Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 18,801 to 18,820 of 55,775
  1. Records of the Amt des Gouverneurs des Distrikts Krakau (Sygn. 98)

    Contains information about the appointment of Dr. Hans Frank as Generalgouverneur of the occupied Polish territories; regulations for Jews (including the wearing of arm bands); resettlement of Jews from the Kraków district to other communities; closing of Jewish schools and dismissal of Jewish teachers and students; businesses and factories in the Kraków district; the Abteilung Arbeit (labor department); and employment in the Kraków district, specifically Jarosław, Poland.

  2. Sächsische Hauptstaatsarchiv Dresden records

    Contains information about revocation of citizenship; activities of Zionist organizations and Zionist congresses; cases of Rassenschande; restrictions on Mischlinge; Jehovah's Witnesses; homosexuals; antisemitic propaganda; anti-Jewish laws; treatment of Ostjuden; concentration camps; treatment of German Romanies; the Jewish question in the East; and activities of Israelitische Religionsgemeinde in various German cities.

  3. Kommandeur der SIPO und SD für den Distrikt Radom records (Sygn.184)

    Contains information about the activities of the police and Gestapo in the area of Radom, including investigations of members of various underground movements, the organization of the Gestapo, the investigation of Communists, and prisoners found guilty of resistance who were sentenced to concentration camps.

  4. Stadt Kielce und Kreishauptmann Kielce records (Sygn.183)

    Contains orders, lists, correspondence, reports, and various other documents relating to the activities of the office of the Stadthauptmann und Kreishauptmann in Kielce, Poland, and Kreishauptmann Hans Drechsel. Also contains information about economy, labor, welfare assistance, police activity, partisan activity, propaganda, and Jewish affairs in Kielce.

  5. The Mefkure Tragedy: An Inquiry into the Slayer's Identity

    Contains information about the 1944 sinking of the merchant ship Mefkure which was used to transport approximately 300 Romanian Jews to Palestine. The author attempts to prove that the German military sunk the Mefkure, and not the Soviet military as was previously believed. Also contains a list of the victims' names.

  6. Dana I. Alvi memoir

    Relates to Dana Alvi's experiences as a child in Warsaw, Poland during World War II; her family's involvement in protecting and hiding Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto; the activities of her uncle, Wladyslaw Wisniewski, in helping Warsaw's Jewish population; the events of the Warsaw Uprising; the Soviet occupation of Warsaw; postwar internment in a displaced persons camp in Eschwege, Germany.

  7. Rosemarie Gumpel speech on Nicholas Wintonʼs Rescue of Jewish children from Czechoslovakia

    Rosemarie Gumpel's speech describes the efforts and personality of Nicholas Winton, a man Gumpel claims saved the lives of 664 Jewish children by transporting them from Czechoslovakia to safer locations elsewhere.

  8. Charles Gross memoir

    Charles Gross' memoir, "My story," describes his experiences after the German annexation of Austria and during his internment in Dachau and Buchenwald.

  9. Prisoner 409

    Eva Gross' memoir relates the life of the author and her family in Mór, Hungary, before and during the Holocaust. It describes antisemitism before the Nazis occupied Hungary, her experiences at Auschwitz, a death march, and her liberation by Americans.

  10. The Holocaust

    Narrates the basic history of the Holocaust, including such aspects as the Einsatzgruppen, ghettos, transports, the SS, medical experiments, resistance, escapes, and war crimes trials.

  11. William C. Alston Jr. papers

    The William C. Alston Jr. papers consists of handwritten notes relating to the Mauthausen concentration camp, dated May 17, 1945; a booklet giving visitor directions to Mauthausen concentration camp and Gusen concentration camp; a handwritten note giving permission to visit a former Nazi concentration camp; a news article describing war-time activities of the U.S. 45th Infantry Division in Aschaffenburg, Germany; a photocopy of an American army medical corps identification card for Alston; and a photocopy of a letter from Alston sent to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1993 wh...

