Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
The collection includes two photographs of students at Jewish school on Lützowstrasse in Cologne, Germany, including Josef Aretz prior to his departure on a Kindertransport.
The papers consist of correspondence pertaining to Lillyan Rosenberg's escape from Germany on a Kindertransport to England and the deaths of her parents in Auschwitz.
The collection consists of two steamer trunks that were sent to England to Lore Gotthelf Jacobs who left Frankfurt-am Main, Germany, on the Kindertransport
The collection consists of letters sent by Leopold and Gertrude Schlachter in Stuttgart, Germany from 1940-1941 to their daughters Liselott and Margot Schlacter in New York. Liselott and Margot fled Germany on a Kindertransport to Glasgow, Scotland and immigrated to the United States in September 1940. There is a small amount of letters sent from other individuals, as well as Liselott’s resume and ...
Sewing kit, manicure kit and two perpetual calendars which belonged to Ingrid Neuhaus Kovary and used by her after she arrived in England on the Kindertransport.
Contains 26 letters, six legal documents, three Canadian Pacific cards, and one menu from the Canadian Pacific pertaining to the experiences of Ilona Penner and her twin brother, Kurt Penner on a Kindertransport.
Thes papers relate to the experiences of Otto Hutter, a former <em>Kindertransportee</em> from Vienna.
Testimony, three pages, typescript, describing experiences of author as a Kindertransport child who was sent to Scotland, later worked on a "Hachshara" in Britain, moved to London to get training in child care, and eventually immigrated to U.S.
Contains documents and photographs pertaining to Ruth Fielder's attempts to obtain visas for her parents, Fedor Zernik and Hedwig Tichauer Zernik, her own escape from Germany to England on a Kindertransport (1939), and leaving England for Australia (February 1939).
The collection consists of three Theresienstadt ghetto-labor camp notes, documents, and photographs relating to the experiences of Gustav (Gus) Meyer in prewar Germany and during his journey on a Kindertransport to Great Britain.