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Displaying items 1,081 to 1,100 of 10,553
Language of Description: English
  1. Articles and U.S. military records relating to displaced persons in postwar Europe

    1. Albert Hutler collection

    Includes copies of military documents and other materials from various U.S. Army authorities (e.g., 7th U.S. Army, Headquarters USFET, SHAEF) in postwar Europe concerning the management, care, living conditions, and repatriation of displaced persons. Also included are two copies of the report written by Earl G. Harrison to President Truman in 1945 concerning conditions for displaced persons in Europe, together with a condensed version of the same report that appeared in the "National Jewish monthly," November 1945 issue.

  2. Documentation of the Stadtkommandantur (municipal military headquarters) in Kharkov, 1941-1943

    Documentation of the Stadtkommandantur (municipal military headquarters) in Kharkov, 1941-1943

  3. Documentation of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers of Romania - The Military Cabinet, 1940-1944

    Documentation of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers of Romania - The Military Cabinet, 1940-1944 The collection includes documents created by the military cabinet of Ion Antonescu. Included among its subjects: the persecution and deportation of Jews; confiscation of Jewish property; military actions against the partisans; documentation of the Intelligence Service regarding the retreat of the Romanian Army from Bessarabia and northern Bucovina in 1940.

  4. Documentation created by the Romanian Military Cabinet, photocopied from the Osoby Archives in Moscow

    Documentation created by the Romanian Military Cabinet, photocopied from the Osoby Archives in Moscow

  5. Documentation regarding the Holocaust from the Federal German Military Archives in Freiburg, 1936-1945

    There is diverse documentation from the Wehrmacht (German Army) regarding the Jews, Jewish communities and the fate of the Jews during the Holocaust in the collection, including reports, memos, telegrams and personal documents, encompassing a wide variety of organizations and units that worked within the Wehrmacht framework. The files cover different areas of activity and organizations: partisan activity, administration of the occupied areas, activities of combat units, cooperation between the German Army and the Einsatzgruppen (Task Forces), activities of the German Military Police and the...

  6. The Military Archive in Podolsk - Documentation from the Central Archive of the Russian Ministry of Defence

    1. Documentation regarding the Holocaust from the Central Archives in Moscow, 1939-1945

    The collection contains documentation from TSAMO (Central Archive of the Russian Ministry of Defence) including information regarding the murder of the Jews of Moldavia, Lithuania, Estonia, Poland, France, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Hungary, Belorussia, Ukraine and more. There is also information regarding the Gypsies, such as the concentration of Gypsies, their living conditions and their murder. Description of the collection: 1. Camps Concentration camps, extermination camps, camps for forced laborers, POW camps and more, transports of Jews, robbery, selection, those running the ca...

  7. Militärbefehlshaber in Belgien und Nordfrankreich

    • Military Commandor of Belgium and Northern France

    1940/1944

    In Belgium, the territories of Eupen, Malmedy, and Moresnet, which had belonged to Germany prior to 1918, were annexed. From 1940 to 1944, the rest of the country was under a German military administration led by a Militärbefehlshaber in Belgien und Nordfrankreich, General Alexander von Falkenhausen.

  8. Diagrams containing the deployments and military moves of Artillery Battalion 161, Balka Karavatka area near Stalingrad, November 1942-January 1943, including a report of military actions taken by the battalion, 15 September 1942-27 January 1943, 03 February 1943

    1. O.32 - Documentation regarding the Jews of the Soviet Union from the Holocaust period

    Diagrams containing the deployments and military moves of Artillery Battalion 161, Balka Karavatka area near Stalingrad, November 1942-January 1943, including a report of military actions taken by the battalion, 15 September 1942-27 January 1943, 03 February 1943 Included in the file: Assessment of military actions taken by Artillery Battalion 161, 15 September-23 November 1942; character evaluation of David Korabelnikov by the Leningrad factory in which he worked until the outbreak of the war and following his discharge from the Red Army, 1946; David Korabelnikov was born in Gomel, Belorus...

  9. Would you Tell Secrets to Spies? Then Don't Talk About Military Matters WWII Public Utilities Commission broadside

    Broadside, "Buy Defense Bonds! Your Buying Keeps 'Em Flying", on one side, and "Would you Tell Secrets to Spies? Then Don't Talk About Military Matters" on the other side.

