[4] From his first marriage to Harriet, née Alexander, in 1888[5] (and divorced in 1902), he had five children, including his daughter Ellie von Bleichröder, who was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp on July 27, 1942 and liberated there at the end of the war.
[7] James von Bleichröder took part in the First World War as a cavalry captain[1].
; today: Automobilclub von Deutschland, AvD) the Palais Bleichröder at Leipziger Platz 16.
[3] He was buried in 1937 in the Bleichröders' family mausoleum at Friedrichsfelde Central Cemetery, which was demolished in 1950 at the instigation of Wilhelm Pieck.
[11] Bleichröder's heirs currently have 37 Search Requests registered in the German Lost Art Foundation Database.