Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 18,961 to 18,980 of 55,814
  1. 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.

  2. 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...

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

  6. 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.

  7. 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.

  8. Essay relating to the Steven Lazar Basic family

    Contains information about the experiences of the Basic family of Sombor, Yugoslavia (Serbia), during the Holocaust. The essay describes the deaths of family members; family members in forced labor; and family members held at Jasenovac concentration camp.

  9. Under the rooftiles

    Photocopy of memoir (228 pages) entitled "Under the Rooftiles." Photocopy of journal containing information about the German invasion of the Netherlands; persecution of Jews in the Netherlands; and hiding of Jews. The journal covers the time span from May 1940 to May 1945.

  10. Winlaw Bramley letter relating to post-liberation Buchenwald

    Contains information about conditions of disease and starvation in Buchenwald concentration camp shortly after liberation.

  11. My struggle for survival 1940/45

    Oscar Lichtenstern's journal explains his experiences after the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Although it describes his stay in the transit camp of Westerbork, most of the entries relate to his internment in Terezin (a.k.a. Theresienstadt) and the hardships he experienced there.

  12. Victor Adler Some notes about my life, with Adler-Stöessler family genealogy and history

    "Some notes about my life" describes the experiences of Victor Adler and members of his family after the German occupation of the Sudetenland; in particular, it relates how Adler escaped Czechoslovakia; fled to Hungary and then to Palestine; enlisted in the Czechoslovak Armoured Brigade under British command; fought in the European theater during World War II; and emigrated to and rebuilt his life in the United States; Adler's parents were sent to Terezin and subsequently transported to and killed at Auschwitz; and how Adler's brother and cousins escaped Czechoslovakia and served in the All...

  13. Confirmation of Masya Ayzikovich's war-time experiences by Polya Leibovna Skazinetskaya and Enya Elevna Nashpits

    The Russian document and its English translation provide official confirmation of the internment of Masya Ayzikovich and her mother in a German concentration camp and their escape from that camp.

  14. Charlotte's memoirs, Oct. 8, 1991 Berlin, Rīga, Stutthof

    Consists of a memoir entitled "Charlotte's Memoirs," written by Charlotte Arpadi Baum in 1991. In the memoir, Charlotte describes her experiences as a child and as an adolescent in Berlin, Germany, as an inhabitant of the ghetto in Rīga, Latvia, in the concentration camps of Rīga-Kaiserwald and Stutthof, on a death march, of liberation in Poland, and her emigration to the United States.

  15. Bäecher family Remembrances

    This memoir, written by cousins Paul Bäecher and Ivan Backer, consists primarily of transcribed oral histories, describes his life and the lives of other family members from Czechoslovakia, of which some fled and immigrated to the United States, while others were caught, interned in Terezin (a.k.a. Theresienstadt), and suffered on Nazi death marches. The memoir also contains genealogical charts relating to the Bäecher family.

  16. Frieden, Wenn sich die zwei letzten Menschen gegenseitig erschlagen haben

    Wolfgang Furrer's memoir describes his experiences as a political prisoner in Dachau and Sachsenhausen. Additionally, the text includes a photocopy of an UNRRA document verifying Furrer's status as a former inmate of concentration camps and a 1953 affidavit by Gottlob Wandel relating the reason for Furrer's arrest.

  17. Stalin, Hitler, and Abraham Briansky

    Abraham Briansky's memoir describes how he: was deported from the Soviet Union because of a letter that he wrote and sent to Joseph Stalin; spent two years in Palestine; emigrated to France; fought in the French army during the German invasion; fled to southern France following the French capitulation; was captured by German soldiers after he tried to recover some property in Vichy France; and escaped and emigrated to the United States via Portugal. The photocopied letters relate to Briansky's attempts to get his memoir published.

  18. Ich gedenke Albert Cohen, Hedwig Cohen

    Günter Schmitz's memorialization and Lore E. Cohn's translation describing the Holocaust-related experiences and deaths of Cohn's parents, Albert and Hedwig Cohen.

  19. And where was god?

    The manuscript describes Alfred Dube's experiences in Prague, the Łódź ghetto, as a prisoner of both Buchenwald and a subcamp of Dora-Mittelbau (Nordhausen), and his liberation in Bergen-Belsen.

  20. Return to life

    De Unikel's memoir "Return to Life," written in 1985, describes her life in Szecseny before the Nazi occupation of Hungary, her experiences in Auschwitz and in a camp in Kraków, Poland, and her liberation.