Renate Klapper: Personal papers

Identifier
WL1684
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 71117
Dates
1 Jan 1927 - 31 Jan 1998
Level of Description
Collection
Languages
  • German
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Biographical History

Renate ('Ray') Johanna Klapper, born in 1920, was sent to London by her parents just before the outbreak of the Second World War. Her mother Grete Klapper and her cousin Max were transported to Auschwitz in 1943. Whilst her mother's fate is unknown, Max died in May 1943.

Renate trained to be a nurse and midwife in England. She later became a midwifery teacher and attended the International Confederation of Midwives Congress in Jerusalem in 1978. She supported various good causes such as the Ethiopian Gemini Trust for which she started a supplementary feeding programme which developed into a large organisation with a clinic, income generating activities for parents and a day care centre. She also contributed to the Princess Tsahai Memorial Hospital Trust, established by Rita Pankhurst's husband's mother, Sylvia Pankhurst. Renate died in Southend-on-Sea in 1998.

Acquisition

Diary, correspondence, photos, personal papers, 2 folders

Donated September 2004

Donor: Rita Pankhurst

Scope and Content

This collection contains the papers of Renate Klapper, a Jewish girl from Berlin who was sent to England shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War to escape Nazi persecution whilst her family died at Auschwitz concentration camp.

Personal papers including her school certificates (1684/1), wartime correspondence with her mother sent via the British Red Cross Message Bureau (1684/2), honorary membership certificate of the Royal College of Midwives (1684/3), two photocopies of her will (1684/4), two copies of her death certificate (1684/5), valuation documents of two properties in Germany (1684/6), photographs (see photo archive), a travel journal of a trip to France in 1988 (1684/7), general correspondence (1684/9) and ephemera (1684/10).

Also included is a confidential letter from Fürstin von Bismarck (née Gräfin Hoyos, married to Herbert von Bismarck) to a Professor Nowak, dated 1929 (1684/8), and a recording (see audio visual archive) of the memorial service for Alexander William Henry Nicholson who worked for the Intelligence Service and was involved in the prosecution of war criminals. [It is unclear how Renate Klapper came into possession of these two records and how they relate to her].

German English

Conditions Governing Access

Open

Related Units of Description

  • See also digital recordings and Photo Archive (NB373)

People

Subjects

Places

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.