Displaying: 776 800 of 1,332 matches for “anschluss”
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776. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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777. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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778. Document from the American Consul-General in Vienna certifying that the Trost family, consisting of Josef, Alice, Dorrit, and Erika, applied for American visas on September 15, 1938 and have been placed on the waiting list with the numbers 47291-47294.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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779. Austrian Jews at an outdoor cafe in Vienna. Pictured are members of the Fiedler and Goldstaub families.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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780. Group portrait of Jewish women in a cooking school in Vienna.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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781. Portrait of Dorrit Trost (b. 1929), the niece of Herma Ellengoghen, as an Austrian-Jewish refugee living in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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782. Portrait of Dorrit (behind) and Erika Trost, the two nieces of Herman Ellenboghen, as Austrian-Jewish refugees living in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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783. Portrait of Alice (Ellenboghen) Trost and her daughter Dorrit, living as Austrian-Jewish refugees in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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784. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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785. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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786. The Goldstaub family in front of their home on Tongshan Road.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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787. The Goldstaub family poses for a photograph with Harry Fiedler.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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788. Austrian Jewish refugees Camilla Goldstaub and Harry Fiedler sit in a pedicab on Tongshan Road.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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789. Members of the Goldstaub family pose with Harry Fiedler on a street in Shanghai.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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790. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of the executive council of the World Jewish Congress, is led on a tour of the Lampertheim displaced persons camp.
appealed for the protection of Austrian Jews after the Anschluss and worked toward a solution of the
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791. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of the executive council of the World Jewish Congress, tours the Lampertheim displaced persons camp with Matile Oftedal.
appealed for the protection of Austrian Jews after the Anschluss and worked toward a solution of the
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792. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of the executive council of the World Jewish Congress, is escorted through the Lampertheim displaced persons camp by Captain Abraham Hyman (center in uniform) and Mathilde Oftedal (left).
appealed for the protection of Austrian Jews after the Anschluss and worked toward a solution of the
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793. A group of children sits around a table in the Ferramonti internment camp.
had been living with an aunt. After the German Anschluss, Jakob helped smuggle Austrian Jews into
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794. Irma Gruenberg serves coffee while seated on a rug in Benghazi, Libya.
had been living with an aunt. After the German Anschluss, Jakob helped smuggle Austrian Jews into
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795. Rudolf Brosan's membership certificate in the Shanghai Guild of Craftsmen.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to
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796. IRO certificate attesting to the fact that Alfred Brosan is eligible for displaced person's assistance.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to
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797. View of the street in Hainbach, Austria where the Brosan family lived.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to
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798. Employees of Rudolf Brosan's leather workshop in Shanghai.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to
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799. Invitation to the bar mitzvah of Alfred Brosan in Vienna, Austria.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to
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800. Alfred and Trudi Brosan sit back-to-back on a bench in the yard of their cottage in Hainbach, Austria.
Vienna. After the Anschluss in March 1938, the family decided to leave Austria. They traveled first to