Browse Items (12 total)

nc2.jpg
The fourteen images on this folio depict the monstrous races believed to populate the margins of the world. For each image, there is a corresponding block of text describing the visual qualities of the humanoid creature.

Left column, top to…

NC1.JPG
On the left-hand side of the folio are seven more monstrous figures.

Top to bottom: Six Arms, Hairy Lady, Twelve Fingers, Half Horse (Centaur), Androgyn II, Four Eyes, Bird Neck and Beak

The world map is a simplified Ptolemaic map that…

peter id card 1.jpg
In the fall of 1938, Nazi authorities required all Jews in Germany to carry identity cards stamped with the letter “J” for Jude (Jew). German Jews whose names did not instantly identify them as Jewish had to add the name “Sara” for women and…

Camp Kitchener Permit .jpg
After Kristallnacht, the Central British Fund for German Jewry (now World Jewish Relief) arranged with the British government for the rescue of about 4,000 Jewish men released from concentration camps. These refugees stayed in a former army base –…

Compulsory ID band %22jude%22 .jpg
Nazi propaganda minister Josef Goebbels was the first to suggest a "general distinguishing mark" for German Jews in May 1938. German SS and police official Reinhard Heydrich reiterated the proposal idea on November 12, 1938, during a meeting with…

Peter with his mother .jpg
Peter with his mother and Peter's parents, Max and Mina, together.

Peter's paternal grandparents and father.jpg
Pictured left to right are: Ernst Ledermann (Peter's father), Ernst's mother Minna, and his father, Max, taken sometime in the 1930s.

Peter's Grandparents in Gotha, Germany.jpg
Peter Lederman's maternal grandparents, Julie and Kapel Hellbrunn, were deeply rooted in Germany. Both were born and raised there. They were steeped in German culture and language, and were integrated into German society. The Hellbrunns lived in…

Peter's letter to parents after leaving Germany 1939.jpg
Peter did not live in the Kitchener Camp. Instead, he attended a boarding school where he continued his education and learned English. Separated from his parents, Peter contacted his father and mother through letters and occasionally visited them.

Hilda Weis.png
Hilda Goldsmith, the mother of Rickey G. Slezak, was born on October 8, 1922, in Gelnhausen, Germany. At the age of 17, she escaped Nazi Germany and arrived in the United States sometime between 1939-1940 alone.
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