J. George Mitnick papers

Identifier
irn617802
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2005.120.2
  • 2005.120
  • 2006.11.1
  • 2016.536.1
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

boxes

oversize boxes

oversize folders

2

2

5

Creator(s)

Biographical History

J. George Mitnick (1917-2005) was born in Hartford Connecticut to David and Rose Mitnick (nee Schwartz). George was the youngest of six children and was raised in a conservative religious home. After high school, George attended the University of Connecticut. Due to family financial stress, George left school after two years and got a job at a supermarket. After a year, he began working at the lumber company owned by his father and two uncles. After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, George enlisted in the Army. George trained at camp Devens, Massachusetts, and Camp Lee, Virginia before entering Officer Candidate School (OCS) in Edgeward, Maryland. George graduated as a Second Lieutenant in the 45th Infantry Division and was sent to Gadsden and then to Fort McClellan, Alabama for further training. While he was stationed in Alabama, George was promoted to Captain. He also met Willine Engel while visiting Birmingham, and the two began a relationship. George then received orders to report to the headquarters of the 65th Infantry Division at Camp Shelby, Mississippi. While in Shelby, George and Willine were married in spring 1944, and then George shipped out to Europe with the 65th. The 65th landed at Le Havre, France in January, 1945, and was deployed to the German border in March. In April, the division advanced into Bavaria and captured the city of Regensburg. On April 13, George arrived at the recently liberated Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. There he saw the abysmal living conditions and the sickly, emaciated corpses of the prisoners the guards killed before they fled. On April 20, the division liberated a subcamp in the Flossenbürg camp system. In May, the 65th captured the town of Passau, then moved into Austria and captured the city of Linz. On May 9, hostilities officially ended in Europe, George was among the troops of the 65th who made contact with the Russians at Erlauf. After the war, George was assigned to arrange for the separation of displaced persons to allow transfer to their homelands. After George returned home, he and Willene settled in Jasper, Alabama and had two daughters. In 1948 George and his brother-in-law, Joe, opened a dry goods store. Over the next eight years, they expanded to nine stores. Then in 1956, they converted the stores to dollar stores with the new name, Top Dollar Stores. George and Joe were able to expand into a chain of over 230 stores in 11 states before the chain was sold to the Sav-A-Stop company. George was very active in professional, civic, and philanthropic organizations. He founded the Walker Area Community Foundation, along with the Walker College Civic Concert Association, and he and his wife established the Mitnick Fellowship Fund to help young adults in Alabama. George was President of Temple Emanu-El, in Jasper, as well as a past president of Walker County Lodge of B'nai B'rith and he was a Member of the Executive Board of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which named him "Man of the Year" in 2003.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ronne Mitnick Hess

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ronne Mitnick Hess

J. George Mitnick and his daughter Ronne Hess donated the J. George Mitnick papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005, 2006, and 2016. Accessions cataloged as 2005.120.1, 2006. 11.1, and 2016.536 2017.574 have been incorporated into this collection.

Scope and Content

The J. George Mitnick papers consist of biographical material, correspondence, military records, photographs, and printed materials documenting American serviceman J. George Mitnick, his World War II military service, and the horrors he witnessed at the liberated Ohrdruf concentration camp. Biographical materials include a biographical statement and memoir describing Mitnick’s life and military service, a tribute to Mitnick by Senator Shelby, and an interview with and biography of Rabbi Hugo Gryn who was liberated from Mauthausen by Mitnick’s unit. Correspondence primarily consists of letters Mitnick wrote to his parents during his World War II military service. One letter dated April 13, 1945 describes the horrors he witnessed at the liberated Ohrdruf concentration camp. Another letter written in May 1945 at the Linz Displaced Persons camp by Julius Levy, a Polish Jew who addresses his letter to his liberators, describes having lost everything in the Holocaust, and begging to be transferred to an Allied hospital to recover. This series also includes correspondence among Mitnick, his wife, and her mother. Military records document Mitnick’s service in World War II. They primarily consist of Mitnick’s military personnel file from 1942 through the 1950s including orders, commendations, veteran materials, and transactional correspondence. This series also includes Mitnick’s Army Officer’s Notebook containing his notes as well as form letters and blank forms. Loose photographs depict Mitnick in uniform and members of the Engel family. A photo album titled “Astra Breifmarken Album” includes additional photographs of Mitnick in military uniform while training in the US and on leave in Europe and of his wife and their family and friends. This series also includes two empty scrapbooks and an empty portfolio. Printed material includes a pamphlet titled The Halberd about a 1951 reunion of the 65th Division, two 1940s Mountain Eagle clipping about Mitnick, a 1994 Palm Beach Post clipping about Patton’s assault on Saarbrucken, and a 1945 issued of The Hartford Times that Mitnick used to line his army footlocker.

System of Arrangement

The J. George Mitnick papers are arranged as five series: I. Biographical materials, 2001-2005 II. Correspondence, 1941-1945 III. Military, approximately 1940-1979 (bulk 1942-1957) IV. Photographs, approximately 1944-1950 V. Printed material, 1945-1994

People

Corporate Bodies

Subjects

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.