Generalkonsul Olof Herman Lamms arkiv
Olof Herman Lamm was born on 23 April 1887 in Stockholm as the son of the merchant and liberal politician Herman Lamm and Lisen Lamm (née Philipson). Both of his parents came from Swedish-Jewish families who had been among the first Jews to settle permanently in Sweden in the late 18th century. From 1919 to 1933 Olof H Lamm was the Swedish Consul General in New York. In 1933 he returned to Stockholm and became the executive director of an insurance company. In addition to these posts he had a number of different assignments and was engaged in various organisations, both Jewish and non-Jewish. For instance, he was an executive on the board of the Swedish branch of ORT and on the Israeli Chamber of Commerce in Sweden. He died in Lidingö in Stockholm in 1967. In order to access parts of the archive, written permission from Stockholm City Archive is required. This can be requested by e-mail: stadsarkivet@stockholm.se. Olof Lamm's archive includes documents concerning his involvement in refugee aid, and relief activities for Jews in Nazi Germany. There are also correspondence between Lamm and other Jews in Sweden, and abroad, about the situation for Jews in countries under German control. The correspondence includes negotiations with Swedish and foreign state representatives and relief organizations about refugee aid, relief and rescue initiatives.
- EHRI
- Archief
- se-006620-generalkonsul_olof_herman_lamms_arkiv
- Sweden
- Orphans
- Sven Hedin
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