  12. The undying spark from generation to generation

    The memoir describes the Jewish community of Shershev, Ukraine; how the author and his family were deported to the Pruzhany ghetto and from there to the concentration camp of Auschwitz; and Auerbach's emigration to the United States and his assimilation into American culture.

  13. A memoir for Paul, David and Adam

    The memoir describes the life of Paulette Singer Barrett from 1939 to 1953. It includes the pre-World War II emigration of Paulette's parents from Poland and Romania to Paris, France, Paulette's and her parents' journey to southern France after the Nazis seized Paris, the fate of her relatives who stayed in Poland, the resistance activities of French citizens, and the eventual imigration of Paulette and her family to the United States after the war.

  14. Chef der SIPO und des SD Umwandererzentralstelle Posen (UWZ) (Sygn. 68)

    Contains information about evacuations of Poles and Jews in the Poznań (Posen) areas and the resettlement of Germans in their place; transports of evacuated persons; camps for evacuees in Poznań and Łódź; removal of Jews and Poles to make room for military training grounds; evictions of Poles and Jews; population statistics in the areas of Poznań and Łódź; and Germanization of eligible Poles. Also contains case files of SS personnel and Umwandererzentralstelle employees.

  15. Case files of the Geheime Staatspolizei, Polizeistelle in Zichenau (Ciechanów) (Sygn. 148)

    Contains dossiers of cases of Poles, Jews, Germans, Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans), and other nationals who were either arrested or under surveillance for 1) membership in resistance movements (Organization of Armed Struggle, Home Army, Polish Fighting Resistance, Secret Insurgents' Army, The Peoples' Army and Guard, Polish Workers' Party, Peasants' Battalions, National Military Organization, National Military Forces, and others); 2) for escape from forced labor; 3) unlawful crossing of General Gouvernement or German borders; 4) illegal animal slaughter; and 5) failure to deliver food consi...

  16. Records of the Staatliche Polizei Verwaltung Sosnowitz O/S, 4 Revier Czeladź (Sygn. 171)

    Contains information about the activities of the police in Sosnowiec, Czeladź , and Katowice, Poland; air raid defense; and treatment of Jews by police forces.

  17. Generalgouvernement Amt des Distrikts Radom (Sygn.100)

    Contains information about the staff and operations of the various departments and divisions of the General Government’s district office in Radom, Poland, including the Internal Administration office, the Justice Department, the Economic Division, the Food and Agriculture Department, the Labor Department, the Building (construction) Department, the Price Controls office, the Forestry Department, and the Finance Division. Also included is information about factories and concentration camp facilities in the Radom district.

  18. Records of the Sondergericht Hohensalza (Inowrocław, Poland) (Sygn.76)

    Contains records for selected criminal cases tried before the Sondergericht (special court) in Hohensalza (Inowroclaw), Poland. Included is information about Poles accused of various crimes including arson, robbery, murder, rape, disturbing the peace, the violation of wartime economic laws, the unlawful possession of weapons, assault, and the violation of radio broadcasting laws. The files also contain the names and biographical information of the accused and the verdicts of the court.

  19. Records of the Kommandeur der Sicherheitspolizei und Sicherheitsdienst in Lublin (Sygn.185)

    Contains information about arrests and court sentencing by the Sicherheitspolizei and Sicherheitsdienst in Lublin, Poland, for various crimes from 1939 to 1945. Also contains information about prisoners transferred to the Lublin concentration camp; the Lublin ghetto; battles with partisans; and Polish propaganda.

  20. Essays relating to Holocaust survivor Morris Stark

    Contains "The Odyssey of Morris Stark: From the Kingdom of Hell to the American Army" and "The Odyssey of Morris Stark: A Miracle of Survival" both relating to the Holocaust experiences of Morris Stark. The essays include information about loss of Stark's father; experiences of antisemitism in Hungary; and incarceration in Auschwitz, Mauthausen, and Gunskirchen. Additionally, Morris Stark gives information on his postwar experiences in the American Army, helping to organize Jewish services and protesting antisemitism.