Privatschule Barber

Former private commercial school in Breslau From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Privatschule Barber or Privat-Handelsschule Barber was a private commercial school in Breslau, Germany, now Wrocław, Poland. It was associated first with Heinrich Barber, who appeared in advertisements as a bookkeeper, writing teacher, commercial teacher, and court-sworn book auditor, and later with Erich Barber. Heinrich Barber and his son Erich Barber came from a Jewish Breslau family.[1][2]

History

The earliest currently identified notices connected with Heinrich Barber place him in Breslau in 1880 as a Buchhalter und Schreiblehrer (bookkeeper and writing teacher) at Carlsstraße 12.[3]

By the late 1880s and early 1890s, Barber was being described in Breslau newspapers as a Handelslehrer (commercial teacher), Lehrer des Breslauer Handlungsdiener-Instituts, and Bücher-Revisor or gerichtlich vereidigter Bücher-Revisor (court-sworn book auditor), usually at Carlsstraße 36.[4][5][6]

Advertisements from this period show that Barber's teaching was aimed at young people preparing for commercial occupations. One notice states that Barber in Breslau, Carlsstraße 36, accepted male and female pupils leaving school who intended to devote themselves to a commercial career.[7]

The curriculum, as far as it can be reconstructed from surviving advertisements, was practical and business-oriented. Notices mention instruction in Buchführung (bookkeeping), Rechnen (arithmetic), and related subjects, indicating a private commercial school rather than a general secondary school.[8]

By 1904 and 1905, Barber was advertised as commercial teacher and auditor of books and records (Handelslehrer und Bücherrevisor) in Graupenstraße, near the Reichsbank, indicating that his activity had moved from the earlier Carlsstraße address.[9][10]

In 1908, advertisements describe an Ostdeutsche Handels-Akademie in Breslau I, founded in 1875, under the name of Heinrich Barber at Graupenstraße 12, with new courses beginning in mid-1908 and October 1908.[11][12]

The school still appeared publicly under Heinrich Barber's name through 1909.[13][14][15]

By late 1909, the school was explicitly advertised as Privat-Handelsschule "Barber" at Gartenstraße 57 in Breslau 5, with new courses announced for January 1910.[16]

At about the same time, advertisements mention Erich Barber vorm. Heinrich Barber as Bücher-Revisor. Erich Barber thus appears publicly as Heinrich Barber's successor from 1909 onward.[17]

Later advertisements show Erich Barber at Gartenstraße 57 in Breslau 5 in 1911, 1913 and 1914, indicating continuity of the Barber commercial institution at that address after the transition from Heinrich Barber.[18][19][20][21]

In 1935 and 1936, notices in the Breslauer Jüdisches Gemeindeblatt referred to the früher Leiter der Privatschule Barber at Gartenstraße 23 near the market hall. By that time Barber advertisements were appearing in the Jewish communal press.[22][23][24][25]

Heinrich Barber

Heinrich Barber is the central documented figure in the early history of the school. In the currently identified advertisements, he appears under several occupational descriptions, including accountant (Buchhalter), writing teacher (Schreiblehrer), business studies teacher (Handelslehrer) and auditor of books and records (Bücher-Revisor).[26][27]

The repeated description court-sworn auditor of books and records (gerichtlich vereidigter Bücher-Revisor) suggests that Barber was active not only as a teacher but also as a professional auditor or examiner of business accounts.[28][29]

The surviving notices also indicate that Barber combined teaching with career-oriented training. One advertisement explicitly states that pupils trained by the institution could obtain practical advancement through the school's arrangements.[30]

A family report in the genealogical database Juden im Deutschen Reich lists Heinrich BARBER, born about 1845, and notes him as a Handelslehrer in Breslau in 1903.[31]

The school or institute associated with Barber claimed a foundation date of 1875 in advertisements from 1908 and 1914.[32][33]

Erich Barber

Erich Barber appears in the source record by late 1909 as Heinrich Barber's successor, when a notice described him as Erich Barber vorm. Heinrich Barber.[34] He was subsequently associated with the Barber school and related commercial instruction at Gartenstraße 57 in Breslau in 1911, 1913 and 1914.[35][36][37]

The surname list of the genealogical database Juden im Deutschen Reich includes an Erich BARBER born on 9 March 1885 in Breslau.[38]

By the mid-1930s, notices in the Breslau Jewish Community Bulletin (Breslauer Jüdisches Gemeindeblatt) referred to the former head of the Barber Private School (früher Leiter der Privatschule Barber) at Gartenstraße 23.[39][40]

School profile

The Barber institution was a private commercial school specializing in office and business education. The documented subject matter includes bookkeeping, arithmetic, and related practical commercial instruction.[41]

The advertisements suggest that the school served students who were either entering commerce directly from school or seeking practical preparation for clerical and accounting work.[42]

At least by the late 1900s, the institution was also presented under more ambitious titles such as Ostdeutsche Handels-Akademie, indicating an attempt to position it within the wider market of private commercial education in Breslau.[43]

Known addresses

  • Carlsstraße 12, Breslau — early address linked to Heinrich Barber as bookkeeper and writing teacher in 1880.[44]
  • Carlsstraße 36, Breslau — address associated with Barber's commercial teaching activity and his work as a book auditor in the late 1880s and 1890s.[45][46]
  • Graupenstraße 12, Breslau I — address given in 1908 advertisements for the Ostdeutsche Handels-Akademie under Heinrich Barber.[47][48]
  • Gartenstraße 57, Breslau 5 — address given for Privat-Handelsschule "Barber" in 1909 and still associated with Erich Barber in 1911, 1913 and 1914.[49][50][51][52]
  • Gartenstraße 23, Breslau — address in 1935 and 1936 notices in the Breslau Jewish Community Bulletin (Breslauer Jüdisches Gemeindeblatt) referring to the former head of Privatschule Barber.[53][54]

The end

After the final known notice in the Breslau Jewish Community Bulletin (Breslauer Jüdisches Gemeindeblatt) in 1936, no further evidence of the continued existence of Privatschule Barber has been identified. The subsequent fate of Heinrich Barber and Erich Barber remains unknown. Erich Barber’s brother Julius Barber died in Tel Aviv in 1943, while Erich’s niece Alice emigrated to the United States in 1940. Erich’s sister-in-law Alma was murdered at Auschwitz.[55][56]

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