Contribute to Izak Vos

What would you like to contribute

Herdenk Izak Vos

Izak Vos

Coevorden, – Midden-Europa,

Reached the age of 49 years

Occupation: Butcher

Stories

The fate of Izak Vos and his family.

Izak Vos was a son of Joseph Vos and Mietje Bierman. He was married, probably around 1925 to Henriette Cutzien from Oldenzaal, usually known as Krukziener, a daughter of Meijer Cutzien and Jane de Groot. Izak and Henriette had two children, namely Joseph on 2 April 1927 and Jeanne on 27 July 1932. However, the complete family, who lived at Bentheimerstraat 53a in Coevorden (Drenthe), was killed in…

Read more

De familie Vos

De familie Vos wonend aan de Bentheimerstraat 54a was een slagersfamilie die oorspronkelijk afkomstig was uit Berkich, Duitsland. Izak Vos, geboren op 20 juli 1894 te Coevorden runden samen een slagerij met zijn vrouw, Henriette Cutzien-Vos, geboren op 10 februari 1901 te Oldenzaal. Zij kregen samen in totaal twee kinderen,  zoon Jozeph, geboren op 2 april 1927 te Coevorden en een dochter Jeanne, …

Read more

Izak Vos' death certificate

Izak Vos died on 1 December 1942 in Reichsautobahnlager Annaberg, Upper Silesia, Germany (today Poland).

The official cause of death: left-sided pneumonia (linksseitige Lungenentzündung).

Source: the official death certificate issued by German authorities (Standesamt).

Read more

Izak Vos and his family

In addition, a Jokos file (number 10119) on this family is at the Amsterdam Municipal Archive. Access is subject to authorization from the Stichting Joods Maatschappelijk Werk.

Read more

About Izak Vos

This person is commemorated on a memorial in Coevorden. More information on this memorial can be found (in Dutch) on the website of the Nationaal Comité 4 en 5 mei.

Read more

The death of Izak Vos

Research into the wartime civil registries of one of the civil registry offices in Upper Silesias (Poland) discovered many records that corresponded to deaths of inmates from the "Reichsautobahnlager Annaburg" and "Zwangsarbeitslager Niederkirch" camps.

A certificate of death for Izak Vos  as discovered there, stated that he died on 1 December 1942  in Camp Annaberg. In it was mentioned an officia…

Read more

The Cosel period.

The period from 28 August to 12 December 1942 was known as the so-called Cosel period. Deportation trains  made a stopover at the freight station of Cosel, located 80 km west of Auschwitz. During that stop, boys and men who were considered fit for work by the Germans, were usually forcibly separated from their families and taken off the train and put to work in the surrounding labor camps of Upper

Read more

Address & residents

Family

Other family members

No other family known (yet)