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Hanauer Family History & Genealogy

326 biographies and 6 photos with the Hanauer last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of Hanauer family members.

Hanauer Last Name History & Origin

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Famous People named Hanauer

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Early Hanauers

These are the earliest records we have of the Hanauer family.

Fred Hanauer of Ohio was born on February 22, 1874, and died at age 90 years old in February 1964.
William Hanauer of Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio was born on March 31, 1877, and died at age 92 years old in August 1969.
Hedwig Hanauer of New Brunswick, Middlesex County, NJ was born on December 25, 1877, and died at age 92 years old in June 1970.
Roseannah Hanauer of Lincoln, Logan County, Illinois was born on October 15, 1878, and died at age 91 years old in January 1970.
Charley Hanauer of Kansas City, Wyandotte County, Kansas was born on December 10, 1879, and died at age 89 years old in September 1969.
Fannie Hanauer was born on August 5, 1879, and died at age 102 years old in October 1981.
Max Hanauer
Max Hanauer was born on March 23, 1880. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Max Hanauer.
Louise Hanauer of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY was born on April 28, 1881, and died at age 88 years old in June 1969.
George Hanauer of Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida was born on December 26, 1882, and died at age 86 years old in September 1969.
Russel Hanauer of Santa Ana, Orange County, California was born on November 12, 1882, and died at age 85 years old in February 1968.
John Hanauer of Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana was born on April 28, 1882, and died at age 92 years old in April 1974.
Marie Hanauer of Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio was born on April 24, 1884, and died at age 100 years old in November 1984.

Hanauer Family Photos

Discover Hanauer family photos shared by the community. These photos contain people and places related to the Hanauer last name.

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Hanauer Family Tree

Discover the most common names, oldest records and life expectancy of people with the last name Hanauer.

Most Common First Names

Updated Hanauer Biographies

William Hanauer of Dayton, Greene County, Ohio was born on December 13, 1920, and died at age 53 years old in December 1973.
Walter H Hanauer of Bronx, Bronx County, NY was born on June 7, 1920, and died at age 77 years old on September 1, 1997.
Ronald C Hanauer of Peoria, Peoria County, IL was born on August 18, 1922, and died at age 77 years old on June 6, 2000.
Leo Hanauer of New York, New York County, NY was born on February 12, 1920 in Danzig or Germany, and died at age 84 years old on May 23, 2004.
Lawrence Hanauer of Niles, Cook County, IL was born on May 27, 1920, and died at age 90 years old on September 13, 2010.
Frank E Hanauer of Carlisle, Middlesex County, MA was born on April 3, 1921, and died at age 89 years old on February 28, 2011.
Donald Hanauer of Kerrville, Kerr County, TX was born on August 10, 1931, and died at age 70 years old on September 19, 2001. Donald Hanauer was buried at Ft. Sam Houston National Cemetery Section 36 Site 423 1520 Harry Wurzbach Road, in San Antonio.
Donald C Hanauer of Dayton, Montgomery County, OH was born on January 25, 1920, and died at age 74 years old on May 21, 1994.
Russell C Hanauer of Trenton, Mercer County, NJ was born on November 7, 1908, and died at age 77 years old in March 1986.
Melvin Hanauer of Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois was born on October 28, 1916, and died at age 70 years old in October 1986.
Thomas A Jr Hanauer of Fort Mitchell, Kenton County, Kentucky was born on December 29, 1917, and died at age 67 years old in January 1985.
Richard J Hanauer of Minnetonka, Hennepin County, MN was born on January 28, 1918, and died at age 78 years old on October 21, 1996.
Richard L Hanauer of Reynoldsburg, Franklin County, OH was born on October 5, 1922, and died at age 83 years old on March 9, 2006.
Milton L Hanauer of New York, New York County, NY was born on August 5, 1908, and died at age 79 years old on April 16, 1988.
Hans Heinz Hanauer
I've been able to testify for my family through my book "The Hanauer Family Before, During, and After the Holocaust!" This is the Preface for my book "The Hanauer Family Before, During, and After the Holocaust": This book was created as a means to document the lives of the Hanauer family before, during, and after the Holocaust. With the help from friends of my deceased relatives, I was able to see what my family had endured the years prior, during and after the war. It has been an amazing journey from not knowing anything about my family in Berlin to finding out where they lived, how they survived and how some sadly were murdered.
Stanley Edward Hanauer of Maple Valley, King County, WA was born on July 23, 1921, and died at age 89 years old on April 21, 2011. Stanley Hanauer was buried at Tahoma National Cemetery Section F Row A Site 121 18600 Se 240th St, in Kent.
Lucille Clara Hanauer of Circle Pines, Anoka County, MN was born on July 31, 1917, and died at age 88 years old on January 3, 2006. Lucille Hanauer was buried at Ft. Snelling National Cemetery Section R Site 4283 7601 34th Avenue, South, in Minneapolis.
Margaret A Hanauer of Hampstead, Carroll County, MD was born on July 21, 1902, and died at age 97 years old on August 25, 1999. Margaret Hanauer was buried at Baltimore National Cemetery Section P Site 1928 5501 Frederick Avenue, in Baltimore.
Doris J Hanauer of Taylor Springs, Montgomery County, IL was born on October 5, 1926, and died at age 71 years old on March 23, 1998. Doris Hanauer was buried at Camp Butler National Cemetery Section M Site 759 R.r. #1 - 5063 Camp Butler Road, in Springfield.
John P Hanauer of Greenwich, Fairfield County, CT was born on June 24, 1891 in Manhattan County, NY, and died at age 77 years old in March 1969.

