Lost cities 2:9
About this series: Until 1960, all my direct ancestors from the great-great-grandparents through to my parents lived in towns and cities. After November 1972 nobody did, as my parents and grandparents had embraced the car-dependent life in the sticks and the previous city-dwelling generations had all died out by then. When I escaped the countryside and moved to various university cities I discovered that I had been missing out on the opportunities and structured environments of cities since we moved away from Würzburg when I was 5 years old. I started to strongly identify as a town mouse, even though I had to re-learn city life (which is why I didn't dare moving to really big cities like Berlin). In this series I am reclaiming my urban heritage in exploring/presenting some of the towns and cities that my DNA passed through within the last two centuries. As the four generations before me have mostly been quite mobile (often starting with employment in the nascent railways), there are many towns and cities popping up in my family tree, including quite a few where I wouldn't mind living myself.
Approaching the tail end of season two, I remembered two university cities which I had previously dismissed as too transitory, but on reflection I realised more things happened there, so they're in. First up, my parents' station before Würzburg, and a lovely city too.
Freiburg's University was founded in 1457 and is thus among the five oldest in Germany. The town today situated in the corner where Switzerland, France and Germany meet has variously belonged to Austria, France, and the dukes of Baden. The arrival of the railway line from Karlsruhe to Basel brought tourism to the town and the Black Forest region. Freiburg grew to become a city of 100,000 residents just before WW2. After the war, it was briefly the capital of the Baden region, which in 1952 merged into the new southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg.
The university has always maintained a stellar reputation especially in the sciences. It boasts five Nobel laureates in chemistry alone, including the founding father of macromolecular chemistry, Hermann Staudinger.
The university on a postcard from 1930, the year Ruth moved from Freiburg to Bonn. I reckon it will have looked similar still when her son arrived in 1957.
Source.
What happened
My grandmother Ruth finished school at Rheydt in 1928 and started studying chemistry, physics and biology at Freiburg in the summer semester of the same year. Not sure why, but she moved to Münster for the winter semester and returned to Freiburg for the summer semester of 1929.
In the summer semester of 1930, she moved to Bonn and stayed there until her final exams.
My father started studying chemistry at Freiburg in the summer semester of 1957, but initially didn't get lab space for the important practicals, so took until late 1961 to finish his intermediate exams. He also found a lot of time for cultural interests. In the first year there were three visits to Strasbourg, and he claims he saw every production of the Wallgrabentheater, a small, alternative theatre. My mother followed in the summer of 1958, at which point they bought a matching pair of his and hers bicycles which survived into the 1980s. In the winter semester of 1961/62 they both moved to Würzburg.
My aunt also studied at Freiburg, however, and stayed on to work in the physics department of the university after graduating, while her husband completed his PhD. Her family stayed at Freiburg until well into the 1970s.
When I was growing up in the sticks, we used to go skiing in the Black Forest in the Christmas holidays, and sometimes stopped over in Freiburg, staying with my aunt's family, so I do have some vague childhood memories of the city.
Locations
- Vierlinden 5
- Kreuzstraße
Previously in the #lostcities series:
- Elberfeld / Wuppertal 1919 - 1961
- Strasbourg 1901 - 1908
- Minden 1903 - 1952/ca.1970
- Tangermünde 1888 - 1916
- Rheydt 1923 - 1935
- Königsberg 1935 - 1945
- Aachen 1936 - 1940
- Idar-Oberstein 1940 - 1962
- Bad Nauheim 1945 - 1972/1983
- Würzburg 1961 - 1968
- Hamborn inlaws: 1922 - 1979/2015
- Bonn 1929 - 1934
- Lorsch 1890 - 1938/1973
- Krefeld 1764 - 1924/current
- Gütersloh 1825 - 1928/1950s
- Breslau 1830 - 1877
- Bad Münster 1919 - 1930/1952; Bad Kreuznach 1945 - 1951
- Bruchsal 1889 - 1909/2023
- Idstein 1714-1804
NB I have now added a second end date to the cities where other family members stayed on after the direct ancestors died. So far, that is the case for Minden, Bad Nauheim, Hamborn and Krefeld.
The Mastodon thread for season 2 is here.