Edgar Dreyfus: Family papers
Extent and Medium
1 folder
Creator(s)
- Union Generale des Israelites de France
Biographical History
Edgar Dreyfus was a banker following in the tradition of the Dreyfus family, which had a history of involvement in the banking and shipping industries.
The Dreyfus house in Paris was one of the first to be occupied by the Gestapo when the Germans occupied the city in 1940. The family, comprising father and mother, Edgar and Yvonne, and their two daughters, Viviane and Christiane, fled to the south of France, staying in Perpignan, Marseille and Cannes. When the Italians capitulated in 1943 they went into hiding in Pau and later walked to Spain. They were accompanied by a cousin, Manon Levenvach, who had managed to escape deportation by jumping from a train. She stayed with the Dreyfus family in Spain for the remainder of the war.
Acquisition
Personal documents and papers-
Donated November 1992
Donor: Lady Swaythling
Scope and Content
The papers in this collection document in part the lives of a French Jewish family and their experiences during the German occupation.
System of Arrangement
The papers have been arranged into three groups: personal documents including passports and identity cards (-/1); general correspondence (-/2); and miscellaneous papers
Conditions Governing Access
Open
People
- Dreyfus family
Subjects
- Family documents [doc]