Displaying: 5,401 5,425 of 53,057 matches for “photographs”
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5401. View of a section of the Maginot Line after the defeat of France.
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5402. A German soldier examines fortifications on the Maginot Line, after the defeat of France by the German army.
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5403. Four young Jewish men and women pose wearing armbands on a staircase in the Olkusz ghetto.
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5404. Portrait of Szmul Hersz Grinbaum in the Olkusz ghetto.
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5405. View of the abandoned furnishings of Jews who have been deported from the ghetto.
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5406. Jewish men are lined up along the perimeter of the town square in Raciaz.
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5407. Jewish men are lined up along the perimeter of the town square in Raciaz.
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5408. Jewish men are lined up in a large courtyard or public square in Raciaz.
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5409. Jews are gathered in the town square of Raciaz.
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5410. A Jewish man walks along the sidewalk near the town square in Raciaz.
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5411. The abandoned property of Jews who have been deported from the Zychlin ghetto is piled in an open field.
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5412. A still image taken from a film showing the deportation of Jews from an unidentified location in Poland.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Leopold Page Photographic Collection
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5413. [Probably, Poles waiting at an assembly point during a resettlement action.] One image of Einsatzgruppen activities in Poland in 1939, found by Joseph Igra after the war, in a an album in an apartment in Sosnowiec.
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5414. [Probably, Poles gathered outside their homes during a resettlement action.] One image of Einsatzgruppen activities in Poland in 1939, found by Joseph Igra after the war, in a an album in an apartment in Sosnowiec.
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5415. [Probably, SD officers questioning the ethnic German (Volksdeutsche) inhabitants of a Polish town.] It was standard practice during the Polish campaign for the SD and German military to question local ethnic Germans for information pertaining to Poles considered Deutschfeindlich, or "hostile to Germans." Poles and Jews named during such interviews were then arrested as suspected opponents and either shot or sent to the rear for internment.
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5416. [Probably, Poles and Jews who have been rounded-up by the SD marching to a temporary internment center.] These prisoners may be what the Germans referred to as "Wehrfaehige," or persons capable of carrying arms, who were summarily interned during and immediately after the Polish campaign as a security measure.
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5417. View of the courtyard of the Moabit prison.
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5418. The main synagogue in Lubaczow.
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5419. A collage of picture postcards depicting sights in Munkachevo.
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5420. A collage of picture postcards depicting sights in Munkachevo.
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5421. A collage of picture postcards depicting sights in Munkachevo.
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5422. Portrait of a Jewish soldier in the Belgian army.
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5423. Portrait Joseph Mordko Halter, the donor's father.
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5424. Portrait of Stanislaw and Anna Podsiadly, rescuers of the donor, Kurt Thomas [Ticho].
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5425. The signing of the Kellogg-Briand Pact by representatives of Germany, the United States, Belgium, France, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Poland and the Czechoslovak Republic.