Popular Hanauer Biographies

Ralph Hanauer
Ralph Hanauer was born on February 6, 1940, and died at age 41 years old in December 1981. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Ralph Hanauer.
Max Hanauer
Max Hanauer was born on March 23, 1880. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Max Hanauer.
Ilse Hanauer
Ilse Hanauer was born on March 21, 1916. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Ilse Hanauer.
Frieda Teske-Hanauer
Frieda Teske-Hanauer was born on March 12, 1891. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Frieda Teske-Hanauer.
Valerie Gerber-Hanauer
Valerie Gerber-Hanauer was born on June 26, 1943. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Valerie Gerber-Hanauer.
Hans Heinz Hanauer
I've been able to testify for my family through my book "The Hanauer Family Before, During, and After the Holocaust!" This is the Preface for my book "The Hanauer Family Before, During, and After the Holocaust": This book was created as a means to document the lives of the Hanauer family before, during, and after the Holocaust. With the help from friends of my deceased relatives, I was able to see what my family had endured the years prior, during and after the war. It has been an amazing journey from not knowing anything about my family in Berlin to finding out where they lived, how they survived and how some sadly were murdered.
Terri Hanauer-Furtado
Terri Hanauer-Furtado was born on November 18, 1961. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Terri Hanauer-Furtado.
Allie Hanauer of Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama was born on July 31, 1892, and died at age 91 years old in December 1983.
Samuel Hanauer of Palm Desert, Riverside County, California was born on June 28, 1909, and died at age 74 years old in June 1983.
Kenneth L Hanauer of Miami, Miami-Dade County, FL was born on August 7, 1912, and died at age 76 years old on June 14, 1989.
Marie Hanauer of Lees Summit, Jackson County, Missouri was born on February 10, 1905, and died at age 78 years old in July 1983.
Betty Hanauer of Laguna Hills, Orange County, CA was born on November 11, 1899, and died at age 93 years old on May 2, 1993.
James Hanauer of Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin was born on January 1, 1914, and died at age 68 years old in February 1982.
Anna Hanauer of Windham, Windham County, CT was born on March 22, 1924, and died at age 84 years old on December 5, 2008.
Stella Hanauer of Whitesboro, Oneida County, NY was born on August 16, 1906, and died at age 76 years old in January 1983.
Madeleine Jane Hanauer of Atascadero, San Luis Obispo County, California was born on September 5, 1923, and died at age 83 years old on August 24, 2007.
Arthur Hanauer of New York, New York County, NY was born on December 9, 1913, and died at age 87 years old on February 27, 2001.
Melvin S Hanauer was born on April 6, 1907, and died at age 85 years old on October 28, 1992. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Melvin S Hanauer.
Lucy Hanauer of Lake Worth, Palm Beach County, FL was born on December 22, 1900, and died at age 79 years old in January 1980.
Gerard L Hanauer of Seattle, King County, WA was born on April 27, 1927, and died at age 80 years old on December 2, 2007.

