Muehlstein family: Papers

Identifier
WL1800
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 71081
Dates
1 Jan 1901 - 31 Jan 2009
Level of Description
Collection
Languages
  • German
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Biographical History

The children Erika and Herbert emigrated separately to England on Kindertransports in 1939. Their parents Arthur and Emma Muehlstein fled to Belgium where they survived the Second World War. The couple had two more children during the war who were taken to a convent to ensure their safety.


Erika Burgell (born 1932, née Muehlstein) and Herbert Muehlstein (1930-1996) were the children of Jewish couple Arthur Aron (1890-1964) and Emma Muehlstein (1902-1964, née Ullmann) from Vienna. Aron and Emma Muehlstein ran two successful clothes and jewellery businesses. The family was well-off employing maids and a governess for the children. After the annexation of Austria in March 1938, Jewish children in Vienna were segregated and Herbert had to go to a special school for Jewish children. The family's businesses were requisitioned by the SS. Herbert Muehlstein and his father, who by then was doing forced labour, were often the victims of anti-semitic violence. The parents managed to secure a place on a Kindertransport to England for Erika in March 1939. Her brother followed her some months later. The children were looked after by separate host families in England which changed frequently. When war broke out both children were evacuated from London to Sussex. After the occupation of France, the area where they lived was declared a war zone and they were moved to South Wales. They were eventually transferred to a children's refugee home in Birmingham and later to London. Erika studied dressmaking at Barrett Street Technical College from 1945. Herbert suffered particularly badly mentally and academically from the separation from his parents and his disrupted education.
In London, Erika and Herbert lived with their uncle, Richard Ullmann (1896-1974) who had also fled persecutions in Austria. He was arrested on the premises of his business in May 1938 and imprisoned at Dachau and later transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp. He was released in February 1939 after which he arranged for his emigration.
Erika and Herbert's parents fled to Antwerp, Belgium, in 1939. Emma gave birth to two more children, Renee (born 1939) and Ruth (born 1943). Both children were taken into the safety of a convent and educated in the Catholic faith. In 1941 the couple was held at Limbourg detention camp but were released in the same year. Aron and Emma survived the Holocaust in Brussels where they settled down with their two youngest daughters after the war.

Acquisition

Papers re restitution claim- 2 boxes

Donated December 2009

Donor: Mrs Burgell

Donor: Half sister: Ruthy Rousseau

Scope and Content

This collection contains the family papers of the Muehlstein family, Jewish refugees from Vienna.

Family papers including correspondence and supporting documents relating to restitution and pension claims and war-time Red Cross correspondence between parents and children. Also included is a photograph of Erika and Herbert Muehlstein before their emigration in 1937.


In an audio interview the donor describes: being born in Vienna 2 years after her brother in 1932; how her father was beaten up and persecuted by the Nazis; how her brother, who was also badly affected followed his sister after a few months to Great Britain on the Kindertransport; how her father raided the family business after it had been expropriated by the Nazis and took jewellry to support his escape to Belgium; her parents remained in Belgium in hiding throughout the war and two more children, daughters; Erika stayed initially in South London then was evacuated to Sussex then Wales. Erika was fostered separately from her brother; how she ended up in Birmingham in a home where she was badly treated; how the two siblings were eventualy reunited with their uncle, Richard Ullman, a former football player for the Austrian national team; how the whole family became reunited after the war for a short period but the parents continued to live in Belgium and Erika and Herbert in England


Readers need to reserve a reading room terminal to access an audio interview with the donor.

System of Arrangement

Arranged chronologically by subject.

Conditions Governing Access

Open

Related Units of Description

  • See photo archive for photographs (2009/59) and audio recording for interview with Erika Burgell. See also 2010/7 Photo box 49

People

Places

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.