Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 10,781 to 10,800 of 55,847
  1. Card files of confiscated Jewish properties from the District of Lublin Kartoteka skonfiskowanych nieruchomosci żydowkich z Dystryktu Lubelskiego (Sygn. 243)

    Contains card files organized in alphabetical order by geographical place name. They contain the following information: date of confiscation; address and description of the property; and name of the Jewish owner. The properties were confiscated by the Germans and administrated by the Treuhandstelle.

  2. Records of the Jewish community and Jewish Committee in Bielsko-Biała Akta Gminy Wyznaniowej i Komitetu Żydowskiego w Bielsku-Białej (Sygn.308)

    Contains records of the Jewish community in Bielsko-Biała, Poland. Most valuable is the cemetery book with entries of all funerals since the day of the opening of the graveyard in 1949. Also contains original statutes of the Jewish organizations from Bielsko-Biała, Jewish birth registers, Jewish diaries, name lists of Jewish soldiers, name lists of Jewish survivors, lists of Jewish properties, photographs from the Jewish orphanage, photographs and a chronicle of the sport club, Maccabi, in Bielsko-Biała.

  3. Gmina Żydowska Wiedeṅ (Sygn.103)

    Contains various documents of the Jewish community in Vienna, Austria, including correspondence from 1940, relating to emigration from Vienna and help rendered by Jewish philanthropic organizations. Also contains lists of emigrants and their letters of thanks addressed to the Jewish community.

  4. Selected records from the departmental archives of the Meuse, France

    This collection contains information pertaining to the arrest and deportation of Jews in the Meuse prefecture, as well as material related to the expropriation and sale of Jewish property. It also contains information on Freemasons, political dissidents, and others. Documents include police records, card files, and lists made in the prefect's office during the German occupation of France; Gendarmerie reports from the prefecture and cabinet; and a list of political deportees from the subprefecture of Verdun.

  5. "Memories": Ester Grintal memoir

    In “Memories,” a memoir written by Ester Grintal, she describes her childhood in Poland, her experiences in labor and concentration camps, and her postwar immigration to Israel.

  6. "Roosevelt and Co.: Krieg-Lüge-Verbrechen" collection

    Consists of one book, entitled "Roosevelt and Co.: Krieg--Lüge-Verbrechen," by Georg Buderose, published in Germany in 1942. The book consists of anti-American propaganda photographs and statements regarding President Franklin D. Roosevelt, his advisers, and his policies. Also includes one short note dated 1945 from "Dick" stating that he found this book in a warehouse near Buchenwald.

  7. Name list of Jewish Holocaust victims from the Netherlands

    The collection consists of a name list of Dutch Holocaust victims, together with their date of birth, city and street address, and presumed date of death.

  8. Berell Guldes letter

    Contains one letter, written in Yiddish and dated July 9, 1941 from "Shifra" in Philadelphia to her sister, Berell Guldes, in Poland. In the letter, Shifra writes that she hopes Berell is alive and implores her to write a few words to her sister. Also includes envelope. The letter was censored by the Germans but returned to the United States, as Ms. Guldes could not be located for delivery.

  9. COHASCO collection

    Collection includes post-war refugee tracing forms; propaganda leaflets; the final, 1949, issue of the camp newspaper in Cyprus (where Jews wishing to immigrate to Palestine were detained); letters sent by internees at Camp Du Vernet, France, in 1940; a letter written and signed by David Zvi Pinkas, a signer of the Israel's Declaration of Independence; a 1911 antisemitic broadside published by Theodore Fritsch; a 1947 circular listing the aims of the first Zionist Congress after the Holocaust; a copy of the 1943 "Proclamation of the Children," proclaiming that children in Jerusalem ask the ...