Hanauer Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a Hanauer family member is 77.0 years old according to our database of 309 people with the last name Hanauer that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

77.0 years

Oldest Hanauers

These are the longest-lived members of the Hanauer family on AncientFaces.

Fannie Hanauer was born on August 5, 1879, and died at age 102 years old in October 1981.
102 years
Catherine H Hanauer of Curwensville, Clearfield County, PA was born on November 28, 1905, and died at age 100 years old on May 28, 2006.
100 years
Marie Hanauer of Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio was born on April 24, 1884, and died at age 100 years old in November 1984.
100 years
Anna Hanauer of Utica, Oneida County, NY was born on December 30, 1887, and died at age 100 years old in December 1987.
99 years
Margaret Hanauer of Laguna Hills, Orange County, California was born on December 29, 1887, and died at age 98 years old in March 1986.
98 years
Edmund M Hanauer of Rancho Santa Fe, San Diego County, CA was born on January 16, 1911, and died at age 98 years old on July 8, 2009.
98 years
Freda Hanauer of Reno, Washoe County, NV was born on July 28, 1908, and died at age 97 years old on January 4, 2006.
97 years
Marguerite G Hanauer of Evanston, Cook County, IL was born on January 14, 1894, and died at age 98 years old on February 18, 1992.
98 years
Blanche Hanauer of Hopkins, Hennepin County, Minnesota was born on August 21, 1885, and died at age 97 years old in September 1982.
97 years
Leonie M Hanauer of Randallstown, Baltimore County, MD was born on April 5, 1904, and died at age 96 years old on January 11, 2001.
96 years
Margaret A Hanauer of Hampstead, Carroll County, MD was born on July 21, 1902, and died at age 97 years old on August 25, 1999. Margaret Hanauer was buried at Baltimore National Cemetery Section P Site 1928 5501 Frederick Avenue, in Baltimore.
97 years
Rebekka Hanauer of New York, New York County, NY was born on June 5, 1890, and died at age 97 years old on October 21, 1987.
97 years
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This is the story of Bavarian Jewish merchant named ABRAHAM HANAUER, b. Dec 1816, his Bavarian-born wife, BARBARA b. Mar 1823 and their five American-born kids: SARAH b. 1850, LEVI b. 1851, LOUISA, b. Oct 1854, FRANKLIN b. Mar 1857, and LAURA, b. ca. Nov 1859 The first four kids were born in Morristown, Belmont County County, Ohio, the fifth, LAURA, was born in South Bend, St. Joseph Co. Indiana.

In the June 1900 Federal Census for South Bend, IN, we are told ABRAHAM HANAUER came to America in 1846, had lived here 54 years and was naturalized. He and BARBARA had both been married 50 years, so they must have married in the USA, ca. 1850. We don't know their marriage date or place, but on 6 Sept 1850, they were living in Morristown, Belmont County County, Ohio with 3-month old baby girl, Sarah.

In the 1900 Census, BARBARA said she had given birth to 5 children, all still living. (And we know who they all are).

In 1900, this family was living at 502 North Michigan Street in South Bend. This was a "HOME" not a farm and they owned it free of mortgage. We found them at this address fairly continuously from 1870 to 1930.

In the 1900 Census, Abraham was 83 years old and Barbara was 77. They both said they were born in Germany and all four of their parents were born in Germany. Several other records are more specific, saying they and all their parents were born in Bavaria. We don't yet know the death dates or places for ABRAHAM and BARBARA HANAUER. We surmise they both died in South Bend Indiana between 1900 and 1910.

ABRAHAM HANAUER (the indexer in 1850 read the surname as HANAM) was listed as a pedlar at age 34 in 1850. From the 1860 census on, he is listed as a Merchant. (In 1860 he lived in South Bend. The indexer read his surname as HAMMER) In 1860 his Real Estate was valued at $1000 and his personal wealth was $5000. Ten years later, by the end of the Civil War, those values had risen to $20,000 and $15,000, respectively. The HANAUER family seemed to have a live-in female servant in the household at least from 1860 through 1920.

In the 1900 South Bend Census, there was living in the HANAUER household a 14-year-old girl named GRACE HANAUER, born in Feb 1886 in Illinois with two Germany-born parents. She is identified as the grand-daughter of the Head, ABRAHAM HANAUER. The indexer seemed to think she was the daughter of FRANK HANAUER b. March 1857, whose name immediately precedes hers. We demur. FRANK HANAUER was single at that time and everytime we find him. On the other hand, we surmise that GRACE HANAUER was the daughter of the older brother, LEVI HANAUER, born in Morristown OH about 1851.

