Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 21,721 to 21,740 of 22,191
Holding Institution: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  1. Mordecai E. Schwartz collection

    The collection consists of armbands, a card, and drawings by Alfred Glück relating to the experiences of Mordecai E. Schwartz during his wartime service in the United States Army and after the war when he served as Area Director for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) from 1945 to 1948 and then as Area Director for the International Refugee Organization in Germany.

  2. Oral history interviews of the University of California, Los Angeles Holocaust Testimonies Project

    Contains interviews with 59 Holocaust survivors in the Los Angeles, California area recorded by the University of California, Los Angeles Holocaust Testimonies Project in cooperation with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

  3. Oral history interviews of the Christian Rescuers Project

    Contains interviews with 95 Christian rescuers in Germany, Netherlands, Canada, France, Belgium, CSSR, United States and Israel

  4. Holocaust Resource Center of Buffalo oral history collection

    Contains interviews with 96 Holocaust survivors, liberators, resistance fighters, and Righteous Gentiles in the Buffalo, N.Y. area

  5. Oral history interviews of the Dallas Memorial Center for Holocaust Studies

    Contains interviews with 31 Holocaust survivors in the Dallas, TX area

  6. Jacqueline Pollen collection

    The collection consists of a Theresienstadt ghetto-labor camp scrip and a Westerbork transit camp voucher.

  7. Raoul Wallenberg Project Archive collection

    Consists of interviews and transcripts collected by the Raoul Wallenberg Project containing testimony of Holocaust survivors from Hungary. The interviews contain information about the diplomatic work of the Swedish government and its agents, among them Raoul Wallenberg, Per Anger, and Charles Lutz, in Hungary (primarily Budapest) during 1944 and 1945. Also contains records copied from Sweden's Foreign Office, the Hungarian Interior Ministry, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee in New York, the Public Record Office in London, and the War Refugee Board in Hyde Park, N.Y.

  8. Oral history interviews of the National Council of Jewish Women Cleveland Section Holocaust Archive Project

    The interviews document the experiences of 136 Holocaust survivors, Righteous Gentiles, and former concentration camp liberators from the Cleveland, Ohio, area.

  9. Hadassah Rosensaft oral history collection

    Interviews with 15 Holocaust survivors documenting their experiences as children during the Holocaust.

  10. Oral history interviews of the Emmanuel Ringelblum collection of Oral History Memoirs of the Holocaust

    The interviews, conducted from 1977 to 1991, discuss the experiences of thirty-four Holocaust survivors from the Dayton area. While not all interviewees were imprisoned in concentration camps, each had his or her life greatly changed by the Holocaust, The videotape versions of the interviews were used to create the program, "Faces of the Holocaust."

  11. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum oral history volunteer collection

    Consists of interviews with Holocaust survivors and concentration camp liberators conducted by United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Oral History Department volunteer staff. The interviewees, among them survivors from Hungary, Germany, Austria, France, Italy, and Poland, discuss their experiences of life before World War II, life in the ghettos, life in concentration camps, and life after the Holocaust.

  12. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum oral history collection

    Contains interviews with Holocaust survivors, concentration camp liberators, rescuers, relief workers, former POWs, and people of different social and ethnic backgrounds who were targeted by the Nazis and their collaborators or witnessed the events of the Holocaust

  13. Oral history interviews of the Winnipeg Second Generation Group collection

    Interviews from the Winnipeg Second Generation Group oral history collection contain oral testimonies with 53 Holocaust survivors from the Winnipeg, Canada, area conducted from 1988 to 1989.

  14. Erich Kupferberg family collection

    The collection consists of dried flowers and documents relating to the experiences of Erich Kupferberg and his parents, Baruch and Hedwig Kupferberg, before the Holocaust in Vienna, Austria, when Erich was sent to Great Britain with the Kindertransport and Baruch and Hedwig left for Shanghai, China, and after the war when Erich served in the US military and Baruch and Hedwig immigrated to Israel, Austria, and then the United States.

  15. Ellen Fass Zilka family collection

    The collection consists of a belt, blanket, bracelet, card game, case, set of garters, handkerchief, spoon, 2 towels, documents, and photographs relating to the experiences of Ellen Ruth Fass before the Holocaust in Germany, during the Holocaust in England, and after the Holocaust in the United States, and an armband, Star of David badge, and documents relating to Marie Goerlich, Ellen’s great aunt, who was interned in Theresienstadt ghetto-labor camp.

  16. Jane Tujak collection

    The collection consists of a baby blanket, a medal, correspondence, documents, and photographs relating to the experiences of the Löw family before and during the Holocaust in Croatia and Italy.

  17. Paul Bleier collection

    Oral history interviews with Paul Bleier who dicusses his experiences with the 663rd Topographic Engineers during WWII.

  18. David F. Busch collection

    The collection consists of artifacts, including United States and German military clothing, equipment, and insignia, scrip, currency, pins, correspondence, documents, and publications relating to the experiences of David F. Busch in the US Army in Europe during World War II.

  19. Ruth Dublon Grossmann collection

    The collection consists of a souvenir dish, spoon and box, autograph book, and photographs relating to the experiences of Ruth Dublon and her family before the Holocaust in Wittlich and Mertloch, Germany.