Schuckman, Walter (Walther)
Biography
Walter (also spelled Walther) Schuckman was a German Holocaust survivor that is associated with the Loeb family. He was involved in WWII in Holland. During the war, Walter took on a false identity to protect himself, and kept up the ruse for years. He was imprisoned by Nazi guards and spent six weeks in solitary confinement before being released due to intervention by relatives. Walter divorced his wife sometime between 1939 and 1945 because she had a child with another man. He moved to London after the war, received degrees in German as well as several other languages, and worked as a teacher and tutor for language. Corresponence between Walter and the Loeb family gives us Walter's firsthand accounts of the Holocaust and WWII.
Found in 14 Collections and/or Records:
Box 1, circa 1890-1987
Box contains documents, letters, newspaper clippings, and photographs related to the Loeb family.
Letter from Ernest Loeb to Bella and Emil Loeb, circa 1946
Letter from Ernest Loeb to family (copy), 16 June 1945
Letter from Ernest Loeb to family (original), 16 June 1945
Letter from Walter Schuckman to Emil Loeb, 7 July 1945
Letter from Walter Schuckman to Emil Loeb, 30 January 1946
Letter from Walter Schuckman to Emil Loeb, 2 March 1946
Letter from Walter Schuckman to Ernest Loeb, 16 September 1945
This is a letter written by Walter Schuckman to Ernest Loeb, written on September 16, 1945 at the St. Paul's Cathedral Choir School in London, England. In the letter, Walter asks Ernest whether or not Ernest had received his previous letter, and says that he is also going to write to Ernest's brother Frank Loeb that day. He also says that Frank had sent Walter a clipping of Ernest's "report about D."