In the April 1910 Census for South Bend Indiana, GRACE HANAUER, 24, is listed in the HANAUER household at 502 North Michigan Street. She is identified as theniece of the Head of the Household, FRANK M. HANAUER, 55. Her occupation is Editress, Society _______. This time her birthplace is given as Iowa. Her dad is said to have been born in OHIO (we concur) and her mother to have been born in KENTUCKY. So we still are in doubt about where GRACE HANAUER was born, who her mother was or what happened to her. Can anybody help?

ONE FINAL MATTER: At this point, we can imagine that this Bavarian-born ABRAHAM HANAUER was a relative of the four Jewish, Bavarian-born HANAUER males, Samuel, Simon, Solomon and Philip who came to America in 1839 and settled in Morristown, Belmont County, Ohio. Morristown was very small (only 455 people in 1850). There were only 3 households in town with German-born immigrants, two of them were HANAUERS. These two households were neighbors, being only 11 doors apart in the 1850 enumeration.

There are, however, several indicators that argue against their being near kin:
1) They didn't come to America together. SAMUEL HANAUER came in 1839, ABRAHAM HANAUER came in 1846. We're still not clear on the others.
2) They didn't use the same names in naming their kids, or grand-kids.
3) We have no indications (yet) that these families ever visited each other, wrote to each other, talked about each other , willed anything to each other, or photographed each other.
4) When they moved away from Morristown, they dispersed. ABRAHAM and BARBARA HANAUER moved to South Bend Indiana ca 1858. SAMUEL and SOPHIA HANAUER moved to Wheeling WV ca 1874 and brothers SOLOMON and PHILIP HANAUER moved to Philadelphia in the mid 1870s.

Does the house at 502 North Michigan Street in South Bend still stand?
Who has access to South Bend Cemetery Records? We would expect at least ABRAHAM, BARBARA (aka MARGARET), LOUISA (unmarried), and FRANKLIN to be there. We don't know what happened to SARAH, LEVI, LAURA and grand-daughter, GRACE
All comments and contributions are welcome.
Bill and Dianne Wolfe
As I grew up, I had questions about my family. I knew my family was from Germany, but other than that, not much else. The only members of my family from Germany that were still alive would not open up to me about what happened to my grandfather or great grandparents.

My Father, Uri Hanauer was born in Berlin, Germany on February 6, 1940. I had no idea that he was a holocaust survivor until after his death on December 5, 1981. My grandmother pulled me aside at my father’s memorial service and told me that she and my father had been in a concentration camp during WWII. She said she needed to tell me this so I would understand why my father was never open with me about his childhood. I asked her the name of the camp and she would not tell me.

In 2002 my grandfather’s sister, Ilse had told me the name of the camp that my father, grandmother and great grandfather were taken to. It was Terezin (Theresienstadt) located in the Czech Republic. I started looking on the web for information on Theresienstadt and learned there was a museum in Israel that had the records of when people were transported to the camp. I had contacted the museum and they sent me copies of the transport documents for both my father and my grandmother. This was the beginning of my quest to learn the whole truth about my family’s survival during the holocaust. The only problem was that the 3 members of my family who had survived were now all deceased.

I then started sending emails to various German agencies on what I knew about my family, which at this point was very little. Fortunately my great aunt Ilse had given me names of some of my relatives just before her death in 2002.

I started out by not knowing anything about my family. I have learned the following from documents I have obtained from many agencies around the world starting in 2003. The notebook that holds these documents is 5” thick and filled. I have added another note book with correspondences I have had with The International Red Cross, historians, authors and German’s who knew my family during the war:

My grandfather’s name was Hans Heinz Hanauer and he was born on June 19, 1918 in Berlin.

My grandfather Hans and grandmother Ursula were married April 30, 1940 in Paderborn, Germany. Almost 3 months after my father’s birth.

On March 3, 1941, Hans had been warned not to leave his hiding place, because an arrest warrant had been issued against him. He was a member of an underground organization that had been plotting the assassination of Hitler and the organization had been infiltrated by a Nazi spy. Hans did not believe he would be arrested and he left his hiding place. As soon as he was spotted on the street, he was arrested.