  10. Military blouse, trousers, and General Service Cap worn by a Dutch Jewish corporal in the Prinses Irene Brigade

    1. Jack and Hedi Justus Grootkerk family collection
    • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    • irn90157
    • English
    • a: Height: 21.000 inches (53.34 cm) | Width: 15.125 inches (38.418 cm) b: Height: 27.875 inches (70.803 cm) | Width: 14.500 inches (36.83 cm) c: Height: 2.875 inches (7.303 cm) | Width: 10.500 inches (26.67 cm) | Depth: 10.000 inches (25.4 cm)

    Military blouse, pants, and General Service Cap worn by Jack Grootkerk, 29, who served in the Dutch Free Forces, Prinses Irene Brigade from September 1942 to September 1945. The Brigade was formed in England in 1941 by the Dutch government in exile and Dutch Army personnel who had escaped German occupied Europe. The unit wore British battledress uniforms with Dutch insignia. On May 10, 1940, Germany invaded the Netherlands. In December 1941, Jack was told to report for forced labor in Germany. He and his brother Erich fled to France and Spain, and were interned several times. In fall 1942, ...

  11. Command No. 201 Military Order Number 201 announcement poster issued by postwar Soviet occupation forces in Germany

    1. German poster collection
    • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    • irn3754
    • English
    • overall: Height: 26.375 inches (66.993 cm) | Width: 18.000 inches (45.72 cm) pictorial area: Height: 24.750 inches (62.865 cm) | Width: 15.500 inches (39.37 cm)

    Poster announcing Military Order Number 201, issued by the Sowjetisch Militärverwaltung in Deutschland (Soviet Military Administration in Germany, SMAD) in August 1947. Order 201 announced the implementation of new guidelines for denazification policy in the Soviet occupied zone (SBZ). After the German surrender on May 8, 1945, Germany was divided into zones of occupation by the Allies. The Soviet zone encompassed the eastern part of Germany. On June 6, SMAD was established to administer and carry out military, political, and economic tasks in the SBZ. One of the principal tasks undertaken ...

  12. Allied Military Authority currency, 10 sen, B series, for use in Japan, acquired by a US soldier

    1. James Edward Kirkebo collection

    Allied military currency, 10 sen, issued in postwar occupied Japan, acquired by Captain James (Jim) Edward Kirkebo, who served in the United States Army from 1940-1945, including combat duty with the Thunderbolt Division in Europe from December 1944-May 1945. The B series was issued in Japan from September 1945-July 1948 and in Okinawa until 1958. Military currency or occupation money was produced for use by military personnel in occupied territories. Notes for the different currencies: lire, francs, kroner, marks, schillings, and yen, had similar designs for ease of production. Kirkebo, 19...

  13. Allied Military Authority currency, 50 sen, B series, for use in Japan, acquired by a US soldier

    1. James Edward Kirkebo collection

    Allied military currency, 50 sen, issued in postwar occupied Japan, acquired by Captain James (Jim) Edward Kirkebo, who served in the United States Army from 1940-1945, including combat duty with the Thunderbolt Division in Europe from December 1944-May 1945. The B series was issued in Japan from September 1945-July 1948 and in Okinawa until 1958. Military currency or occupation money was produced for use by military personnel in occupied territories. Notes for the different currencies: lire, francs, kroner, marks, schillings, and yen, had similar designs for ease of production. Kirkebo, 19...

  14. Sound recordings of the Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal (Set B)

    3,936 digital files corresponding to the Set B audio recordings of the Nuremberg Trials originally recorded on cardboard and aluminum gramophone discs.

  15. Selected records from the "Nedic Archives" of the Military Historical Institute of the Ministry of Defense of Serbia

    Selected records from the archives of the Military Historical Institute of the Ministry of Defense of Serbia related to the activities of the puppet government of the Prime-Minister Milan Nedic during the Nazi occupation. This collection includes correspondence of the various Government authorities regarding arrests, persecution and reprisals against Jews, members of the antifascist movement, communists and the civilian population.