Max and Shari Bronner papers
Extent and Medium
folders
13
Creator(s)
- Shari Bronner
- Max Bronner
Biographical History
Max Bronner (1913-1976) was born Max Eichenbronner in Nuremberg to Moritz (Moses, 1881-approximately 1942) and Sylvia (Sylveria, 1892- approximately 1942) Eichenbronner. He immigrated to the United States in April 1937, settled in Chicago, and changed his name. Max tried to bring his parents to the United States, but they were deported to Izbica in 1942 with his aunt Frieda Eichenbronner and perished. Max Bronner also unsuccessfully tried to bring family members Maximillian Schaefer and Simon and Gertrude Einhorn, from France to the United States. Simon and Gertrude Einhorn survived the Holocaust and immigrated in 1947.
Shari Bronner (1914-2013) was born Scharika Bergmann in Czechoslovakia and was raised in Nuremberg, where she met Max Bronner. She fled Germany for France in 1938 and immigrated to the United States and married Max in 1940.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Shari Bronner donated the Max and Shari Bronner papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1997.
Scope and Content
The Max and Shari Bronner papers consist of biographical materials, correspondence, and immigration files documenting Max Bronner’s successful efforts to bring Shari Bronner to the United States from Nuremberg via France and his unsuccessful efforts to bring his parents to the United States from Nuremberg via Palestine, Mexico, Cuba, or the Dominican Republic and to bring relatives Frieda Eichenbronner, Maximillian Schaefer, and Simon and Gertrude Einhorn to the United States. Biographical materials include Max Bronner’s birth certificate, driver’s license, French identification document, German passport, and American immigrant identification card as well as a 1934 notice of complaint about Max Bronner’s piano playing. Correspondence files consist of telegrams and a letter between Max and Shari Bronner sending love and asking for news; telegrams from Max’s parents to Max about Shari’s and their own immigration plans; and letters from family friends Julius Karpf in the United States and Marta Wolfsheimer in Cuba about Moritz and Sylvia’s immigration plans. Immigration files document Max Bronner’s successful efforts to bring Shari Bronner to the United States from France and unsuccessful efforts to bring Moritz, Sylvia, and Frieda Eichenbronner, Maximillian Schaefer, and Simon and Gertrude Einhorn to the United States from Germany and France. The files include correspondence with consulates, embassies, the Visa Division of the State Department, travel companies, aid organizations, senators, judges, and lawyers; affidavits of support; proof of income; and money transfers.
System of Arrangement
The Max and Shari Bronner papers are arranged as three series: I. Biographical materials, 1923-1936, II. Correspondence, 1939-1941, III. Immigration files, 1938-1942
Subjects
- Chicago (Ill.)
- Jewish refugees--France.
- United States--Emigration and immigration--History--20th century.
- Jews--Germany--Nuremberg.
- France--Emigration and immigration--History--20th century.
- Paris (France)
- Nuremberg (Germany)
- Jewish refugees--Illinois--Chicago.
- Germany--Emigration and immigration--History--20th century.
Genre
- Certificates.
- Document
- Letters.