Weesperstraat 107 1018 VN Amsterdam
Contains a memoir about Victoria Herron's Holocaust experiences, Victoria Herron's passport, death certificate, and a decree from the director of the Interior of the Canton of Zurich.
Contains six photographs, mostly of a memorial site in former Soviet Union where 8,000 Jews were murdered by Nazis in August 1941.
Early World War I propaganda toilet paper "Die Lügen-Nachrichten unserer Feinde! Bestes deutsches Abort-Papier" [the lying news of our enemies - best German toilet paper]. Consists of approximately 65 sheets with printed press reports bound in a folder, which is stamped on the back: Friedrich Blos Gr. Hoflieferant Karlsruhe. (New cord, original was black-red-white, see copy Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin)<br ...
The papers consist of identification cards, photographs, and a document relating to the experiences of Adam Peiperl after World War II and in Camp Wegscheid near Linz, Austria, and photographs of the Peiperl family before World War II in Poland.
The papers belonged to a unknown United States serviceman and include forty-eight photographs depicting wartime Europe and liberated concentration camps, an envelope, a set of souvenir postcards from Liverpool, England, and a business card from the Taverne Savoy in Brussels, Belgium.
The Edith Bredehoft papers consist of a letter and three postcards sent from Dachau concentration camp by Oskar Richter to Klara (Clara) Richter, circa 1938-1939; and an identifcation card issued to Dr. Oskar Richter in Shanghai, China.
The papers consist of a certificate issued by Varian Fry from the Emergency Rescue Committee that attests to the service of Marcel Verzeano and a certificate issued by the Unitarian Service Committee that attests to service of Marcel Verzeano.
Consists of postcards from Stanisławów, Poland (Stanislav, Ukraine) and family correspondence addressed to Nathan Krisnapoller (later Kriss) from Stanisławów and the Warsaw Ghetto, in addition to photocopies of documents.
Consists of photographs and documents pertaining to Liova and Zlata Sidrer, the parents of Ettie Zilber. The collection primarily documents Liova and Zlata's experiences as displaced persons living in Landsberg.
Contains documents and correspondence pertaining to Max, Hans, and Nella Weissmann Epstein's emigration from Vienna, Austria, in 1938. Includes passports, birth and marriage certificates, official correspondence, and travel documentation.