Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 7,141 to 7,160 of 10,126
  1. [A letter to Saly Meyer]

    1. Judge Hadassa Ben-Itto collection 1926-2018

    A letter from the Joint Foreign Committee to Saly Mayer informing him he will not be getting the funds he had asked for, since the funds were needed for German refugees and the burden on the committee was too great. Saly Mayer was involved in the Bern trial and anti-fascist publications in Switzerland. This letter is part of a collection of letters and documents in the Bern trial case files.

  2. Charles Rosenbloom Dachau collection

    Contains photocopies of camp prisoners' newsletters, proceedings and minutes of meetings, communiques, memoranda, correspondence, reports, and a scrapbook relating to Charles Rosenbloom's work with United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration Team 115 at Dachau concentration camp shortly after World War II and his involvement with the International Prisoners' Committee in Dachau.

  3. Nachum family papers

    Photographic album of family history; two (2) German passports illustrating travel to Shanghai; documents relating to the family's emigration. Identification documents, passports, and immigration documents, related to the emigration of Siegfried (later Fred) and Rosa Nachum, and their sone Uri (later Ronald) from Germany to the United States, via Shanghai, 1939-1947. Includes school records from Shanghai for Uri Nachum (1943-1946), U.S. naturalization certificates for each member of family, and photographs. Also includes records related to the family of Mozes Wrubel (also Wrobel) of Wilkes-...

  4. Ernst Kamm personal papers

    The collection contains personal papers and photographs.

  5. Concessions aux Allemands (scellé n° 34 découvert) 1. minute de la lettre adressée par le Maréchal Pétain au Chancelier Hitler pour l'anniversaire de l'entrevue de Montoire, 20 octobre 1941 2. minute d'une note sur papier à en tête du S.E. à la Guerre concernant l'installation de commissions de contrôle allemandes au Maroc, avril 1941 3. note sur les frais d'entretien de l'armée d'occupation, 18 mars 1941 4. note sur la révision du montant des frais d'occupation, s.d. 5. note sur les commandes d'avions allemands en France, s.d. 6. note sur l'utilisation d'avions allemands par l'Armée de l'Air française, s.d. 7. note sur le rattachement des départements du Nord et du Pas-de-Calais au chef de l'administration militaire allemande de Paris, s.d. 8. note sur le retour des réfugiés en zone réservée, s.d. 9. note sur la colonisation de la zone réservée par l'organisation "Ostland", s.d. 10. note sur les exigences allemandes de locomotives et de wagons français, s.d. 11. note sur le recrutement en zone occupée d'engagés pour l'Armée d'Armistice, s.d. 12. note sur l'assouplissement de la ligne de démarcation, s.d. 13. note du ministre des Affaires Etrangères sur les exigences allemandes et les contre-parties à demander par le Gouvernement français, juin 1941 (avec annotations manuscrites de la main du Maréchal Pétain) 14 et 15. rapport du général Doyen sur ses dix mois de présidence à la Délégation française de Wiesbaden et lettre d'envoi au secrétaire général du Chef de l'Etat, 16 juillet 1941 (original) 16. traduction du message adressée par le Fuhrer au Maréchal Pétain le 17 mai 1941

  6. Jewish Religious Community of Pardubice

    This fonds contains lists of Jews living in the Pardubice domain at the end of the 18th century, the community's statutes including amendments (1874, 1977, 1896, 1936), meeting minutes, election records, personnel records, a list of war refugees (1914–1918), construction records (including for the construction of a synagogue), burial society records, and draft texts on the history of the Jews in Pardubice. The burial society registers, particularly grave records, were kept until 1942. The fonds also includes files from the Pardubice Arbeitsamt (labour office) with records of work assignment...

  7. Hedi S. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Hedi S., who was born in Mainz, Germany in 1904. She recalls her sheltered life as the only child of a prosperous, assimilated family; attending a Jewish elementary school; traveling with her parents; marriage and divorce; and cordial relations with non-Jews. Mrs. S. recalls the anti-Jewish boycott in Berlin; her father's death in 1935; deciding to emigrate for her son's sake; obtaining a visa through American relatives; being searched when leaving in 1937; and learning of her former parents-in-law's suicide. She describes several jobs after arriving in New York; her ...