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Displaying items 1,661 to 1,680 of 10,320
  1. Chinese paper currency note, 100 yuan, acquired by a German refugee

    1. Max Schmeidler family collection

    Chinese bank note, 100 yuan, owned by Max Schmeidler, who fled Berlin, Germany, for Shanghai, China.

  2. German anti-American propaganda film

    Statue of Liberty shots, FDR speaks, troops and mounted police battle strikers in various locations, wounded are picked up, rioters arrested. Workers smash windows in Detroit, coal strike in Pittsburgh and farmers dump milk during milk strike. Another large protest rally then CU of stills of American "Jews" including Major Rothschild, Untermeyer, Schiff, Frankfurter, Lehman, and (?)La Guardia. FDR speaking, footage from film "Grapes of Wrath," camps for refugees of Dust Bowl, shots of slums, footage of gangster Dillinger, other criminals, and Eleanor Roosevelt as fashion model.

  3. Prime Minister's Office: Confidential Correspondence and Papers (PREM 4). Selected records.

    The collection consists of selected correspondence files and reports from the Prime Minister's Office related to the Jewish situation in occupied Europe and the refugee situation in Palestine. Files originate from the record group PREM 4 at the National Archives, United Kingdom.

  4. Zdenko Bergl collection

    Consists of two false documents issued to Zdenko Bergl and his mother in Mirabella Eclano, Italy, in September 1943; four documents issued to Zdenko Bergl in the Cinecitta displaced persons camp near Rome, Italy, in 1946 and 1947; a photocopy of a certificate issued to Zdenko Bergl's father in 1940 in his hometown of St. Ivan Zabno in Croatia; a photograph of Zdenko Bergl and two friends in the Cinecitta DP camp in 1947; and a circa 1932 photograph of a brick factory, which belonged to Zdenko Bergl's father.

  5. Richard Scott Washington photograph collection

    The collection consists of 18 photographs taken or obtained by Richard Scott Washington, formerly Corporal, C Company, 42nd Tank Battalion, 11th Armored Division. The images were taken during World War II and depict Buchenwald concentration camp post-liberation as well as other sites of slave labor and refugees formerly under Nazi occupation.

  6. Phyllis Milstein collection

    The Phyllis Milstein collection consists of five photographs and an affidavit relating to Phyllis Frankiel Milstein and her family's experiences in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp. The typed document in English served as an affidavit for the birth of Oskar Frankiel.

  7. Ann Curiel papers

    Consists of documents related to Vilma Avolia (b. 1921, later Wilma D'Urbino) and her mother, Fortunata D'Urbino (b. 1893), who survived the war as Jewish women in Italy. Includes a 1941 identity card identifying Vilma as a resident of the Comune di Catanzaro, a 1944 copy of Fortunata's birth certificate, a 1945 refugee and ration card for Fortunata (with photograph) and a document listing her as a resident of the Prato displaced persons camp in 1945.

  8. MS St. Louis immigrant identification card

    An identification card for Elisabeth Haas, a passenger on the MS St. Louis, dated May 27, 1939, the anticipated date of arrival.

  9. Berger family papers

    1. Berger family collection

    The papers consist of documents, correspondence, photographs, newspapers, and an address book relating to the experiences of the Berger family before, during, and after the Holocaust.

  10. Henry Sarna collection

    The papers consist of seven photographs of refugees at the displaced persons camp, Bad Reichenhall, and on the military transport ship, "General McCray," which was headed for the United States in October 1949, as well as release papers from the Bad Reichenhall DP camp and a Polish repatriation document.

  11. Miriam and Saul Ingber collection

    The collection consists of photographs of Saul Ingber, his wife, Miriam, and other refugees at a DP camp in Poking (Pocking), Germany, as well as a photograph of the donor and his sister before World War II. Collection also includes photographs of images from pre-World War II Hungary and Romania, the Poking (Pocking) and Bamberg displaced person (DP) camps, and the marriage of Miriam Farcus to Saul Ingber as well as an invitation from Miriam and Saul Ingber's wedding in the Poking DP camp.

  12. Project Second Wave records

    Contains transcripts of oral history interviews, completed questionnaires, and other related documents created and collected by Dr. Gerald Holton and Professor Gerhart Sonnert during "Project Second Wave," which documented the experiences of young refugees from Nazism who came to the United States and the lives and careers they built. Approximately 86 interviews were conducted for the project in 2003 and 2004.

  13. Mina Freier papers

    The papers consist of an identification card for former concentration camp inmates issued to Henry Freier donor's husband in Laufen, Germany, and an identification card ("Ausweis") for civilian internees of Mauthausen concentration camp issued to Mina Horowicz at the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) DP camp in Ebensee, Austria.

  14. Oster-Marcusohn family photograph collection

    Collection consisting of 46 photographs documenting the experiences of Blanchette Marcusohn [donor], Zvi Oster, and their families in Romania before World War II, during the war in Transnistria, and after the war in Cyprus and Palestine.

  15. Michael Danziger papers

    The papers consist of a labor card and a driver's license issued to Fajwel Dancygier [donor's father] at the Zeilsheim displaced persons camp in Germany, a photograph of a boy wearing a dark military-style hat and a Star of David pin, a photograph of Itta Rizal Danziger [mother of Philip (Felix) Danziger] who perished in the Holocaust, and an identification document issued to Fajwel Dancygier by a Polish government official in Braunschweig (Brunswick), Germany.

  16. Henry and Grace Dondero photograph collection

    The collection consists of five photographs of the proceedings of the Nazi war crimes trials at Nuremburg and Dachau, Germany; one photograph of refugees on the ship "Medina Yehudit" attempting to enter Haifa, Palestine, on December 3, 1947; and a photograph of a little girl waving Israeli and American flags in front of a kosher butcher store in Pittsburgh, Pa., on July 2, 1948.

  17. Letters 1938 to 1945 The Grunwalds' journey from oppression to freedom

    Consists of a book, written and edited by Susanne Sommer, entitled "Letters 1938 to 1945: The Grunwalds' Journey from Oppression to Freedom." The book mainly consists of copies and transcriptions of the correspondence between Max and Marga Grunwald of Berlin, Germany, and Paul and Jean Lewinson, of Arlington, Virginia. The Lewinsons were the American sponsors of the Grunwald family who traveled from Germany to the Philippines where they remained for two years before arriving in the United States in 1941. Also includes copies of correspondence between the Grunwalds and other family members.