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Schools:
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The Höhere Töchterschule (Girls' Grammar School) was opened by Dr. Moritz Katzenstein and his wife Fanny at No. 36 Großneumarkt in October 1863. In 1881 the school moved to Nos. 3, 4 and 5 erste Fehlandstraße, where it remained until 1899. Dr. Jakob Loewenberg took over the school on 1.04.1892. Prior to this, from 1886, Dr. Loewenberg had been at the Realschule der evangelisch-reformierten Gemeinde (Secondary Modern School of the Reformed Protestant Community). Later this school became the Realschule in the district of St. Pauli. Dr. Loewenberg introduced various changes to his new school which from this time on was called Höhere Mädchenschule. A new curriculum was established. The weekly reports and corresponding transfers, the high number of grades, the commendation cards, the official examinations and positions in class were abolished. He sought above all to maintain the positive spirit of the school, i.e. the pleasure of learning.
The new school prospect stated: In October 1899 the school moved to No. 11 Heimhuderstraße. (The building exists today). The rooms were larger and brighter.
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In August 1907 the school moved to No. 33 Johnsallee following alterations made to the building. This building was evidently better suited to the running of a school, or could be so converted. Before the transfer took place all rooms were installed with central heating and electric light. The Swedish wall-bars were the first to be installed in a school gymnasium in any school in Hamburg. There were also a spacious gardens at the front and rear of the building. The number of pupils increased rapidly in the new building. There were 138 pupils in 1892 when Dr. Loewenberg took over the school which had increased to 290 in 1913. At Easter 1910 the school was reorganized into a school having ten years. In 1912 the school became a Lyzeum, i.e. a girls' secondary school, and was named "Anerkannte Höhere Mädchenschule Lyzeum von Dr. J. Loewenberg". The curriculum of the Hamburg state lyzeums was operative in the school. Special emphasis was given to the teaching of German. Religious Education was taught separately according to belief. The favourable location of the school enabled frequent visits to the Botanical Gardens, the Kunsthalle (Art Gallery), where the director Alfred Lichtwark gave tours, the Natural History Museum and the Ethnology Museum.
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In 1913 the school grandly celebrated its 50th anniversary in Curio-Haus, at No. 11-15 Rothenbaumchaussee, where usually in following years the school leaving ceremony was held.
The transfer of the school to No. 33 Johnsallee followed an inspection by the city medical officer
and school inspector. In a school inspectors report dated 29.01.1909, Dr. Loewenberg was praised as
having tastefully decorated and suitably equipped the classrooms for learning. The overall impression
was "more favourable", and special mention was made of Dr. Loewenberg's expenditure on furnishing the
school in the interest of the health and aesthetic sense of the girl pupils. The length of lessons differed from the the other girls' secondary schools in Hamburg in that the Jewish pupils exclusively had two hours of religious education. Formerly, Religious Education for the Jewish pupils took place on Sundays and for the other pupils on Saturdays. In 1908 of the 241 pupils 31 were Protestant. On 22.04.1926 all the former Lyzeums in Hamburg were retitled "Mädchen-Realschule". Henceforth, the school was called "Dr. J. Loewenberg, Realschule für Mädchen" and "Realschule für Mädchen von Dr. J. Loewenberg.
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On 30.11.1926 the school authority granted Dr. Loewenberg the right to add to school leaving certificates the observation that pupils were able to continue on to the Obersekunda (seventh year of a German secondary school = lower sixth form) of a girls' Oberrealschule (non-classical secondary school). So at the age of seventy Dr. Loewenberg had achieved a further success for his school. On 16.03.1926, his seventy-first birthday, the Hamburg Senat paid tribute to him. They commended him, as teacher and educator, for the contribution he had made to the Hamburg education system. He had always been an enthusiastic advancer and supporter of progressive educational ideas and had involved his colleagues through his personal conviction and liberal-mindedness. He was a teacher of outstanding talent. He was additionally one of the most convicted and energetic initiators and promoters of adult education for the Literarischen Gesellschaft (Literary Society) and had rendered it great personal service. However, it was his poetry, that found resonance throughout Germany, that encapsulated his total personality. Aus der Schule.
Mein Kind kam heute von der Schule her,
So war's bisher noch immer nicht genug, A poem by Dr. Jakob Loewenberg relating to an event in his son Ernst's life.
