Overview
- Brief Narrative
- Child's green silk long-sleeved smocked dress. Part of a collection illustrating the experiences of Isaak and Rose Salzberg and their daughters Ruth and Jutta who immigrated to the United States in November 1938 from Hamburg, Germany.
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ruth Salzberg Horwitz
Physical Details
- Classification
-
Clothing and Dress
- Category
-
Children's clothing
- Object Type
-
Child's dress (lcsh)
- Physical Description
- Child's green silk long-sleeved smocked dress with bottons along the back of the neck.
- Dimensions
- overall: Height: 24.880 inches (63.195 cm) | Width: 43.000 inches (109.22 cm)
- Materials
- overall : silk
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- No restrictions on access
- Conditions on Use
- No restrictions on use
Administrative Notes
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- The dress was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2011 by Ruth Salzberg Horwitz.
- Record last modified:
- 2024-10-03 12:50:20
- This page:
- http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn546827
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Also in Ruth Salzberg Horwitz collection
The collection consists of a trunk, typewriter with lid, and child's skirt, bonnet, ribbon, and dress. The collection also includes documents, photographs, and correspondence, as well as drawings created by the donor as a child.
Handmade booklet of drawings by Ruth Salzberg
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Drawings in pencil and crayon handbound into a small booklet with a piece of red yarn. The drawings were created by Ruth Salzberg as a child.
Drawing of a Torah scroll
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Pencil and crayon drawing on paper done by Ruth Salzberg as a child. The drawing depicts a Torah scroll with a floral border.
Drawing
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Pencil and crayon drawing on the front and back sides of a postcard, done by Ruth Salzberg as a child. The drawing depicts people, flowers and furniture.
Drawing
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Pencil and crayon drawing done by Ruth Salzberg as a child, depicting flowers as well as symbols of Rosh Hashanah such as apples, the shofar, and a Torah scroll.
Drawing
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Pencil and crayon drawing depicting depicting people, furniture and Shabbat candles as well as the word "MAMAMAMA!" on one side.
Drawing
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Pencil and crayon drawing folded into a homemade card with writing on one side and a drawing of a house on the other. The drawing was created by Ruth Salzberg as a child.
Drawing
Object
Pencil and crayon drawing depicting a person standing by a table and two chairs. The drawing was created by Ruth Salzberg as a child.
Drawing
Object
Pencil and crayon drawing depicting two children bringing flowers to their mother in bed. The title reads "Guten Morgen Mama. Hier nim[m] doch." An inscription on the back reads "Liebe Mutti." The drawing was created by Ruth Salzberg as a child.
Collage of a flower pot
Object
Collage depicting a flower pot with a white and red flower and leaves made of pieces of paper adhered to black cardboard.
Drawing
Object
Pencil and crayon drawing created by Ruth Salzberg as a child. The drawing depicts the sounds "Mimi", "Mi", "Ma" and "Mo" along with illustrations for each.
Ruth Salzberg Horwitz papers
Document
The Ruth Salzberg Horwitz papers consist of biographical materials, photographs, and printed materials documenting the Salzberg family of Hamburg, Germany, their immigration to the United States in 1938, and the family members who remained in Europe and were killed in the Holocaust. Biographical materials include identification papers, student records, immigration records, and personal narratives. Photographs depict Ruth and her family and their home in Hamburg. Printed materials primarily document the Salzberg family’s life in the United States.
Trunk
Object
Large trunk, part of a collection relating to the experiences of Isaak and Rose Salzberg and their daughters Ruth and Jutta who immigrated to the United States in November 1938 from Hamburg, Germany.
Typewriter with lid
Object
German Seidal & Naumann-Dresden Erika typewriter with detachable lid. Lid has luggage tag from the White Star Line affixed to the outside along with the name and address of Salzberg and the name of the ship he was on; the Queen Mary.
Child's skirt and bonnet set
Object
Child's red skirt with velvet trim, along with matching bonnet. Part of a collection illustrating the experiences of Isaak and Rose Salzberg and their daughters Ruth and Jutta who immigrated to the United States in November 1938 from Hamburg, Germany.