Displaying: 3,351 3,375 of 8,566 matches for “dachau”
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3351. Urano S. N. Caranchini collection
The collection consists of two blankets removed from Dachau after liberation by Staff Sargeant
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3352. Rabbi Aaron Landes collection
The collection consists of two Waffen SS fez found at Dachau concentration camp following its
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3353. Malcolm Vendig collection
The collection consists of 2 badges found by Malcolm Vendig at Dachau concentration camp post-war.
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3354. Marvin Glyder collection
Marvin Glyder as a soldier in the United States Army stationed near Dachau, Germany, after the war.
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3355. Eva and Zvi Schloss collection
as documents relating to the experiences of Meier Schloss while imprisoned in Dachau concentration
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3356. Edward Kaluski collection
service as a soldier in the United States 3rd Army in Germany, including the liberation of Dachau
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3357. Jacob Rutstein collection
The collection consists of 13 coins and a hand-made tobacco pouch found at Dachau concentration
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3358. Gerald Trees photograph collection
Consists of seven photographs of the Kaufering sub-camp of Dachau soon after liberation.
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3359. Kloster Indersdorf Displaced Persons Camp
was a displaced children's home in the Bayern town of Kloster Indersdorf. Located between Dachau and
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3360. Flag graphic for US 36th Infantry Division
Dachau concentration camp. The 36th Infantry Division was recognized as a liberating unit in 1995 by the
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3361. Flag graphic for US 4th Infantry Division
Nuremberg and discovered a Dachau subcamp near Haunstetten. The 4th Infantry
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3362. The Nazi Camp System: Terminology
.” Dachau was the first major concentration camp, run by the SS and existing from 1933 to
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3363. SS officer Theodor Eicke visits the Lichtenburg camp
subordinate to the SS Main Office. Eicke had been the commandant of the concentration camp at Dachau since
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3364. The Malmedy Massacre
killings of non-combatant Belgian civilians. The US Army then transported them to the former Dachau
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3365. Topf and Sons: An “Ordinary Company”
Dachau, Mauthausen, Gusen, and
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3366. Abraham Lewent describes hunger and death in the Warsaw ghetto
Skarzysko, Buchenwald, Schlieben, Bisingen, and Dachau. US troops liberated Abraham as the Germans evacuated
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3367. Liberation of major Nazi camps, 1944-1945
Dachau, and Mauthausen camps. British forces liberated camps in northern
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3368. Nazi concentration camps, 1933–39
Besides Dachau, they were Sachsenhausen (1936
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3369. Lublin/Majdanek Concentration Camp: Administration
as Buchenwald, Dachau, and Mauthausen, subordinated to the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps in
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3370. David Levine describes hiding his two-year-old nephew during a roundup of children in the Kovno ghetto
his father were deported to Dachau; his mother and nephew were
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3371. Abraham Lewent describes performing forced labor in Warsaw and increased Polish antisemitism
Skarzysko, Buchenwald, Schlieben, Bisingen, and Dachau. US troops liberated Abraham as the Germans evacuated
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3372. Nazi concentration camps, 1933–34
). Dachau was the only concentration camp opened in 1933 that remained in operation until 1945, and was the
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3373. Wartime Fate of the Passengers of the St. Louis
Dachau and Buchenwald. After his release, he booked passage for himself on
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3374. David (Dudi) Bergman describes a roll call "violation" incident in the Reichenbach subcamp of Gross-Rosen
Dachau. He was liberated after a death march from Innsbruck toward the
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3375. Sachsenhausen
transported those arrested to Sachsenhausen, Dachau, and