Papers on Otto Schiff
Extent and Medium
2 boxes
Creator(s)
- American Jewish Archives
- The Wiener Holocaust Library
- The National Archives
- Jewish Refugees Committee
- Home Office
- Central Welfare Department. Bloomsbury House
Biographical History
Otto Schiff was born in Frankfurt am Main on 8 May 1875 to Philipp and Bertha (née Dreyfus) Schiff. He came from a distinguished family of bankers. Schiff arrived in London in 1896, where he established the stockbroking firm Bourke, Schiff & Co. In 1901 he became a British subject. Schiff also devoted himself to charitable work on behalf of Jewish immigrants, working on the Jewish Board of Guardians and the Jews’ Temporary Shelter. He developed a good working relationship with the Aliens Department at the Home Office. During the First World War, he not only supported Belgian Jewish refugees but also enlisted in the Royal Artillery as a Gunner and fought on the Western Front.
In March 1933, in response to the Nazi accession to power, he helped set up the Jewish Refugees Committee. Soon he devoted himself entirely to this position, and he played an important part in shaping government policy on refugees. In June 1939, he was awarded a CBE for his work. During the Second World War, he continued to lobby the British government tirelessly on behalf of Jewish refugees. Contemporaries and later commentators commend him for his instrumental role in admitting 80,000 Jews to Britain as well as for his personal generosity. Some historians have criticised him for being too conciliatory vis-à-vis the British authorities. He died in London in November 1952 of a cardiac arrest.
Archival History
A. J. Sherman and Pamela Shatzkes created and collated these papers over 2006-2009; Sherman donated them to the library in 2010. The collection in 2167/2 belonged to Joan Stiebel. She must have passed them on to Sherman and Shatzkes to use in their research.
Acquisition
Papers re Otto Schiff article
Donated 29.03.2010
Donor: AJ Sherman
Scope and Content
Notes, correspondence, primary documents (most photocopied) and secondary literature written or collated by A. J. Sherman and Pamela Shtazkes to write an article on Otto Schiff. Their article appeared in The Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook in 2009.
In addition the collection contains a similar set of materials created or collected by Joan Stiebel, who had worked closely with Schiff in the 1930s and 1940s. Particularly interesting are the drafts Stiebel wrote of a longer, unpublished memoir or autobiography of Schiff; these also examine her work with refugees after 1945.
The dates in the date field indicate first when the original documents were created and suggest second, in square brackets, when the copies might have been produced.
System of Arrangement
The collection is divided into two series: one for the Sherman and Shatzkes's papers and one for the Joan Stiebel collection. The latter contains the materials in folders labelled with her name. Some of the latter were clearly photocopied by Sherman or Shatzkes and appear in the series associated with them.
Conditions Governing Access
Open
People
- Sherman, A.J.
- Shatzkes, Pamela
- Schiff, Otto
- Stiebel, Joan
- Schiff, Hilda
Subjects
- Welfare
- Personal narratives
- Refugees