Displaying: 376 400 of 977 matches for “H%C3%B6cker”
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376. Klara Taussig and her cousin Traute Rendi go horseback riding.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Henry H. Brecher
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377. Portrait of part of the Brecher family taken soon after the Anschluss.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Henry H. Brecher
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378. Two young boys share a swing in Graz, circa 1937.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Henry H. Brecher
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379. Photograph of the Gottschalk family. Minna and Julius Gottschalk pose with their children Hermann, Ernst-August, and Karola by an unidentified exterior.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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380. Photograph of Norbert Walzer.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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381. Portrait of the Zuckermann family. Ruth Zuckermann with parents Perle and Heinz shortly before her father's emigration from Germany to England.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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382. Photograph of Ernst-August Gottschalk.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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383. Portrait of Harry Goldstein, chairman of the Hamburg Jewish Community.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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384. Frieda Zeidshnur (center) poses with her parents Judit and Zelman before the war.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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385. Prewar portrait of the Zeidshnur family. Pictured are Frieda (center), Zelman, and Judit Zeidshnur.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Carl H. Rosner
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386. Arthur Lewy confers with a customer in his tobacco shop in Berlin.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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387. Arthur Lewy confers with a customer in his tobacco store in Berlin.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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388. Two young children exchange cigarette coupons on the street in Berlin.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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389. View of the commercial street in Berlin where Arthur Lewy's tobacco store was located.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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390. Six-year-old Heinz Stephan Lewy poses in the yard of the Baruch Auerbach Jewish orphanage in Berlin.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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391. Heinz Stephan Lewy poses with his father and stepmother in their home in Berlin, shortly before his departure on a Kindertransport to France.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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392. Portrait of Heinz Stephan Lewy taken near the time of his bar mitzvah.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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393. Group portrait of German-Jewish refugee children who were sent to France on a Kindertransport in the spring of 1939 on the steps of the Quincy-sous-Senart children's home near Paris.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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394. Jewish refugee youth who are students in an ORT leather working class at the Château de Chabannes children's home, pose on the front staircase of the home.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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395. Jewish refugee youth pose on the staircase of the Château de Chabannes children's home near Limoges.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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396. Heinz Stephan Lewy works in the kitchen of the Château de Chabannes OSE (Oeuvre de secours aux Enfants) children's home.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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397. Heinz Stephan Lewy poses with Louise Budnick at the Château de Chabannes OSE (Oeuvre de secours aux Enfants) home near Limoges.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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398. Portrait of Heinz Stephan Lewy in American army uniform.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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399. A notice sent by the American Consulate General in Berlin to Arthur Lewy and family, instructing them to report to the consulate on July 26, 1939 with all the required documents, in order to receive their American visas.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy
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400. A list of the documents required of those seeking to move to the United States, that was sent to Arthur Lewy by the American Consulate General in Berlin on July 24, 1939.
Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Stephan H. Lewy