Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Wapenschild, 52nd (Lowland) Division."The white cross of Saint Andrew."" "Het schildje is gemaakt van triplex. ( Eigen fabricaat) voor een tentoonstelling in het Bevrijdingsmuseum." "afmeting : 14cm x 12cm.
This collection consists of correspondence and printed extracts relating to an aspect of the will of Edith Stein, aka St. Teresa Benedetta of the Cross, the Jewish born academic, convert to Catholicism.
Two shots of ghetto bridge w/many people crossing. Street scene with bicycle rickshaws; crowded street scenes with traffic, carts, rickshaws, wagons. Jewish Police direct traffic.
Photocopy of a death certificate for Samuel Roth, the donor's father-in-law, who died at Buchenwald. Photocopy of a prisoner card with photograph of Eugene Roth. Original typescript letter from the International Red Cross, International Tracing Servicing, circa 1963.
Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral)--Universität Stuttgart, 2009. 348 pages ; 24 cm
The collection consists of a Mother's Cross medal, documents, two reels of 16mm film, one photograph, and publication relating to the experiences of John Vincent Tillman as an American student in Germany from 1935 and 1936 and after his return to the United States.
The collection consists of a Cross of Honor of the German Mother medal with case, photographs of Dachau concentration camp, a pamphlet on the liberation of Buchenwald concentration camp, and a typewritten letter with envelope relating to the experiences of Sidney Tick while serving with the United States Army in Europe during World War II.
Shield shaped embroidered badge with two gold swords crossed over blue cross on red shield.
Consists of documents, correspondence, and photographs related to the Holocaust experiences of the de Leeuw and Frankenhuis families of the Netherlands. Includes photographs of the familes, correspondence from the Westerbork deportation camp, and post-war documents from the Dutch Red Cross.
The papers consist of letters, Red Cross forms, an American naturalization certificate, and an autograph album relating to the experiences of the Friedman family, their flight from Salzburg, Austria, to Switzerland, France, and Portugal, and their eventual immigration to the United States in 1941.