Dr. Loewenberg died on 7.02.1929. He had remained director of his school to the very end. At his
funeral the rabbi of the Israelitische Tempelverband (Israelite Temple Association), Dr. Brunno
Italiener stated:
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On 1.04.1926, Dr. Jakob Loewenberg's son Dr. Ernst Loewenberg took over the school. He was qualified to teach German, French and Spanish. On 1.11.1930 the school had 189 pupils. On 1.12. 1930, Dr. Ernst Loewenberg, the new school director, was compelled to inform the parents in a letter that the school was forced to dissolve at Easter 1931. He explained that the continuous fall in the number of pupils, as shown by the small number of children wishing to enrol at Easter 1931, was evidence that the school, "made famous" by Dr. Jakob Loewenberg, had fulfilled its purpose within the Hamburg education system. He cited the "evolution of education policy" over the past decades, and the current economic depression as the deciding factors. The school had negotiated with the Mädchenschule der Deutsch-Israelitische Gemeinde (Volks- und Realschule) (Elementary and Secondary Girls' School of the German Israelite Community) so as to enable the majority of girls to remain in their old school classes. The community school had decided to accommodate part of their classes in the school building at No. 33 Johnsallee so that the majority of girls that had moved to the community school would be able to remain in the old school building. The children in the primary school classes were exempted from paying school fees. The same concern had been taken for the non-Jewish pupils who were to move school. On the same day Dr. Ernst Loewenberg wrote to the Senator responsible for education that he knew that the educational ethos that his father had sought to instil had found its place and was effective in the current education system. His father's educational ideas would live on after the school he created no longer existed. Shortly before the school was dissolved the Senator acknowledged Dr. Jakob Loewenberg's contribution to education in Hamburg. He described how Dr. Loewenberg had known how to enable pupils in his charge to become adults that were fully equipped to meet the demands of life. He had attracted men of outstanding quality such as Otto Ernst, (1862-1926), teacher and writer of plays, narratives and novels, Heinrich Scharrelmann, (1871-1940), school and educational reformer, Alfred Lichtwark, (1852-1914), art teacher and director of the Hamburg Kunsthalle (Art Gallery) from 1886, and others to teach and contribute to extra-curricular activities, and who had helped to make the school essential to the education system in Hamburg. In a letter dated 19.03.1931 the Education Authority acknowledging Dr. Jakob Loewenberg for his life's work in education in Hamburg stated that his memory would live on for what he and his school had meant for "girl's education". At Easter 1931 the girls transferred to six other schools in Hamburg, the majority moving to the Ria Wirth, private Realschule at No. 90 Mittelweg.
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What follows is an account given on 17.02.1986 by a former pupil of the school, Frau H. A. in Tel Aviv.
She attended Dr. Jakob Loewenberg's school between 1921 and 1931:
We all revered Dr. Loewenberg whom we loved and respected. Following the school break, which we
spent in the schoolyard with its tall linden trees, we had to return to the classroom in a
disciplined manner. A pupil from the top forms stood on each of the half landings as supervisor.
Sometimes Dr. Loewenberg came out of his room; occasionally he stopped a pupil, stoked the hair away
from her brow and mumbled something like the brow should be free of hair, totally free. The annual leaving ceremony for the Untersekunda (sixth year of the former secondary school) was also renown. It was held in Curiohaus (No. 11-15 Rothenbaumchaussee) to which not only relatives of pupils but also the general public came. In retrospect, I wish to say that the education we received sixty years ago was just as modern an education as my grandchildren receive today.
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Die Schullinde.
Im engen Schulhof steht ein Lindenbaum,
Doch mancher Arm um seinen Stamm sich legt,
Am Fenster steh ich sinnend oft, gebückt, A poem by Dr. Jakob Loewenberg. Dr. E. Loewenberg is registered as joint owner of the house at No. 33 Johnsallee until 1938. Up until this date the tenant was the Mädchenschule der Deutsch-Israelitischen Gemeinde (Volks- und Realschule) (classes I - V) (Elementary and Secondary Girls' School of the German Israelite Community). From 1940 onward the registered tenants were the Dammtor local branch of the NSDAP (Nazi Party), together with another tenant.
Today No. 33 Johnsallee is privately owned.
HIER - IN DER JOHNSALLEE 33 - WIRKTE AB 1907
MIT SEINEM KOLLEGIUM ARBEITETE ER REFORMPÄDAGOGISCH. There is a Loewenbergstraße in the district of Iserbrook, a long way from Dr. Loewenberg's school and work. Before its dissolution the former Realschule für Mädchen von Dr. Loewenberg had, in addition to Dr. Loewenberg as head teacher, nine full-time and ten part-time teachers, one of whom was Pastor A. Bernitt who had been there from 1891.
In order of the date of their employment the full-time teachers were:
Of the last children of the former Realschule für Mädchen von Dr. J. Loewenberg (23.03.1931)
the following were deported:
We conclude with information regarding Dr. Jakob Loewenberg's son Dr. Ernst Loewenberg:
German text: Dipl.-Pol. Wilhelm Mosel, Deutsch-Jüdische Gesellschaft, Hamburg.
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