Hans was then transported to the train station where he boarded the train that would be taking him to the labor camp, Gut Winkel in Spreenhagen. My father was with my grandmother at the train station where my grandfather had been taken. They were there to see him off. A soldier had asked my grandmother to hold my father, because he was trying to run to the train to be with his father. As Hans sat on the train, the wife of one of the soldier’s had given him a pen and piece of paper so he could write a note to my grandmother. The letter was hand delivered to my grandmother by the wife of a soldier that was on the train. My father’s half brother had given this letter to me in 2003. I had it translated right away. This is the exact translation:


3. III.41.

My Dear Love!

Now at day’s end I want to send a few lines. At noon you were standing by the train and I thought you had already left. Just as the train started to pull out, the wife of one of the soldiers said that you are still there. I looked right away but you had already started to walk away. That made me so sad because you were standing there and I didn’t look to see if you are still there.

That is the reason I wanted to write to you immediately so you will know that I am always with you in thought and I will always be thinking about you when there may be bad days like maybe today. Always know that there is someone thinking about you.

Dear Ursula I hope you won’t have to suffer because of me, I hope all will be good again. I am hoping to hear from you, so I can stop worrying about you. Greetings and kisses from your loving, sometimes a little stupid
Hans

Give Uri a kiss from Pappa.


Written on side of postcard from the wife of one of the soldiers who had hand delivered note to my grandmother Ursula:
“You do not know me but I am sending greetings, Ester Binder”.


Hans spent 2 years in Gut Winkel. This labor camp was set up to educate young Jewish men and women in agriculture and wood working so they could immigrate to Palestine.

Hans was transported from Gut Winkel to Auschwitz on March 4, 1943. There were 1159 people on the train and Hans was the 983rd person registered on the manifest. Hans was registered on the manifest as Hans Heinz Israel Hanauer. Hans arrived in Auschwitz on March 6, 1943 and was given the prison #106433. Hans was murdered in Auschwitz on March 31, 1943.

Both of my great grandfathers were Jewish and both of my great grandmothers were Christian.

My great grandfather (Ursula’s father) Jonas Rosenfeld had been incarcerated on 3 occasions. He documented all of the dates in a journal that my father’s half brother had. I had made a copy of this journal in 2003
Jonas was held in a facility on Rosenstrasse (Rose St.) in Berlin with over 10,000 other Jewish men, women and children. This was from February 27, 1943 until March 8, 1943. This was to be the last evacuation of the remaining Jews in Berlin, most of which were in mixed marriages (Christian/Jews). When the Christian wives of the Jewish men found out they were being held there, they began to go to the building and protest against the detainment of their spouses. The protest actually ended on March 6, 1943. The prisoners were released in alphabetical order one by one. Because Jonas’ last name was Rosenfeld, his release date was March 8, 1943.

There was a movie released in 2003 and made by German director Margarethe Von Trotta named “Rosenstrasse”. I saw this movie in 2005, and at that time I had no idea that my family had been involved in it. I actually purchased the movie the very next day, because I felt compelled to watch it again. It would be about 5 months later that I would go to the copied journal looking for birthdates of Jonas’ family members. As I was going through his notes I came across the translations of his dates of arrest. I was in shock when I saw in his own handwriting the date 27 Feb. 1943 until 8 Mar. 1943.

I had been told that my family was protected by my great grandmother’s Christian heritage. My great grandmother Emma Tscharntke-Rosenfeld died on August 16, 1944. On August 21, 1944, my father, grandmother and great grandfather were arrested. On September 8, 1944, the three of them were transported to Theresienstadt. They were liberated on June 7, 1945 and returned to Berlin. They left Berlin on May 29, 1946 on the SS Mariner and arrived in New York on June 18, 1946.

I was contacted by Michael Schneeberger in August of 2007. He was with the Ephraim Gustav Hoelein Genealogy Project of the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation located in Wuerzburg. He said my email was forwarded to him from an office in Berlin that had received my email over a year earlier. Michael had located information on my family which was held in Lower Franconia and created a family tree for me. In September 2007, I received my family tree that traced my Hanauer family back to Abraham Hanauer born in 1727 in Wiesenfeld, Bavaria. Michael had done a lot of research and had documented on property that was taken from my family, which included Gestapo numbers placed on the property. He had also included camps where my family were taken and murdered.

