Overview
- Date
-
commemoration:
1914-1918
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Walter Feibelman
Physical Details
- Classification
-
Military Insignia
- Category
-
Medals
- Object Type
-
Medals, Austro-Hungarian (lcsh)
- Physical Description
- Circular form constructed of metal; recto, at center is raised "1914-1918" and "GRIENAUEL" surrounded by wreath; verso, at center is raised image of eagle holding shield with extended wings, below image is raised text that reads "FUR OSTERREICH"; attached to metal body is triangular red and white stripe ribbon
- Dimensions
- overall:
overall: Height: 3.120 inches (7.925 cm) | Width: 2.120 inches (5.385 cm) - Materials
- overall : metal, cloth
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- No restrictions on access
- Conditions on Use
- No restrictions on use
Administrative Notes
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- The medal was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1998 by Walter Feibelman, the son of Bernhard Feibelman.
- Record last modified:
- 2024-10-03 13:12:36
- This page:
- https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn12668
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Also in Walter Fiebelman collection
The Walter Feibelman papers consist of biographical materials, subject files, and objects documenting the Feibelmann family’s life in Berlin, immigration to the United States, and postwar search for their lost relatives.
Date: 1917-1993
Walter Feibelman papers
Document
The Walter Feibelman papers consist of biographical materials and subject files documenting the Feibelmann family’s life in Berlin, immigration to the United States, and postwar search for their lost relatives. Biographical materials include military records documenting Bernhard Feibelmann’s World War I service, Walter’s student records, his parents’ passports, and tracing documents following Otto and Addi Feibelmann and Emma Klein. Subject files include a photograph of the Theodor Herzl Schule, Hamburg- American Line records about the Feibelmanns’ passage to America, ration tickets for bread, two empty envelopes, and Walter’s personal memories of his childhood in Berlin and immigration to America, "Some Personal Recollections of the Years 1933-1941."
Medal
Object
WWI service medal, known as the Hindenburg Cross, awarded to commemorate the distinguished deeds of the German people during the WW I. The medal was established by President von Hindenburg in July 1934 to honor German participants of the Great War. Individuals had to apply to the government to receive the medal. This versions of the medal, with crossed swords, was awarded to combatants. It was the only medal issued by the Third Reich to honor veterans of that war.
Medal
Object