Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 29,381 to 29,400 of 55,890
  1. Gross family documents

    This collection of family papers documents the experiences of an assimilated German Jewish family some of whom managed to escape to safety and others who perished in the Holocaust. It consists of original correspondence between members of the family and friends before, during and after the war. Also included are personal papers such as certificates and photographs.

  2. War Crimes Trials: various papers

    This collection consists of a papers relating to a number of separate war crimes trials deposited at different times from different sources.

  3. Copy letter from deportee to Terezin

  4. Julian Lehmann: various press cuttings and articles

    This collection comprises miscellaneous press cuttings from German language newspapers dating from c1916 to the 1930s which can roughly be classified into those dealing with the life and work of contemporary Jewish personalities such as Freud, Einstein and Stefan Zweig, on the one hand and articles of a general Jewish interest on the other. In addition there are a number of draft typescript articles and notes on a variety of subjects ranging from obituary notices to articles describing the experiences of German Jewish immigrants to Great Britain during the Nazi era. They are either clearly ...

  5. Pottlitzer family papers

    Papers of the Pottlitzer family including birth, marriage and death certificates; Deutsches Reich Kennkarte for Margot Strauss (1194/7); reference from a former employer, where Margot worked as an editor/ journalist, dated 10 March 1933 (1194/3); copy manuscript letter from Max Pottlitzer to the Polizeiamt, Schöneberg, Berlin, in which he registers the transfer of money and property to his mother, [as required by the recently enacted law relating to the registering of Jewish property], dated 22 September 1938 (1194/4).Mostly German 

  6. Hinda Elsztajn: report re Nazi persecution

    Interview transcript of Hinda Elsztajn, former inmate at Auschwitz and victim of Dr. ClaubergFrench Brussels 9 pages 

  7. Julian Layton papers

    This collection of papers documents the activities of Lt. Colonel Julian Layton, a British born Jew, of German Jewish origins, who assisted many German Jewish refugees before the war and internees during the war. The collection comprises several deposits from different sources.

  8. Hepner and Cahn: family papers

    This collection of papers consists primarily of original (and some copy) correspondence between friends and relatives of the Cahn Hepner family. Käthe Ruth Cahn-Hepner (1924-2019) and Mrs Jacobs-Hepner, the depositors of this collection, are the daughters of Fritz and Leonie Cahn, German Jews who spent the war years in Switzerland. The depositors provided brief notes about most of the correspondents, many of whom perished in the Holocaust. This information has been incorporated into the descriptions below, along with information from additional sources, which sheds further light on their fa...

  9. Warburg family tree and other papers

  10. War crimes trials: Document transcripts and other papers

    This collection consists of trial transcripts and copy documents relating to the trial proceedings at Nuremberg, which followed the trial of the major war criminals. The papers in this collection comprise copy trial transcripts, and reports and correspondence relating to some of the 'subsequent trials' mentioned above. It is worth noting that the trial transcripts are verbatim whereas those in the published version are often abridged or extracted.

  11. Herta Ningo: family papers

  12. Joachim Prinz: Miscellaneous papers

  13. Mayor of Nuremberg: notice to Council officers

    Typescript notice from the mayor of Nuremberg instructing council officials to ensure that they always use correct German, ie free from foreign influenceThese instructions issued by the mayor of Nuremberg to the city's council officials reflect the Nazi preoccupation with maintaining the supposed purity of the German language. The last paragraph strongly urges individuals, professions, businesses etc to be described in terms of their ethnicity; they are either German or Jewish. They can not therefore be described as being Christian since the latter does not define ethnicity.

  14. Neues Leben: Miscellaneous papers

    Papers of the organization Neues Leben including a membership list, 1934; article on its foundation; and miscellaneous papers

  15. Report re Westerbork concentration camp, Holland

    This collection consists of a typescript, annotated (possibly) original report into conditions at Westerbork Concentration camp, entitled Kollektive Arbeit einer Widerstandsgruppe, apparently produced by member(s) of the 'Widerstandsgruppe' a typescript copy of the same; and correspondence between the Alfred Wiener and Professor David Cohen, Amsterdam relating to the above. The associated correspondence questions the reliability of the report. The report is critical, amongst others, of Professor Cohen, who had something to with the camp, and who subsequently wrote a book about the camp.

  16. Typed report into the fate of Rabbi Dr. E. Steckelmacher and his wife

    Typed report into the fate of Rabbi Dr. E. Steckelmacher and his wife during the Nazi era including an account of their experiences in their home town of Dürkheim, Württemberg, in 1933, when the Nazis came to power; 1934 at the time of the boycott of Jewish shops and businesses; Kristallnacht; conditions in Gurs Concentration Camp, Pyrenees, France; conditions in Camp du Recebedon, near Toulouse and a slave labour camp in Villemur, FranceGerman 15 pages 

  17. Israel - home of hope