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Vacationing on Lake Traun, Gmunden, Austria

Film | Digitized | Accession Number: 2009.62 | RG Number: RG-60.4748 | Film ID: 2867

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    Vacationing on Lake Traun, Gmunden, Austria

    Overview

    Description
    Outside, a sign reads "Schloss Pension: Freisitz Roith" (a famous historic hotel on the Traunsee [Lake Traun] in Gmunden, Austria). Scenes of an estate at the end of a long scenic road, where children run about and peer over a railing to the view of Lake Traun with mountains surrounding it. They run back into the house. 01:05:11 Eva Schur stands on a man-made pathway, watching swans on the lake in front of her. Motorboats pass by. 01:05:30 Girls play with dolls, boys swim, mother crochets. A rowboat with everyone aboard, along with a new woman in glasses. The boat is landed and chained by the young boys. They get changed out of their wet clothes. 01:07:43 Two infants lie in a baby carriage. Their mother, and the children, entertain the babies. 01:07:53 Swimming, various scenes of the children playing in the water.
    Duration
    00:04:11
    Date
    Event:  1935-1938
    Locale
    Gmunden, Austria
    Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Peter Schur
    Contributor
    Camera Operator: Helen Schur
    Subject: Peter Schur
    Biography
    Dr. Max Schur, born in Ukraine and living in Vienna from 1914, was a psychoanalyst and Freud's personal physician. His wife, Helen (Kraus) Schur, born in Prague, was also a doctor. They married at the Seitenstettengasse synagogue in Vienna in 1930 and had two children, Peter (b.1933) and Eva (b.1935). The Schur family lived in Vienna until June 10, 1938, when they left for London with visas obtained by Marie Bonaparte, who was born in France, married to Danish and Greek royalty, and a psychoanalyst and colleague of Freud. Ernest Jones, a British psychoanalyst, was equally important in obtaining the visas, and also obtained permission for Dr. Schur to treat Freud in England.The Schurs left for New York in April 1939. After a brief stay during the spring of 1939, the family returned to London so that Dr. Schur could care for Freud, who was in the final stage of oral cancer. Years previously Freud had told Dr. Schur that he didn't want to suffer at the end of his life. On September 1939 Dr. Schur administered a dose of morphine that caused Freud to lapse into a coma and eventually die. The Schur family moved back to New York in October 1939.

    Details taken from correspondence with Eva (Schur) Milofsky in February 2014 and Peter Schur's essay "The Freud-Schur Connection" delivered to the Vienna Psychoanalytic Association in February 1994.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Silent
    Genre/Form
    Amateur.
    B&W / Color
    Black & White
    Image Quality
    Fair
    Time Code
    01:04:14:00 to 01:08:25:00
    Film Format
    • Master
    • Master 2867 Video: VHS - 1/2 inch - NTSC
      Master 2867 Video: VHS - 1/2 inch - NTSC
      Master 2867 Video: VHS - 1/2 inch - NTSC
      Master 2867 Video: VHS - 1/2 inch - NTSC
    • Preservation
    • Preservation 2867 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - large
      Preservation 2867 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - large
      Preservation 2867 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - large
      Preservation 2867 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - large

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    You do not require further permission from the Museum to access this archival media.
    Copyright
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Conditions on Use
    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum places no restrictions on use of this material. You do not require further permission from the Museum to reproduce or use this film footage.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Film Provenance
    Peter Schur donated a VHS videocassette transfer of his family's original films to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in May 2009. The original film materials have not been located by the Schur family.
    Film Source
    Dr. Peter Schur
    File Number
    Legacy Database File: 5137
    Record last modified:
    2024-02-21 08:06:30
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn1004246

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