Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 4,981 to 5,000 of 55,814
  1. Hilda and Julius Manasse collection

    Contains a Deutsches Reich Reisepasses (German passports), one issued to Hilda Ruth "Sara" Horwitz (donor), born 1925 in Uelzen, Germany, who immigrated to the United States in 1941 through Portugal; two passports issued to Julius Manasse, born in 1890 in Germany, and his wife Hilda Manasse born in 1899 in Germany, both of whom immigrated to the United States from Germany through Cherbourg, arriving in the U.S. in 1938, along with their son, Kurt, whose American visa is present in his mother’s passport. Kurt and Ruth later married. Also includes immigration identification cards for Hilda an...

  2. Non Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights, Inc. collection

    Contains a solicitation letter with membership application and return envelope from the Non Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights, Inc.; dated February 1, 1939.

  3. Spiegel family collection

    Contains documents, photographs and correspondence regarding the experiences of Max and Ida Spiegel and their children Ruth and Alfred, who fled Emden, Germany. Photographs depict the family primarily before the second World War, including images from WWI. The family was able to immigrate to the United States in September 1938. Also includes a booklet detailing the Spiegel family tree, letters from extended family that did not survive, and a pre-war autograph book.

  4. Leo Mantelmacher memoir

    Typescript memoir, 6 pages, by Leo Mantelmacher (1919-2006), titled "How One Brother Saved His Other Brother's Life Without Knowing It." Mantelmacher, originally of Kozienice, Poland, described the experiences of his family in German-occupied Poland during World War II, and in particular, the evacuation of the Jewish population from his hometown of Kozienice in 1942, his own work as a forced laborer, his experiences working as a tailor on the side for Polish overseers, his experiences at various concentration camps (Auschwitz, Dachau, Allach), and those of his siblings, including his brothe...

  5. Mordechai Moniek Hanani collection

    Contains photographs depicting the Wassertail family in Rajcza, Poland.

  6. Oral history interview with Zsuzanna Lorand Dallos

  7. Toibman family collection

    Contains an identity card for Pesia Toibman, issued in the Bershad Ghetto; a postwar photo of Benjamin Toibman; photocopies of documents related to Victor, Pesia, and Gregory Toibman being in the Bershad Ghetto, 1941 to 14 March 1944 (issued by the Bershad City Council 1972); and Benjamin Toibman's brief memoir of his Holocaust experiences.

  8. Lavan Robinson papers

    Collection of documents entrusted to 1st Lt Lavan Robinson, who was in the 86th Infantry Division of the United States Army. Robinson worked to bring order to the Dachau Concentration Camp in Germany in 1945. In exchange, Robinson received gifts of appreciation from the people he assisted or worked with in the camp. Also included is correspondence received by Robinson after he returned to the United States and a modern letter detailing the events of the time period by Robinson.

  9. Wooden sign with a painted butterfly made from trash found in postwar Berlin

    Wooden sign with butterfly made of rubble found in the ruins of Berlin; verso: typed page affixed with explanation: in the summer of 1945 a small group of friends, painters and designers and decided to create something out of the ruins. The light blue came from tiles of a delicatessen store on Potsdamer Platz and the red brown came from bricks of an old building on Wilhelmstrasse.

  10. Miniature ceramic mug

  11. Rotman, Rosenblatt and Bialer families collection

    The Rotman, Rosenblatt, and Bialer families collection consists of documents and photographs documenting the experiences of Genia Strasborg Rotman, Arthur Rosenblatt, and David Bialer following their liberation and life in post-war Poland, Sweden, and the United States.

  12. Photograph album of German-occupied Poland

    Consists of a photograph album depicting German-occupied Poland, primarily Warsaw. The album was likely compiled and captioned by Jakob Lechner, an Austrian SS Hauptsturmführer who served as a Kriminal-Kommissar in Warsaw. While many photographs are attributed to propaganda photographer Mieczysław Bil-Bilażewski, personal snapshots are included. The album features events celebrating German occupiers, the reception of the Japanese delegation at Malkinia, and propaganda photography of the Warsaw ghetto. Among the figures depicted are Governor-General Hans Frank, Governor of Krakow Otto Wächte...

  13. Harold Williams photograph collection

    Contains photographs taken at the Buchenwald concentration camp by Harold Williams, a member of the United States Army, shortly after the liberation of the camp.

  14. War Office certificate holder

    War Office plastic certificate holder that originally housed a retirement certificate dating from 1968. The certificate itself is housed with the document portion of the collection.

  15. Selected records of the Embassies, Consulates and Diplomatic Legations of the Polish Republic : Consulate of the Republic of Poland in Leipzig Konsulat Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej w Lipsku (Sygn.479)

    Correspondence and questionnaires relating to the issuance of passports to Polish citizens living in Germany, and a case of the expulsion of a Polish citizen, Mojzesz Wethamer, by the German authorities.

  16. Sigmund Neuberger papers

    The collection documents the experiences of Sigmund Neuberger of Hainstadt, Germany as a soldier during World War I and his immigration to the United States from Zurich in 1940. Included are identification documents, a document stating that he was neither a communist nor a fascist in Zurich, immigration papers, German Army papers from World War I, German passports, and photographs. Also included are German military documents from his brother in law, Moritz Rosenbaum, also a World War I veteran.

  17. American propaganda leaflets

    Two American propaganda leaflets in Hungarian warning Hungarian people that the perpetrators of the Holocaust will be brought to justice. The first leaflet is titled “Te Is Mosod Kezeidet?” [“Will you, too, wash your hands of this?!”] and is illustrated with a pair of hairy hands washing-up in a bowl. On the reverse is an image of blind justice and a quote from President Roosevelt. The second is illustrated with a uniformed man carrying a gun in a doorway and asks “Kellett Ez Nektek?” [“Did you Need this?”].

  18. Georges Despaux stone relief

    Stone relief of a man in profile (looking left); verso: inscribed "K.L. Buchenwald" [in Russian] "1-X-1944"; Attributed to Georges Despaux (1906-1969) an artist who was a prisoner in Buchenwald.

  19. Photographic print of Chaim Simcha Mechlowitz

    • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    • irn613486
    • English
    • overall: Height: 13.940 inches (35.408 cm) | Width: 10.940 inches (27.788 cm) pictorial area: Height: 13.500 inches (34.29 cm) | Width: 8.940 inches (22.708 cm)

    Gelatin silver print, portrait of Chaim Simcha Mechlowitz, a farmer and tanner, Vysni Apsa, Carpathian Ruthenia, ca. 1935-38.

  20. Poster

    Mikhail Gordon (1918-2003). [We Will Destroy The Hitler State And Its Inspirers!], Iskusstvo, Leningrad.