Box JHC Holocaust Archives Box 8
Contains 13 Results:
Negatives and slides, circa 1922-1963
Includes pre-war images of Guta Blas and her family in Łódź, Poland, and Leon Weintraub and his family in Bodzentyn, Poland. Also included are images of Leon Weintraub in the Tartak work camp in Starachowice, Poland, Guta Blas in Sweden after her rescue by the Swedish Red Cross, and the Weintraubs in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp and in Charleston, South Carolina. Digital images on DVD are included.
Clippings and notes, 1971, 1981, 2006, 2008, undated
Includes three newspaper clippings from The Post and Courier which describe Blas's actions at Majowka and her testimony in the trial of the guard who shot her. Also included are Weintraub's obituary and researchers' notes from discussions with Weintraub's daughter, Blanche Weintraub Wine.
Negatives and slides, 1905-1957, undated
Photographs and clippings, 1945, circa 2000
Four atrocity photographs from the Ohrdruf concentration camp taken after its April 4, 1945, liberation by the 89th Infantry Division of the U.S. Army. Two photocopied clippings from a circa 2000 Rolling W, the newsletter for the 89th Infantry Division, describe the liberation of Ohrdruf. Also includes negatives, slides, and digital images on DVD.
Images, 1945
Negatives and slides of atrocity photographs from an unidentified concentration camp located in Bavaria near the German-Austrian border. Includes brief field notes with descriptions of the photographs. Also includes digital images on DVD.
Right to be Proud: History of the 65th Infantry Division's March Across Germany, 1945
The collection consists of twenty-six Holocaust atrocity photographs taken by Robert Turner, a U.S. soldier from the 65th Infantry Division who photographed victims in a Bavarian concentration camp after it was liberated. Included is a photocopy of the 1945 booklet Right to Be Proud: History of the 65th Infantry Division's March Across Germany.
Photographs, 1945
The collection consists of twenty-four Holocaust atrocity photographs collected by U.S. soldier Clarence Holland. Some of the concentration camps photographed include Buchenwald, Dora, Gardelegen, and Ohrdruf.
Images, 1905-1961
Photographs of Alexander Kornfeld, his wife, Mathilde, and their son, Walter. Nearly all photographs were taken in pre-war Vienna and include family portraits and group photographs, including Alexander Kornfeld with his military unit. Other images include the Kornfeld family's German passports, U.S. certificates of naturalization, ghetto money, and other papers. Materials consist of digital images on CD and photocopies.
Memoir of Alexander Kornfeld, undated
Alexander Kornfeld's memoir details his family history, his Austrian military service in World War I and subsequent business career, and his struggle to flee Austria with his family at the beginning of World War II.
