for today, as I must still practice for the Golden Anniversary.  More next time.

Your, Mariechen

This of course was the weekly Sunday extended family dinner. Many more such amusing anecdotes from daily life of the extended Cassirer family can be found in the booklet produced for Max Cassirer's eightieth birday [for the English translation click here]. And there were also the grand formal events such as the one shown below in December 1920 on the occasion of the marriage of Isidor Cassirer's son Rudolph to Eli Ruth.



[Centre facing at table: father Isidor Cassirer, bride Eli Ruth (in marriage dress), groom Rudolph Cassirer, and mother Lydia]

So domestic, social and business life developed into a rich dynamic picture. As a whole the seven sons and two daughters of Markus and Jeanette Cassirer had been very successful. But not only were they successes but, with this background, so were their children, many of whom, as will be described, became very prominent. However, as the family of Isidor sat around the celebratory dinner table in 1920, it is unlikely they could have begun to understand how dramatically this nice picture of success would, in another 18 years, be disrupted by the advent of the Nazis.


Grave: Isidor and Else Cassirer Grave: Eduard and Jenny Cassirer Grave: Louis and Emilie Cassirer    (all in Berlin)
Back to Contents / Next page: The Breslau Generation

Click here for Cassirers:  Breslau to Berlin; Music, Publishing and Art; Continuing the Entrepeneurship; Daughters; The Scattered Generations

To see some genealogical sites which have supported this one by listing this in their directories click here


Page last modified on January 02, 2013, at 10:21 PM