Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 581 to 600 of 1,934
Country: United Kingdom
  1. Copy correspondence with newspaper editors and academics re articles about Israel

    Copy correspondence with newspaper editors and academics re articles about Israel 

  2. Merzbach family documents

    The collection contains letters of condolence from colleagues in the banking world on the death of Wilhelm Merzbach in 1924. In additon there are some original and copy documents dating back to the era of the ghetto and the 'protected Jew'.

  3. Grete Salus: Poems

    This collection of typescript poems was written by Grete Salus during the period of her incarceration in the camps of Terezin, Auschwitz and Oederan.

  4. International Bureau for the Right of Asylum Aid to Political Refugees

    The reports and other papers in this collection concern a proposed international convention on the problem of refugees from Nazi Germany, in France.

  5. Central British Fund: Reports and other papers re orphans

    These reports and memoranda of the Committee for the Care of Children from Camps, document, in part, the challenges encountered by receiving such a large group of refugees with all their attendant problems. Included are some pamphlets and brochures re the CBF activities with children from concentration camps.Readers need to reserve a reading room terminal to access a digital copy of the 5 reports

  6. Reports and other papers re Jewish Social Work conference

    The reports and other papers in this collection relate to the Third International Conference on Social Work which took place in London in July 1936. It was held in conjunction with the International Conference for Jewish Social Work. The collection consists in the main of reports on the situation of Jews in many European countries and the USA.

  7. Julian Lehmann: Various draft articles and other writings

    This collection consists of draft articles and draft fragments of 2 unidentified works [of historical/ fiction?] by Julian Lehmann, a German Jewish journalist and pre-war immigrant to Great Britain. It is not known how many of the articles were published. The articles deal with many aspects of Jewish life and history with particular emphasis on the experiences of German and Austrian Jewish figures. Most of them range in length from approximately 2 to 8 pages- except for the drafts of the book-length works.

  8. International Refugee Organization, Bad Kissingen: reports

    These papers consist of information sheets; administrative and provisional orders; and printed IRO statistics on the occupational skills of refugees.

  9. Typescript account of the persecution of a Jewish couple in Fürth

    A typescript account of the persecution of a Jewish couple in Fürth, who were forced to sell their property.German 1 pageThe names of the victims have been abbreviated.The document has been annotated with the reference PIIIe, which suggests that it might have been created as part of the Wiener Library Eyewitness Testimonies series.

  10. Account of life in a ghetto

    This typescript copy account of life in an unidentified ghetto commences with a note in English that the letter extracts were received in New York from Switzerland. It is also headed ‘strictly confidential, for your personal information only' and annotated with the date May 1942.

  11. Copy eyewitness reports regarding the November Pogrom

    These copy reports are apparently strays from a full collection of 356 reports (WL Document Collection 1375) gathered in the weeks and months following the November Pogrom of 1938 by the Jewish Central Information Office (JCIO) in Amsterdam. They bear a similar reference number to the rest of the reports in this collection, pre-fixed by the letter 'B'. These reports have been numbered separately (B40, B41, B42) and are in relation to the destruction of synagogues in Germany during the November Pogrom. 

  12. Copy article re Walther Rathenau

    Typescript translation of a newspaper article by an unidentified former member of the French Foreign Legion. The adjutant of the camp on the Libyan border was Tessier, someone who showed particular kindness to the Jewish legionnaires. When a new legionnaire by the name of Rathenau arrived, Tessier confessed that he was one of the murderers of Walther Rathenau, the former's uncle, and he produced a letter which Rathenau's mother had written to Tessier's mother after her son was killed. The author of the report met Tessier again in Marseille, where he helped many refugees escape.German 3 pages

  13. Netherlands: Copy plea for help

    Copy of a letter addressed to Princess Juliana asking for help for her 8 year old son. She and her husband were ordered to leave the country. Her husband had been in protective custody for 7 months and the evacuation transport for which they had registered would not accept children under 10.German 2 pagesThe annotation PIIIi suggests that it may have been intended for the Wiener Library Eyewitness Testimonies series. The latter reference appears to have replaced the previous: B.262.

  14. Personal account by Louis Lustig

    Personal account by Louis Lustig of his arrest for treason in March 1938 and his subsequent imprisonment in Sachsenhausen concentration campGerman 2 pagesThis personal account of life in Sachsenhausen was addressed to a Mrs Kerr in Johannesburg. The memoir is prefaced with the caveat that details of the author's experiences have been forgotten because after the imprisonment he deliberately tried to put the episode out of his mind. He describes himself as 82 years old at the time of writing.

  15. Programme and correspondence re Das Schloss

  16. Testimonies of Jewish former residents of Russia and Eastern Europe

    Testimonies of Jewish former residents of Russia and Eastern Europe describing experiences of persecution.. All of the interviewees went to Palestine on Youth AliyahThe identities of the interviewees are not known. Each testimony is entitled ‘case history' and followed by a number. The numbers in this collection are: 5, 6, 8, 9, 12-16. It is not known where the missing numbers are.

  17. Kurt Ferber: personal papers

    This collection, comprises a set of correspondence between Kurt Ferber and a friend in Berlin; material relating to the Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur; miscellaneous contemporary newspapers and cuttings; and unidentified notes. The correspondence is of particular interest for it provides a fascinating insight into the mentalities of 2 ordinary German citizens with special reference to their political and cultural interests. The provenance of the material is not known. Nor is anything known about the history of its custody prior to deposit. Olga Bruewitsch-Heuss' political stance is made clea...

  18. Gerda Nabe: School project

    This original school project documents a year of Hitler's rule in a series of compositions illustrated by photographs from newspapers and drawings. Produced by Gerda Nabe in 1935, it demonstrates the extent to which devotion to the nazi party and to its leader permeated German society, even to the level of school children. The project begins by reporting the elections in Saarland, when the residents chose to revert back to Germany again and provides a history of the region and its people. It goes on to commemorate the deaths of fallen nazi 'heroes'. It then marks the date that Hitler became...

  19. Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien: various papers

    The original papers in this collection document the activities of the representative organization of the Jewish cultural community in Vienna in 1939. Also included in the deposit and now housed in the Wiener Library 'Special Collections' are an original Jewish tram pass issued to Berta Brand and 2 pieces of 'Jude' badges.Correspondence and papers of the head office of the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde, Wien including correspondence and statements from the housing and emigration departments of the IKW, which provide biographical details of Jews who have suffered persecution under the Nazis an...

  20. Gertrud Wilmersdörfer: copy papers

    This collection of copy papers document in part Gertrud Wilmersdörfer's pre war anti-nazi activities; the experiences of a former French Resistance colleague, Alexandre Morgune, and conditions in Ravensbrück concentration camp.