Online Store Contact us About us
Yad Vashem logo

Transport from Wloclawek, Ghetto, Poland to Lodz, Ghetto, Poland on 26/09/1941

Transport
Departure Date 26/09/1941 Arrival Date 26/09/1941
Wloclawek,Ghetto,Poland
Passenger train
Widzew Train Station, Poland
Radegast railway station
Marched by foot
Passenger train
Radegast railway station
Widzew Train Station, Poland
Marched by foot
Passenger train
Widzew Train Station, Poland
Radegast railway station
Marched by foot
Passenger train
Lodz,Ghetto,Poland
The Włocławek region was occupied by the Germans in its entirety by mid-September 1939. As in the case of Litzmannstadt (Łódź), the city of Leslau (Włocławek) was considered by the Germans to consist of two separate units—“Kreis Leslau Stadt,” the city, and “Kreis Leslau Land,” the county. Before the war, at least 15,042 Jews lived in both the county and the city. After the annexation, many Jews had fled or were deported to the General Government (Generalgouvernement, the zone of Nazi-occupied central Poland not formally annexed to the Reich). As a result, the number of Jews in the city dropped significantly, reaching some 3,200 people, with approximately 5,000 in the entire Włocławek region. By November 1940, a ghetto had been established in the city’s poorest area. In the summer of 1941 hundreds of Jews were deported to forced labor camps in the Poznań area. ...
Overview
    No. of transports at the event : 1
    Date of Departure : 26/09/1941
    Date of Arrival : 26/09/1941