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Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 187 Collections and/or Records:

Visitors Pass to Wittenauer Sanatorium, 1941 September 29

 Item
Identifier: B333.02.0001.0002.00003
Abstract

Visitors pass to admit Marie Loewenstein to Wittenauer Heilstätten, Wittenauer Sanatorium, to visit Dr. Max Loewenstein. Front side is an official printed and typed pass signed by the public prosecutor and including the contact information for the Wittenauer Sanatorium. The back is a list of rules for visitors to the Wittenauer Sanatorium.

Dates: 1941 September 29

Walter Stoll, 1942-1947

 File
Identifier: B111.09.0009.0026
Abstract

Folder contains copies of transcribed letters from 1942-1947. Correspondence was saved by donor’s father, Max Stoll, and contains letters from family members in Germany and Theresienstadt. Collection also contains a poem written by the donor’s aunt, Thekla Stoll titled Encounter. The same poem was saved by Maria Lowenstein and is in the Lowenstein collection, B333.

Dates: 1942-1947

Winograd Family in Poland, 1919-1952

 File
Identifier: B266.03.0002.0011
Scope and Contents

Contains receipts and correspondence before and after the Holocaust, and documents regarding immigration of family survivors to Israel and the United States.

Dates: 1919-1952

Winograd Judd Family Papers

 Collection
Identifier: B266
Abstract Abraham Winograd immigrated to the United State in 1909. He had been born in Biala, Poland in 1889 and died in Denver in 1971. His future wife, Matilda Pinsky had come earlier with her parents and brother from Lithuania. The couple had two children, Eleanor, born in Denver in 1916 and died in Greeley in 2007, and Harold Winograd, born in Denver in 1921 and died in Greeley in 1971. Eleanor Winograd married Morris Judd, who was born in Denver in 1916 and died in Boulder in 2008. Morris was a...
Dates: 1890-2013

Yakov Neyman, 2008

 Item — Object B398.01.00021: Series B398.01 [Barcode: U186023282558]
Identifier: B398.01.00021
Abstract

Framed drawing of Yakov Neyman by artist Deborah Howard. Drawing is in black and white, he wears a patterned collared shirt and a baseball cap. Yakov Neyman is looking towards the viewer.

Dates: 2008

Zivin and Joselewitz Families Correspondence

 Collection
Identifier: B268
Abstract

The Zivin and Joselewitz were Russian Jewish immigrant families who settled in Denver, Colorado. Collection contains correspondence, playing cards, news clippings, and Russian booklets related to the Zivin and Joselewitz families from 1900.

Dates: circa 1900-1982