I have found 3 extended family members, 1 of which I have linked to my family. His name is Mike Jones and he lives in England. We have all come together through a website that bares our family name, Hanauer.

According to the German government, my grandfather Hans and grandmother Ursula were considered “Mischlinge” (half-breed). This was the label given to Christian Jews. All who were of Jewish heritage were mandated to take new middle names as they registered, “Israel” for males and “Sara” for females. This was how the Jews were identified by the Nazi’s.

My great grandfather Max Hanauer owned a women’s clothing factory in Berlin. It had been taken away from him during the holocaust and was destroyed during the bombings. In October, 2007 I received from a distant relative in Buenos Aires, Argentina a copy of listed addresses for businesses in Berlin in 1927. It shows my great grandfather, Max Hanauer’s name, address and what type of business he owned.


My great grandmother Frieda Hanauer had sewn all of Max Hanauers’ mother’s jewelry into the hem of her clothing. She had also sewn family pictures into the lining of her dresses. There are over 200 photos dating back to the mid 1800’s that were saved.

My great grandparents, Max and Frieda Hanauer were hidden in a small cabin in Grunau, just outside of Berlin. This was the property of a woman named Lotte Mader who was an employee of my grandfather’s clothing factory. I have learned this from Tutti. Tutti was an employee of my great grandfather’s factory. She was friends of Ilse and Hans and she decided that it was time for our family to know the truth of what happened during the war. In 2005, Tutti had sent me a bowl and plate that my grandfather Hans had made as an apprentice and had given to her in the late 30’s.

I have documented Max Hanauer’s voyage to America in 1903. On the manifest, it showed him as a Brewer from Berlin. He had over $400 cash at the time he arrived to Ellis Island.

He traveled from New York to Salt Lake City to spend time with 3 cousins living there who owned the HANAUER SMELTING WORKS UTAH at Salt Lake City, Utah. From there he went to San Francisco, where he survived the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. He had taken 2 panoramic pictures of the devastation and I have the copies. My cousin Juliette Hanauer has the originals. He went back to Germany sometime in 1906. I am still trying to find out where he had traveled and when he actually left America.

My great-great grandfather David Hanauer was a Hops and Barley trader in Bavaria. His brother’s owned farms and were the growers of the hops and barley. He traded in Russia and China. My cousin, Mike Jones had told me that one of the Hanauer brother’s had owned a tobacco farm in Bavaria.

There were many Hanauers’ that were murdered during the holocaust.

I would like to share my story with the world. I know there are many stories already published about the holocaust, but I do believe mine has many pieces of German history not really known to the world.

Every word written is the truth backed by documentation from many sources. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has documented many pictures of my family and I have donated my father’s ID card and his release card from Theresienstadt to the USHMM.

This book is a testimonial to how God has answered my prayers. I had prayed to learn my family history and I was given the most amazing documentation.


As I finalized my father’s family documentation, my mother asked me to start on her genealogy. Now, that is a whole other story that holds an amazing tracking of her ancestors as Mormon pioneers. I have a feeling I will find a connection between my great grandfather, Max Hanauer and one of my mother’s ancestors in Salt Lake City. It wouldn’t surprise me a bit.
I would like to share my story with you of what I have found out about my family's heritage.


As I grew up, I had questions about my family. I knew my family was from Germany, but other than that, not much else. The only members of my family from Germany that were still alive would not open up to me about what happened to my grandfather or great grandparents.

My Father, Uri Hanauer was born in Berlin, Germany on February 6, 1940. I had no idea that he was a holocaust survivor until after his death on December 5, 1981. My grandmother pulled me aside at my father’s memorial service and told me that she and my father had been in a concentration camp during WWII. She said she needed to tell me this so I would understand why my father was never open with me about his childhood. I asked her the name of the camp and she would not tell me.

In 2002 my grandfather’s sister, Ilse had told me the name of the camp that my father, grandmother and great grandfather were taken to. It was Terezin (Theresienstadt) located in the Czech Republic. I started looking on the web for information on Theresienstadt and learned there was a museum in Israel that had the records of when people were transported to the camp. I had contacted the museum and they sent me copies of the transport documents for both my father and my grandmother. This was the beginning of my quest to learn the whole truth about my family’s survival during the holocaust. The only problem was that the 3 members of my family who had survived were now all deceased.

