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Silver ice cream serving spoon with floral engraving saved by young German Jewish refugee

Object | Accession Number: 2015.334.1

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    Silver ice cream serving spoon with floral engraving saved by young German Jewish refugee

    Overview

    Brief Narrative
    Silver ice cream spoon from a set of twelve brought by Ingrid Neuhaus, 18, when she was sent for safety from Hamburg, Germany, to Great Britain in Feburary 1939. She joined her younger siblings Annelore and Hans who had been sent on the Kindertransport in January. This set of spoons was the only valuable item she was able to take out of Germany.
    Date
    emigration:  1939 February
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Vally Kovary
    Contributor
    Subject: Ingrid Kovary
    Biography
    Ingrid Neuhaus Kovary (1921-2009) was born in Hamburg, Germany, on 2 August 1921, to Julius and Marie Eisner Neuhaus. She had two siblings, Annelore, born 23 September 1923, and Hans, born 20 July 1925. Her father was a leather merchant, and had a successful import-export business in Hamburg, and the family was Jewish, but assimilated. Following the rise of the Nazis and Hitler's appointment as chancellor in 1933, the Neuhaus family joined a synagogue in reaction to the growing anti-Semitism in the city. That same year, Julius' business was seized by the Nazis, and as anti-Semitic regulations increased during the following years, so did the family's hardships. By 1938, the parents made plans to emigrate, and sent their children ahead on Kinderstransports, with Annelore and Hans arriving in Britain in January 1939, and Ingrid in the following month. Julius and Marie were unable to leave Germany, however, and in November 1941, were deported to the Minsk ghetto, in the German-occupied Soviet Union, and they were subsequently murdered. During the war years in Britain, Ingrid attended secretarial school, and in 1945, went to work for the United States War Department in the Civil Censorship Division. In 1947, after receiving sponsorship from the parents of a friend of hers, Ingrid emigrated to the United States and settled in Ohio. She attended Ohio State University, and it was there that she met Tom Kovary, who had immigrated from Czechoslovakia, and who she married in 1950. The Kovarys had two daughters, and relocated to New York, where Tom Kovary became a professor of Spanish and Linguistics at the State University of New York in Cortland, NY. Ingrid Kovary passed away in September 2009.

    Physical Details

    Classification
    Household Utensils
    Category
    Flatware
    Object Type
    Serving spoons (aat)
    Physical Description
    large silver spoon with elaborate pattern on handle, and floral and bird design etched onto inside of spoon bowl
    Dimensions
    overall:
    Materials
    overall : silver

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    No restrictions on access

    Administrative Notes

    Provenance
    The silver ice-cream spoon was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2015 by Vally Kovary, the daughter of Ingrid Neuhaus.
    Record last modified:
    2022-07-28 20:13:45
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn526678

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