Eva Webb: personal papers
Extent and Medium
1 folder
Biographical History
Eva Webb (née Poper) was born in Berlin in 1927, the third child of Jewish couple Ernestine (née Krauss, c 1892-1931) and Heinrich Poper (c 1895-1944). Her father served in the First World War and was awarded the Iron Cross. As her mother suffered from TB she was soon sent to join her elder brother Hans and sister Elizabeth (Erszi) who were living with their aunt Anna Neni in Velka-Bytca, Czechoslovakia. When Eva was four years old her mother died.
Her father soon remarried an 'Aryan' woman, Trude Gebhardt. Eva and her brother Hans moved back with their father and step-mother. Life became increasingly difficult in Berlin with Heinrich being unemployed and the family being subjected to anti-semitic abuse. She transferred to the "Schule der Jüdischen Gemeinde" in Moabit where she learned English in preparation for a possible emigration. Due to the difficulties of being in a mixed marriage and the fact that Trude Gebhardt did not want to emigrate, they divorced in 1939. At the same time a wealthy foster family was found in Oxford who was willing to care for Eva. Professor Lane-Poole was lecturer and later president of St John's College. They had another daughter who was sent away to relatives in the countryside when war broke out. Eva's schooling changed very frequently. She initially attended Oxford High School but was soon transferred to the Convent of the Sacred Heart School for Girls at Oxford, followed by St Juliana's Convent boarding school at Begbroke, near Woodstock. She completed her training as a nursery nurse in 1945.
Heinrich Poper was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1943. In September 1944 he was transported to Auschwitz concentration camp where he died. Trude Gebhardt died in one of the last air raids on Berlin.
Acquisition
Personal papers- 1 folder
Donated January 2009
Donor: Eva Webb
Scope and Content
Personal correspondence and autobiographical account of Eva Webb. Also included is correspondence relating to her war compensation claim, confirmation of the death of Heinrich Poper by Theresienstadt Martyrs Remembrance Association and letters from her father.
Conditions Governing Access
Open
People
- Webb, Eva
Subjects
- Terezin (ghetto)
- National Socialism
- Migration
- Holocaust
- Restitution
- Refugees
- Persecution
- Jews
- Concentration camps
Places
- Oswiecim