I then started sending emails to various German agencies on what I knew about my family, which at this point was very little. Fortunately my great aunt Ilse had given me names of some of my relatives just before her death in 2002.

I started out by not knowing anything about my family. I have learned the following from documents I have obtained from many agencies around the world starting in 2003. The notebook that holds these documents is 5” thick and filled. I have added another note book with correspondences I have had with The International Red Cross, historians, authors and German’s who knew my family during the war:

My grandfather’s name was Hans Heinz Hanauer and he was born on June 19, 1918 in Berlin.

My grandfather Hans and grandmother Ursula were married April 30, 1940 in Paderborn, Germany. Almost 3 months after my father’s birth.

On March 3, 1941, Hans had been warned not to leave his hiding place, because an arrest warrant had been issued against him. He was a member of an underground organization that had been plotting the assassination of Hitler and the organization had been infiltrated by a Nazi spy. Hans did not believe he would be arrested and he left his hiding place. As soon as he was spotted on the street, he was arrested.

Hans was then transported to the train station where he boarded the train that would be taking him to the labor camp, Gut Winkel in Spreenhagen. My father was with my grandmother at the train station where my grandfather had been taken. They were there to see him off. A soldier had asked my grandmother to hold my father, because he was trying to run to the train to be with his father. As Hans sat on the train, the wife of one of the soldier’s had given him a pen and piece of paper so he could write a note to my grandmother. The original letter Hans had written to my grandmother Ursula as he sat on the train is below the translation. The letter was hand delivered to my grandmother by the wife of a soldier that was on the train. My father’s half brother had given this letter to me in 2003. I had it translated right away. This is the exact translation:
3. III.41.

My Dear Love!

Now at day’s end I want to send a few lines. At noon you were standing by the train and I thought you had already left. Just as the train started to pull out, the wife of one of the soldiers said that you are still there. I looked right away but you had already started to walk away. That made me so sad because you were standing there and I didn’t look to see if you are still there.

That is the reason I wanted to write to you immediately so you will know that I am always with you in thought and I will always be thinking about you when there may be bad days like maybe today. Always know that there is someone thinking about you.

Dear Ursula I hope you won’t have to suffer because of me, I hope all will be good again. I am hoping to hear from you, so I can stop worrying about you. Greetings and kisses from your loving, sometimes a little stupid
Hans

Give Uri a kiss from Pappa.


Written on side of postcard from the wife of one of the soldiers who had hand delivered note to my grandmother Ursula:
“You do not know me but I am sending greetings, Ester Binder”.







Hans spent 2 years in Gut Winkel. This labor camp was set up to educate young Jewish men and women in agriculture and wood working so they could immigrate to Palestine.

Hans was transported from Gut Winkel to Auschwitz on March 4, 1943. There were 1159 people on the train and Hans was the 983rd person registered on the manifest. Hans was registered on the manifest as Hans Heinz Israel Hanauer. Hans arrived in Auschwitz on March 6, 1943 and was given the prison #106433. Hans was murdered in Auschwitz on March 31, 1943.

Both of my great grandfathers were Jewish and both of my great grandmothers were Christian.

My great grandfather (Ursula’s father) Jonas Rosenfeld had been incarcerated on 3 occasions. He documented all of the dates in a journal that my father’s half brother had. I had made a copy of this journal in 2003
Jonas was held in a facility on Rosenstrasse (Rose St.) in Berlin with over 10,000 other Jewish men, women and children. This was from February 27, 1943 until March 8, 1943. This was to be the last evacuation of the remaining Jews in Berlin, most of which were in mixed marriages (Christian/Jews). When the Christian wives of the Jewish men found out they were being held there, they began to go to the building and protest against the detainment of their spouses. The protest actually ended on March 6, 1943. The prisoners were released in alphabetical order one by one. Because Jonas’ last name was Rosenfeld, his release date was March 8, 1943.

There was a movie released in 2003 and made by German director Margarethe Von Trotta named “Rosenstrasse”. I saw this movie in 2005, and at that time I had no idea that my family had been involved in it. I actually purchased the movie the very next day, because I felt compelled to watch it again. It would be about 5 months later that I would go to the copied journal looking for birthdates of Jonas’ family members. As I was going through his notes I came across the translations of his dates of arrest. I was in shock when I saw in his own handwriting the date 27 Feb. 1943 until 8 Mar. 1943.

