Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 20,961 to 20,980 of 55,888
  1. Glass plate negative of Dachau at liberation

    View of a room full of corpses; negative in an Agfa film box with a label in French.

  2. Felix Geiger passport

    Contains a German passport issued to Felix Geiger, August 1939. Marked "Deutsches Reich Reisepass"; letter "J" stamped in red ink; middle name "Israel" added; contains immigration visa issued September 20, 1939 in "Vienna, Germany"; Italian transit visa issued October 18, 1939.

  3. Scrapbook of a visit to the Generalgouvernement

    Scrapbook consisting of photographs and articles of the editors in chief of the Nazi party press trip through the Generalgovernment in Poland from March 5-12, 1940. The oversized scrapbook covered in leather consists of 64 pages of photographs of Nazi party press members and their propaganda reports of the current situation in the Generalgovernment. Twelve Nazi party press members participated in this trip representing the main Nazi press publications.

  4. Oral history interview with Michael Bernath

  5. Frima Laub papers

    The Frima Laub papers consist of photographs of Frima Gleiser (later Frima Laub) taken in 1945 and 1947. Four of the photographs were taken at the Schlüpfing displaced persons camp in Bavaria, Germany and shows Frima with an unidentified friend. Also included is a poster featuring a photograph of Frima and announcing a performance sponsored by the Association of Jewish Women in Havana, Cuba, in 1949.

  6. Isaac Bitton papers

    The papers consist of one two-page carbon copy of a letter from Dr. Azancot, head of the Jewish community in Lisbon, Portugal, to President Salazar regarding the protection of refugees in Portugal and photocopies of articles appearing in the Portuguese newspaper "Diario de noticias" regarding the Jewish community in Lisbon.

  7. Photograph of members of "Hanoar Hazioni"

    The photograph of the Zionist youth organization "Hanoar Hazioni" (No`ar ha-Tsiyoni) taken in May 1939 in Sosnowiec, Poland. Sitting from left to right: Dr. Burshtyn, Josef Kozhuch, Samek Meitlis, Lola Pomeranzblum, Benjamin Bimko. Josef Kozhuch, Samek Meitlis, Lola Pomeranzblum, and Benjamin Bimko belonged to the underground Zionist resistance movement and were all killed by the Germans in August 1943.

  8. Maurice Raynor family papers

    Contains Red Cross papers, family photographs, and school photographs pertaining to the Holocaust experiences of Isaac and Sientje Rabbie (later Raynor) and their children, Maurice and Helena. Includes photographs depicting the family in pre-war Amsterdam, wartime correspondence with family, and post-war photographs and documents, including a photograph of Helena Rabbie shortly after her liberation from Bergen-Belsen. She perished a few days later at the age of eleven.

  9. Report card

    The school report card was issued to Aba Feuerstein in Zbaraż, Poland, on June 28, 1914

  10. War Merit Cross 2nd Class with swords medal

  11. The Jewish Transcript (Seattle, Washington) [Newspaper]

  12. Sign excluding Jews from a property

    Enameled, metal sign prohibiting the presence of Jews. Such signs were often present in shops, restaurants, and other public buildings during the Nazi regime. While there was no singular law requiring the physical segregation of Jews from other Germans, a series of over 400 laws enacted throughout the 1930s increased restrictions for Jews in every aspect of their lives. On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg. The German government began instituting laws the following April, which began negatively defining and segregating Jews f...

  13. Oral history interview with Icek Wluka

  14. Book

    Book banned in the Third Reich.

  15. [Newspaper]

    German National Socialist newspaper.

  16. Concentration camp jacket with a prisoner ID patch worn by a Polish Jewish inmate

    Concentration camp uniform jacket worn by Benjamin Milich, age 30, in Auschwitz, Kaufering, and Dachau concentration camps from August 1944 to May 1945. The jacket has a hidden pocket and a patch with his Dachau prisoner ID number, 96699. Benjamin, his mother Rajzla, and his siblings Abram, Leib, and Anita lived in Łódź. In spring 1940, they were forced into the ghetto. In July 1942, Abram was sent to Auschwitz. In August 1944, Benjamin, Leib, and Anita were sent to Auschwitz. In late August, Benjamin and Leib were transferred to Kaufering labor camp in Germany. After nine months, they were...

  17. Photograph of a field

    Contains an undated image of a field with trees and a fence in the background.

  18. Book

    Insert in book concerning the study of eugenics

  19. Cemetery; synagogue

    Contemporary footage of a memorial or Jewish cemetery. CU, EXT ornate sign in Hebrew (gravestone?). Different views of synagogue. Pan to Jewish star on roof of building.