Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 2,901 to 2,920 of 55,818
  1. Correspondence addressed to Adolf Hitler offering him honorary citizenship to communities across Germany

    Consists of a single folder of correspondence addressed to Adolf Hitler authored by local officials throughout Germany. The content of the letter primarily concerns offers of honorary citizenship and requests for local acknowledgement and visits by Hitler.

  2. Albin F. Irzyk collection

    Albin F. Irzyk, Sr.’s personal account of his unit's liberation of the Ohrdruf concentration camp. He was the Battalion Commander of the 8th Tank Battalion, 4th Armored Division, Third Army on April 4, 1945 when the discovery was made.

  3. Mittelbau forced labor camp scrip, 1 Reichsmark note

  4. Congregation Kehillath Yaakov and the Gemiluth Chessed of Greater New York collection

    Archive of minutes, documents and communications regarding Congregation Kehillath Yaakov and the Gemiluth Chessed of Greater New York, both of Washington Heights, NY. Gemiluth Chessed c. 235 pages bound in ledger, with additional loose letters and newspaper clippings. Kehillath Yaakov documents, c. 325 pages. In German and English; Washington Heights, NY; dated 1940s-1970s

  5. American Jew travels to Poland

    Home movie coverage of a trip to Poland taken by Walter Wiener in 1934. Scenes cover the farewell in New York, on board the ship, arriving in England, touring through France, greeting family members in Panevesz, Poland, a synagogue sponsored by Americans, the market, meeting relatives in Kovno, Lithuania, and returning to the United States. The film includes Yiddish intertitles.

  6. Feingold family collection

    Photo and letter to the editor clipped from the New York Times Magazine. Mark Feinberg is the son of Joseph Feingold's brother, Alexander Feingold. The photo is of a third brother who was killed. Alexander wrote the letter to the editor.

  7. Der Moment

    The Yiddish journal "Der Moment", an Orthodox Zionist weekly published in Montevideo from the early 1940’s until the early 1960’s.

  8. Stark family collection

    The collection documents the pre and post-war lives of the Stark and Kornitzer families, respectively from Berettyóújfalu and Szerencs, Hungary. Photographs depict Rozalia Stark (née Kornitzer), her parents Salomon and Miriam Kornitzer, sibling Geza, and Rozalia with her husband Adrian Stark and their daughter Eva. Also included is Adrian’s Hungarian state insurance ID card, 1956. One photograph is original and three are copy prints.

  9. Presentation by Rachel Bodner

  10. Waldapfel family papers

    The Waldapfel family papers include correspondence, immigration documents, and photographs documenting Irma Waldapfel, her children Valerie, Max, and Karoline, and their Waldapfel and Fischer relatives. Correspondence includes postcards sent from Czechoslovakia to Irma, Valerie, and Karoline during the interwar period and letters Irma and Karoline sent from Vienna to Valeria and Max in New York. Immigration documents consist of a Queen Mary passenger list and handwritten notes documenting Irma’s and Karoline’s itinerary from Vienna to Cherbourg to New York. Photographs depict Irma, Karoline...

  11. Heny Hersh papers

    The collection includes about 25 prewar and DP camp photographs documenting the donor's parents: Heny Hersh nee Stern (1926-2017) and Artie Hersh (b. 1927, Osoj – currently residing in Boynton Beach, FL). Heny Hersh survived Romanian ghetto, Auschwitz-Birkenau, Ober Hohenelbe, DP camps Admund, Salfenden, Rivoli, Barletta, and immigration to the US in 1950. Artie Hersh survived Auschwitz, Hausdorf, Ebanzei, DP camps Rivoli, Kobenz, Bagnoli, and immigration to the US in 1950.

  12. Deportált Hiradó [Newspapers]

    The rare weekly newspaper published in Satu Mare,Transylvania in July-August 1945. The publication focuses on assistance provided to Jewish Holocaust survivors from Northern Transylvania returning from the Nazi death and forced labor camps.

  13. Erdélyi Lapok [Newspapers]

    Selected issues of the antisemitic newspaper Erdélyi Lapok published in Oradea,Transylvania. The paper was published with the financial support of the Roman Catholic Church. In 1936 changed its name to Új Lapok and later to Magyar Lapok,

  14. Oral history interview with Walter Klebe

  15. "Progress" Haladás [Newspapers]

    Radical weekly newspaper edited and published by Béla Zsolt, after WWII. The Haladás was a newspaper of the Magyar Radikális Párt, MRP (Hungarian Radical Party).

  16. A Liberator of Dachau Remembered

  17. Oral history interview with Haim Brill

  18. Society for the Support of Jewish Performing Arts in Vilnius Towarzystwo Popierania Żydowskiej Sztuki Scenicznej w Wilnie (Fond 296)

    Records related to the activities of Yiddish theatre groups that performed in Poland during the interwar period. It includes bylaws of the organization, minutes and resolutions of board meetings, work plans, and activities reports, extensive correspondence related to the organization of performances and tours, cooperation with other Jewish public organizations in Wilno and Poland, applications for permission to hold performances and concerts; financial records related to the support provided to local theaters and unemployed actors, tax exemptions applications for organizing cultural events,...