Alice Neven DuMont

Johanna Josefine Maria Alice Neven DuMont (née Minderop, born April 19, 1877, in Cologne; died August 23, 1964, ibid.)

After Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, Nazi anti-Jewish persecution forced women artists and politicians, including Else Falk and Hertha Kraus, to resign from their long-standing chairmanships of Cologne associations.

[10] Else Falk[11] and Margarete Tietz were forced to resign from the chairmanship of the Cologne GEDOK because of their Jewish heritage and Alice Neven DuMont became chairman again.

[13] To escape Allied bombing raids on Cologne, Neven DuMont spent the last months of the war in Starnberg with her son Kurt, who had married Franz von Lenbach's daughter Gabriele.

[14] After World War II, Neven DuMont ran Das Lädchen, the women's association's sales outlet founded in 1922 by Rosa Bodenheimer and Adele Meurer to sell privately owned valuables.

[15] On July 21, 1953, along with Paula Haubrich, Lotte Scheibler, Margarete Zanders, Edith Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Else Lang, she was one of the initiators of the new founding of the Cologne GEDOK, of which she was appointed honorary member on March 2, 1955.