Born in Wandsbek (Germany) on August 5, 1886.
Manfred Victor was a traveling salesman and married to Ilse Abraham (Hamburg 8-6-1900). The couple had a daughter, Elli (Hamburg 1922).
Ilse Abraham was the daughter of Jenny Porges (see there) and Moritz Abraham
On September 28, 1937, the Victor family arrived in the Netherlands, in Rotterdam, where they moved into Van Beuningenstraat 5. In January 1939, Ilse's mother, the widow Jeannette Sara Abraham-Porges (see under Porges), joined them there.
In October 1940 they all moved to a boarding house at Matthijssenhoutweg 1e in Blaricum and from there moved to Bussummerweg 33. Ilse's sister Gertrud Jacobine Abraham (see there) follows exactly the same route from the Statenweg in Rotterdam, so that mother Abraham-Porges ultimately lives on the Bussummerweg with her two daughters, her granddaughter Elli and her son-in-law Manfred.
On June 30, 1942, the Victor-Abraham couple moved to Niersstraat 451 (near Schlesinger). As of December 30 of that year, they are officially deregistered from Niersstraat to Westerbork. Both were murdered in Sobibor on May 28, 1943.
For Manfred Victor and Ilse Victor born. Abraham were placed in front of their former home at Haynstraße 7 in Hamburg Stolpersteine.
Elli (Sara) Victor, childcare worker, did not go with her parents to the Niersstraat from the Bussummerweg in Blaricum on June 30, 1942; she went to live at Zuideramstellaan 2092 (after the war it became Rooseveltlaan) and survived the war.
On August 8, 1945 she returned to Blaricum where she lived on Capittenweg.
Source: Ron van den Berg
The story is part of the document '1942: Blaricum, its Jewish inhabitants and how they fared'. Can be found under https://hdl.handle.net/21.12143/301823155 on the Gooi en Vechtstreek Archives website.