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Alte Kirche (Wuppertal-Langerfeld)

Buildings and structures in WuppertalChurches completed in 1786Protestant churches in North Rhine-Westphalia
Wuppertal Odoakerstr 0001
Wuppertal Odoakerstr 0001

The Alte Kirche (Old Church) is a Protestant church in the district Langerfeld of Wuppertal. It is one of two churches of the Protestant congregation Langerfeld and is located between the Odoakerstraße (Odoacer street) and the Schwelmer Straße (Schwelm street). It was built from 1768 to 1786; the first service took place on 24 September 1786, and was celebrated to the memory of Frederick II of Prussia.In 2015, when the congregation celebrated her 250th jubilee, the church was redeveloped Inside and Outside extensively.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Alte Kirche (Wuppertal-Langerfeld) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Alte Kirche (Wuppertal-Langerfeld)
Odoakerstraße, Wuppertal Langerfeld

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 51.2745 ° E 7.2444 °
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Address

Alte Kirche Langerfeld

Odoakerstraße 5
42389 Wuppertal, Langerfeld
North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
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Website
kirche-langerfeld.de

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Wuppertal Odoakerstr 0001
Wuppertal Odoakerstr 0001
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Kemna concentration camp

Kemna concentration camp (German: Konzentrationslager Kemna, KZ Kemna) was one of the early Nazi concentration camps, created by the Third Reich to incarcerate their political opponents (ostensibly in protective custody) after the Nazi Party first seized power in 1933. The camp was established in a former factory on the Wupper river in the Kemna neighborhood of the Barmen quarter of Wuppertal. It was run by the SA group in Düsseldorf. The purpose of the early concentration camps was to repress and terrorize opponents of the new regime, primarily communists, but also socialists, dissenting Christians, and trade unionists. Unlike later concentration camps, the prisoners and the guards at Kemna were from the same cities and in many cases, knew each other and were already enemies from the German Revolution of 1918–1919 and subsequent political battles of the 1920s. Torture was practiced and the screams of the men were audible to people living and working nearby, and severely injured men were taken to nearby hospitals, all causing word of the camp's misdeeds to spread quickly. There was a major release of prisoners in October 1933; those released were forced to sign a document promising to keep secret all they had seen and experienced at the camp, and were threatened with re-arrest if they disobeyed. The Nazis wanted the public to become familiar with the term "concentration camp" and regard it with dread, but worried that the excesses at Kemna and the other early concentration camps would turn public opinion against them and thwart their plans. As a result, the camp was closed in January 1934, just six months after it opened. After the SA lost political influence, reports of torture led to an investigation and eventually to hearings and the perpetrators given a warning. No crimes were prosecuted. After the war, the Kemna Trial became the first major German trial regarding a concentration camp. Nonetheless, the camp was afterward largely forgotten, with no research into its past and for decades, only two sources supplying most of the information known about the camp. In 1983, a monument honoring the prisoners who suffered there was installed across the street from the former concentration camp; the builders of the monument were forbidden by the owner of the property from erecting any memorial on the site itself.