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Alternate names: Wolbrom [Pol], Wohlborn [Ger], Volbrom [Yid-Вольбром, Rus-Вольбром]. 50°22' N, 19°46' E, 50 miles SW of Kielce, 21 miles NNW of Kraków, 11 miles NE of Olkusz. Słownik Geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego (1880-1902), XIII, pp. 825-826: "Wolbrom". 1900 Jewish population: 2,901. Yizkor: Wolbrom irenu, (Tel Aviv, 1962). This town in Olkusz powiat, Lesser Poland Voivodeship had 9,568 inhabitants in 2005. Jewish history. History of Wolbrom. The Story of Jewish Wolbrom.   [July 2009]

Normal 0 CEMETERY: Located at ul. Skalskiej in the vicinity of an emergency building, the WWII devastation by the Nazis left only isolated fragments of gravestones. In the 1980s, the Nissenbaum Family Foundation, Council for the Protection of Memory of Struggle and Martyrdom, and local authorities cleaned and fenced the site. On November 24, 1988, they unveiled a monument commemorating 4,500 Wolbrom Holocaust victims: pillars supporting a beam with a Mogen David inscribed in Polish and Hebrew. MASS GRAVE: In the nearby forest, Jews were murdered here by the Nazis during the liquidation of the Wolbrom  ghetto. Video.  [July 2009]

US Commission No. 000564

Located in Katowickie. The US Commission is not finished rechecking this file. [2000]

The following is a list of Jewish cemeteries in Zaglembie. I have personally visted most of them: Bedzin - ul. Podzamcze, Bedzin - ul. Zawale (now a park), Bedzin - ul. Sielecka (bus terminal), Czeladz - ul. Czealdzka 64 (also used by Bedzin community), Sosnowiec - ul. Gospodarcza 1, Sosnowiec (Modzejow) - ul. Niwka Pastewna, Sosnowiec (Milowice) - ul. Stalowa, Dabrowa Gornicza - ul. Wolka 5, Dabrowa gornicza - ul. Mydlice, Wolbrom - ul. Skalska, Zawiercie - ul. Daszynskiego, Kromolow - ul. Piaskowa 29, Olkusz - ul. Kopalniana, Olkusz - ul. Olowiana, Boleslaw - Krzykawka 139 (used by Slawkow community), I have many photos of these cemeteries. You should also consult the following:

Jeffrey Cymbler This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. [November 2000 on JewishGen Digest]
Parent Category: EASTERN EUROPE