I had been told that my family was protected by my great grandmother’s Christian heritage. My great grandmother Emma Tscharntke-Rosenfeld died on August 16, 1944. On August 21, 1944, my father, grandmother and great grandfather were arrested. On September 8, 1944, the three of them were transported to Theresienstadt. They were liberated on June 7, 1945 and returned to Berlin. They left Berlin on May 29, 1946 on the SS Mariner and arrived in New York on June 18, 1946.

I was contacted by Michael Schneeberger in August of 2007. He was with the Ephraim Gustav Hoelein Genealogy Project of the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation located in Wuerzburg. He said my email was forwarded to him from an office in Berlin that had received my email over a year earlier. Michael had located information on my family which was held in Lower Franconia and created a family tree for me. In September 2007, I received my family tree that traced my Hanauer family back to Abraham Hanauer born in 1727 in Wiesenfeld, Bavaria. Michael had done a lot of research and had documented on property that was taken from my family, which included Gestapo numbers placed on the property. He had also included camps where my family were taken and murdered.

I have found 3 extended family members, 1 of which I have linked to my family. His name is Mike Jones and he lives in England. We have all come together through a website that bares our family name, Hanauer.

According to the German government, my grandfather Hans and grandmother Ursula were considered “Mischlinge” (half-breed). This was the label given to Christian Jews. All who were of Jewish heritage were mandated to take new middle names as they registered Israel for males and Sara for females. This was how the Jews were identified by the Nazi’s.

My great grandfather Max Hanauer owned a women’s clothing factory in Berlin. It had been taken away from him during the holocaust and was destroyed during the bombings. In October, 2007 I received from a distant relative in Buenos Aires, Argentina a copy of listed addresses for businesses in Berlin in 1927. It shows my great grandfather, Max Hanauer’s name, address and what type of business he owned.


My great grandmother Frieda Hanauer had sewn all of Max Hanauers’ mother’s jewelry into the hem of her clothing. She had also sewn family pictures into the lining of her dresses. There are over 200 photos dating back to the mid 1800’s that were saved.


My great grandparents, Max and Frieda Hanauer were hidden in a small cabin in Grunau, just outside of Berlin. This was the property of a woman named Lotte Mader who was an employee of my grandfather’s clothing factory. I have learned this from Tutti. Tutti was an employee of my great grandfather’s factory. She was friends of Ilse and Hans and she decided that it was time for our family to know the truth of what happened during the war. In 2005, Tutti had sent me a bowl and plate that my grandfather Hans had made as an apprentice and had given to her in the late 30’s.

I have documented Max Hanauer’s voyage to America in 1903. On the manifest, it showed him as a Brewer from Berlin. He had over $400 cash at the time he arrived to Ellis Island.

He traveled from New York to Salt Lake City to spend time with 3 cousins living there who owned the HANAUER SMELTING WORKS UTAH at Salt Lake City, Utah. From there he went to San Francisco, where he survived the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. He had taken 2 panoramic pictures of the devastation and I have the copies. My cousin Juliette Hanauer has the originals. He went back to Germany sometime in 1906. I am still trying to find out where he had traveled and when he actually left America.

My great-great grandfather David Hanauer was a Hops and Barley trader in Bavaria. His brother’s owned farms and were the growers of the hops and barley. He traded in Russia and China. My cousin, Mike Jones had told me that one of the Hanauer brother’s had owned a tobacco farm in Bavaria.

There were many Hanauers’ that were murdered during the holocaust.

I would like to share my story with the world. I know there are many stories already published about the holocaust, but I do believe mine has many pieces of German history not really known to the world.

Every word written is the truth backed by documentation from many sources. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has documented many pictures of my family and I have donated my father’s ID card and his release card from Theresienstadt to the USHMM.

This book is a testimonial to how God has answered my prayers. I had prayed to learn my family history and I was given the most amazing documentation.


As I finalized my father’s family documentation, my mother asked me to start on her genealogy. Now, that is a whole other story that holds an amazing tracking of her ancestors as Mormon pioneers. I have a feeling I will find a connection between my great grandfather, Max Hanauer and one of my mother’s ancestors in Salt Lake City. It wouldn’t surprise me a bit.

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