Mändle family papers

Identifier
irn548848
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 1994.58
Dates
1 Jan 1918 - 31 Dec 1945
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • German
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

folder

book enclosure

1

1

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Siegfried Mändle (1900-1969) was born on October 3, 1900 to David and Fanny Mändle. He had two brothers, Dr. Julius Mandle (1899-1968) and Friedrich Mändle (Fritz, circa 1897-1919). Reida Lichtenstetter (later Reida Mändle, 1904-1953) was born on July 5, 1904 to Heinrich and Lina Lichtenstätter in Kliensteinacht, Germany. Reida had three siblings, Flora Schwab-Wallach (1895-1979), Solomon Lichenstetter (1896-1974), and Selma Lichtenstetter (Thelma, 1898-1987). Siegfried Mändle married Reida Lichtenstetter on May 13, 1929 in Augsburg, Germany. Their daughter, Brigitte Mändle, was born on June 3, 1930. The family emigrated from Augsburg, Germany aboard the Volendam. They arrived in New York on December 30, 1939. Reida, now Rita Mandle, became a naturalized citizen of the United States on July 3, 1945. Rita Mandle died on September 29, 1953 in Washington, DC. Siegfried Mandle died on May 4, 1969 in Louisville, Kentucky.

Brigitte Freidin was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Augsburg, Germany on June 3, 1930. Her father, Siegfried, was a volunteer soldier during World War I and managed a furniture store. Her mother, Rita, took care of Brigitte, their only child, and spent her days cooking, a talent for which she was well known throughout town. Brigitte had a wonderful childhood, spending her time playing with other neighborhood children, visiting the local zoo, reading, and swimming in the municipal pool. By the time Brigitte was old enough to go to school, Hitler and the Nazi party had come to power in Germany and implement anti-Semitic legislation. Since Jewish children were not allowed to attend public schools, Brigitte went to school at the local synagogue. Eventually, Siegfried was forced to close his furniture store. However, his good relationship with his customers ensured that they continued to pay their bills owed to him. This allowed the family to survive for a time with some source of income. As conditions for Jews worsened in Germany, Siegfried and Rita began to plan to immigrate to the United States, where Rita had a brother. The family submitted all the necessary paperwork, but had to wait for their quota number to be called. To prepare for the move, Rita purchased furniture and other household goods which were stored in a lift van until it was time to move America. Tickets for voyage to America were secured. Siegfried sent money to a Swiss bank account so that the family would have something to live on when they arrived in the States. Brigitte’s parents even took English lessons in preparation. On the night of November 9, 1938, Brigitte woke to loud crashing noises and rocks being thrown through her window. Her parents pulled Brigitte into their bed to wait for the violence to stop. Below, they could hear their neighbors trying to break into the furniture store. In the morning, Brigitte answered a knock at the door. Staring back at her were two SS officers, who had come to arrest Siegfried. Her father was taken and held in the Dachau concentration camp for five months. Siegfried was released under the condition the family left Germany within three weeks. The family went to England, where Siegfried had a first cousin, to await departure for America. Brigitte and her parents shared a single room in a small London apartment. Rita worked as a maid to help support the family. Since refugees were not technically allowed to work, Rita was paid in cash. Brigitte attended school but it was not until she was sent to the countryside at the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 that Brigitte learned English. Just a few months later, Brigitte and her family left for America on The Volendam, the last cruise ship to leave England. The family took with them one large steamer trunk and approximately $30 in U.S. currency. The German government seized all of the belonging that were in storage. The family arrived in New York City just after Christmas in 1939. They lived in the Bronx for a few months before permanently settling in Washington, D.C. where Rita had a first cousin. Rita found work sewing buttons onto shirts while Siegfried worked for a local furniture store. Brigitte adjusted well to school life in America. She looked forward to receiving her ten cents every Saturday to see the double feature at the local movie theater. Brigitte married her husband where she was twenty-one and has two children. She became an interior designer and is not a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Brigitte Freidin

Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.

Briegitte Freidin donated the Mändle family papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1994.

Scope and Content

The Mändle family papers consist of documents related to the World War I experiences of Siegfried Mändle and the Mändle family’s 1939 immigration documents. Siegfried Mändle, Reida Mändle, and Brigette Mändle emigrated from Augsburg, Germany to the United States in 1939 aboard the Volendam. The papers includes a 1918 proficiency handbook for handling weapons, a license (Wehrmanns-Ausweis) for bearing a firearm, and an Einwohnerwehr (Inhabitant Department) officer handbook. The immigration documents include passports (Reisepasses) for the family, Siegried Mändle’s passport issued in 1936 and Reida and Brigitte Mändle’s passport issued in 1939; an immigrant identification card issued to Brigitte Mändle in 1939 by the American Consulate in London; a copy of a marriage license (Heiratsurkunde) issued by the "standesamt" for Rieda Lichtenstetter and Siegfried Mändle, originally issued May 13, 1929, copy made March 1939 in preparation for immigration efforts; and a Certificate of Naturalization for the United States of America issued to Reida Mändle, July 1945.

System of Arrangement

The Mändle family papers is arranged in a single series.

People

Subjects

Genre

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.