Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 18,861 to 18,880 of 58,960
  1. Oral history interview with Yankel Talis

  2. Nazi infiltration of the International Committee of the Red Cross

    Records relating to Office of Strategic Services (OSS) research into allegations concerning Nazi infiltration of the ICRC: lists of people suspected of espionage, reports about Giuseppe Berretta, reports on activities of ICRC representatives in North Africa, Naples, and Marseille, documentation of the activities of Jean-Robert (Jean-Roger) Pagan in North Africa.

  3. Henry Kinast memoir

    Consists of one typed document, one page, regarding the Holocaust experiences of Henry Kinast. When Henry was 12, he went to work in a munitions factory in Skarzysko, Poland. In 1944, he was transferred to Czestochowa, and in January 1945, he was transferred to Buchenwald, where he was liberated. Henry was reunited with his father and brother, and they lived in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp for three years. The document is very brief.

  4. Frank Halpern papers

    The papers consist of one security clearance certifying that the bearer could attend classified briefing for operation "Market Garden," the Allied invasion of Holland; one photograph of Henry Plitt, an American airman who captured war criminal Julius Streicher; and one document issued to Julius Streicher under an assumed name permitting him to live in Waidring, Austria.

  5. The Oscar and Miriam Lifshutz papers

    A letter and news article relating to the fates of some members of the donor's family during the Holocaust.

  6. Memoir of experiences as a hidden child in Lithuania

    A memoir of donor's experiences as a child hidden with a Catholic Lithuanian family during and after the Holocaust.

  7. Selected records relating to concentration camps from the National Archives and Records Administration

    Contains camp registration name lists, transport name lists, camp arrival registers, death lists, lists of Jews who emigrated, personal property lists, medical records, death certificates, prisoner biographical data cards, postwar questionnaires, and other camp records. Included is information about the Buchenwald, Dachau, Sandbostel, Flossenbürg, Mauthausen, Hinzert, Natzweiler, Gross-Rosen, and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps. The collection also contains documents relating to various Gestapo branches and to the Jewish Agency.

  8. Miscellaneous programs relating to the Holocaust

    Contains audio tapes on the following programs: "Euthanasia"; "Survivors of the Holocaust"; "Elie Wiesel at the National Press Club"; "Japanese Americans: The Redress Effort"; "Neo-Nazis in America"; "Women in the Holocaust" and "Children of Nazis."

  9. Warsaw

    Location filming in Warsaw, Poland for SHOAH. Scenes include the ghetto, Mila 18, the cemetery, the railway station, and archival documents and photographs. FILM ID 4709 -- White 39A Varsovie La Gare VAR 61-66 Ticket counter in Warsaw's train station. (00:34) The train schedule. (3:36) A sign that reads: “Gornik. Warszawa WSCH. Częstochowa-Katowice- Gliwice.” The sign is on a train moving out of the station platform. A man is leaning outside the window of the train. (6:00) Trains go past the platform. FILM ID 4710 -- White 39B Varsovie Ville Clapperboard reads: “Varsovie Ghetto.” A monument...

  10. Certificate of incarceration

    Certifification of donor's incarceration in Stutthof and Dachau concentration camps.

  11. Robert Buckley papers

    The Robert Buckley papers contains two folders. One folder contains two copies of the Jehovah's Witness magazine Awake! , from 1989 and 1995. The magazines each contain an article concerning the Holocaust, including some on the role Jehovah's Witnesses played during that time.The second folder contains photographs from Buckley's trip to West Germany in May, 1990. Besides landscape photos, there are pictures of interviewees Sophie Mewes, Irmgard Jahndorf, Josef and Margarete Niklasch, Hubert Mattischek, Berta and Gustav Wenzel, and Johanna Buchner. Also included is a photograph reproduction ...

  12. "My Mother's Diary"

    Consists of a copy of a typed English translation of the diary of Ella Pick, originally of Vienna, which she began in 1920 to document the life of her son, Rudi (Rudolph) Pick, who later edited the diary. In the diary, Ella describes Rudi's health and schooling throughout his childhood, addressing him directly after Rudi managed to escape to England. At the end of the diary, she tells him that his parents are soon to depart and writes of how proud they are their son. Also includes a conclusion in which Rudolph writes of his own wartime history and of finding out of his parents' deportation ...

  13. Sketch

  14. A memoir

    Testimony: Manuscript, three pages, describing a woman's experiences, first in an unnamed ghetto in Poland, then in Tarnopol, and then--posing as a non-Jewish Polish laborer, in Elbing and later in the Harz Mountains.

  15. Hans Fassler testimony

    Interview with Hans Fassler, legislator from Switzerland, relating to the saving of Jews by a Mr. Grueninger during World War II.

  16. Een getuigenverslag 1945-1995

    Binder contains reproductions of an exhibition in France.

  17. Gary J. Greenberg collection

    Documents and photographs taken from pouches of German soldier. Documents relating to the immigration/naturalization of donor's family. Identity card for Berthold Podhaicer. Correspondence. Documents regarding Bert Podhaicer's military career, etc.

  18. Theresienstadt ghetto-labor camp scrip, 10 kronen note

  19. Pierre Haber memoir

    Contains a testimony, typescript, one page, about Pierre Haber's experiences as he and his family fled from Landau/Pfalz, settled in Strasbourg, were interned by French officials, and how his father purchased a Cuban visa and left in 1942.