  10. Oral history interview with Hanna Pick-Goslar

  11. Selected records from the Kansallisarkisto (Finnish National Archive)

    Contains correspondence of the Jewish Congregation of Helsinki, primarily concerning aid to Jewish refugees and Soviet Jewish POWs in Finland. Also contains documents created by the Finnish State Police, the Finnish Ministry of Justice (Oikeusministeriö), and Finnish Prime Minister T.M. Kivimäki, all related to Jewish refugee issues and aid.

  12. Max Birnbach collection

    Consists of correspondence, postcards, and forms related to the efforts of Maximillian Birnbach to emigrate from Switzerland during the war and his efforts to assist family and friends in Vienna to do the same. Also includes post-war correspondence regarding attempts to find missing loved ones. The majority of the correspondence dates from 1938-1942 and from 1946-1948.

  13. Manuel Berman collection

    Consists of one Hitler Youth training filmstrip (in a case); three small Nazi propaganda booklets entitled "1934 Der Führer Macht Geschichte," "1935 Der Führer Macht Geschichte" and "Des Führers Kampf im Osten 1." Also includes photographs (with negatives), taken after the liberation of Dachau, of various buildings and structures, including the crematorium. Manuel Berman [donor] took the photographs while on a visit offered to United States Army soldiers in the area of Dachau.

  14. Dr. Wanda Rein Folman photograph collection

    The collection consists of three photographs of Marta Rein and Wanda Rein Folman with friends.

  15. Boleslaw Kalinski papers

    The collection consists of two documents and a copy print relating to the experiences of Boleslaw Kalinski. Includes an identification card ("Arbeitskarte") number 61156 issued to Artur Gliksman [donor's younger brother, born May 20, 1930, who was killed in Auschwitz-Birkenau in August 1944], residing at 14 Brzezinska Street, Apt 19, in the ghetto in Łódź, Poland, stating that he is employed in the electrician workshop in the ghetto; a membership card issued to Boleslaw Kalinski on October 27, 1945, and stating that he is a member of "Zwiazek Walki Mlodych," a Communist youth organization...

  16. Helena Krystyna Singer photograph collection

    The collection consists of four photographs of Helena Krystyna Singer [donor's mother] taken while she was working in a military hospital in Tengeru, Tanzania, in 1945 and 1946.

  17. Josef Schwartz photograph collection

    The collection consists of 48 photographs from Łodź, Poland, before World War II and of the Łodź ghetto. The collection illustrates the Szwarc family before the war and during their imprisonment in the Łodź ghetto.

  18. Czeisler and Paszor families papers

    The papers consist of three documents and 11 photographs relating to the life of Gyorgy Czeisler (George Levoy; donor's husband) who worked at the Swedish embassy in Budapest, Hungary, as a driver and on occasion worked with Raoul Wallenberg. The documents include a certificate of Gyorgy Czeisler's employment with the Swedish embassy signed by Wallenberg, a request for his examption from wearing a Star of David badge, and his Swedish Schutzpass. Also included are photographs of the Czeisler and Paszor [donor's] families and experiences in Hungary during the Holocaust.

  19. Chaim Melamed papers

    The Chaim Melamed papers consists of postcards, correspondence, and photographs relating to the Melamed family before, during, and after World War II in Łódź, Poland, and Hannover, Germany. Pictured in the photographs are Chaim Melamed, Maryla Melamed, Peretz Lipka, Dawid Lipka, Isuchor Melamed and Fajga Melamed.

  20. Gabrielle Kahn Gilbert memoir

    Consists of one memoir, 9 pages, describing the pre-war, wartime, and post-war experiences of Gabriele (now Gabrielle) Kahn, originally of Mannheim, Germany. Gabriele's family was prominent in Germany, but fled the country in 1933, moving first to Paris, and then to the Netherlands. There, the family lived in Amsterdam, Amstelveen, and Blaricum, including a period of time in hiding, before escaping to the United States in 1941 by using Dr. Richard Kahn's (Gabriele's father) professional connections. Includes memories of Gabriele's psychological reactions to her pre-war, wartime, and post-wa...