Rosa Goldberg envelope
Extent and Medium
folder
1
Creator(s)
- Rosa Goldberg
Biographical History
Rosa Goldberg was born Rosa Seemann on June 4, 1904 in Poland. She married Baruch Golberg, also from Poland, in 1927. The couple lived at Mullergasse 12-16 in Kassel, Germany with their sons, Manfed (b. April 21, 1930) and Hermann (b. July 1934). Baruch Goldberg escaped to Britain in August 1939, but the rest of the family were unable to join him before World War II began. Goldberg and her sons were deported to the Riga ghetto in Latvia In December 1941. In August 1943 they were sent to a nearby labor camp. Hermann was taken away by guards one day and presumably killed. Rosa and Manfred were sent to the Stutthof concentration camp in August 1944. They survived a death march from Stutthof and were liberated in Neustadt, Germany on May 3, 1945. They reunited with Baruch Goldberg in Britain in September 1946
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Stanley Jaffe
Stanley Jaffe donated the envelope to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1992.
Scope and Content
The envelope was sent by Rosa Goldberg from Millergasse 12.-16, Kassel, Germany to Morris Moidel at 4 Equality Park, W. Newport, RI, USA. The Moidel family were friends of the Goldberg family in Kassel and managed to get visas and immigrate to the United States before the war. The envelope bears four stamps of German National Insignia, encircled with "Oberkommando der Wermacht." The word "Geöffnet" is stamped three times on the the verso. The whereabouts of the former contents of the envelope are unknown.
Subjects
- Kassel (Germany)
- Jews--Germany--Kassel.
Genre
- Stamped envelopes.
- Document