Overview
- Brief Narrative
- Nazi Party Labor Day (Tag der Arbeit) 1935 pin obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII (1939-1945). Labor Day (also known as May Day) takes place on May 1 to celebrate laborers and the working classes. In April 1933, after the Nazi party took control of the German government, May 1 was appropriated as the “Day of National Work,” with all celebrations organized by the government. On May 2, the Nazi party banned all independent trade-unions, bringing them under state control of the German Labor Front. This style of mass-produced, cast metal pin is often referred to colloquially as a tinnie.
- Date
-
issue:
1935
commemoration: 1935 May 01
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Zaro Calabrese
- Markings
- front, top, embossed : TAG DER ARBEIT [LABOR DAY]
front, bottom center, embossed : 1935
back, center, embossed : M. NETT / FÜRTH i./ B. - Contributor
-
Subject:
Zaro Calabrese
- Biography
-
Rosario "Zaro" Calabrese served as a member of the 3rd US Cavalry Group, which was attached to the 4th Armored Division of the US Army. The 4th Division landed at Utah Beach in Normandy on July 11, 1944 and entered combat in France. They played a significant role in the breakout from the Normandy beachhead and the liberation of France in 1944, and then fought their way through Germany. On April 4, 1945, they liberated Ohrdruf concentration camp, a subcamp of Buchenwald, the first concentration camp to be liberated by American troops. General Eisenhower visited the camp on April 12. When Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945, the Division was in Czechoslovakia. The 4th was placed on occupation duty until inactivated on April 26, 1946. Zaro settled in New Jersey.
Physical Details
- Language
- German
- Classification
-
Identifying Artifacts
- Category
-
Badges
- Object Type
-
Lapel pins (aat)
- Genre/Form
- Badges.
- Physical Description
- Oval-shaped, silver-colored, die-struck, metal pin with a raised depicting three men below a band of German text. The man on left rests a large hammer on his shoulder, while the man in center holds a scroll and the man on right cradles a sheaf of wheat. Just below them is a Parteiadler, a stylized eagle with its head turned to the right, holding in its claws a wreath with a swastika in its center. The embossed year flanks the eagle's claws, and the wreath extends below edge of oval. A pin clasp is attached to the back center by a raised metal guide, and there is a maker's mark below it. The pin may be made from an aluminum alloy with a silver-washed surface.
- Dimensions
- overall: Height: 1.875 inches (4.763 cm) | Width: 1.375 inches (3.493 cm) | Depth: 0.250 inches (0.635 cm)
- Materials
- overall : metal
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- No restrictions on access
- Conditions on Use
- No restrictions on use
Keywords & Subjects
- Geographic Name
- Germany
Administrative Notes
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- The lapel pin was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Zaro Calabrese in 1995.
- Record last modified:
- 2024-10-03 11:35:28
- This page:
- http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn9023
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Also in Zaro Calabrese collection
The collection consists of Nazi pins and badges acquired by Zaro Calabrese during his military service in Europe during World War II (1939- 1945).
Date: 1936-1945
NSDAP membership badge found by Zaro Calabrese
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Nazi Party membership pin (Parteiabzeichen) obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII (1939-1945). All members of the Nazi Party wore these pins. They were typically worn on the lapels of their civilian clothing and some uniforms.
NSDAP membership badge found by Zaro Calabrese
Object
Nazi Party membership pin (Parteiabzeichen) obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII (1939-1945). All members of the Nazi Party wore these pins. They were typically worn on the lapels of their civilian clothing and some uniforms.
Nazi Party pin for Labor Day 1934 found by Zaro Calabrese
Object
Nazi Party Labor Day (Tag der Arbeit) 1934 pin obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII (1939-1945). Labor Day (also known as May Day) takes place on May 1 to celebrate laborers and the working classes. In April 1933, after the Nazi party took control of the German government, May 1 was appropriated as the “Day of National Work,” with all celebrations organized by the government. On May 2, the Nazi party banned all independent trade-unions, bringing them under state control of the German Labor Front. This style of mass-produced, cast metal pin is often referred to colloquially as a tinnie.
Nazi Party Congress badge from a rally in Weimar found by Zaro Calabrese
Object
Commemorative pin from a Nazi Party rally in Weimar, Germany, in July 1936. The rally marked the tenth anniversary of a Nazi Party Congress in Weimar in 1926. Before the Nazi Party came to national power in 1933, it held annual congresses such as the one in Weimar. This style of mass-produced, die-struck metal pin is often referred to colloquially as a tinnie.
Hitler Youth membership badge
Object
Button displaying the Nazi party insignia. Worn by all members most likely on the lapel and obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party SS badge for Social Member
Object
Button displaying the Nazi party insignia. Worn by all members most likely on the lapel and obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII. SS badge for Social Member [Foerdernde Mitglieder]
Nazi Party badge
Object
Button displaying the Nazi party insignia. Worn by all members most likely on the lapel and obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party badge
Object
Button displaying the Nazi party insignia. Possibly a Gauleiter badge. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Iron Cross medal, World War I
Object
Pin of the German Army of World War I. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party pin for Labor Day 1936 found by Zaro Calabrese
Object
Nazi Party Labor Day (Tag der Arbeit) 1936 pin acquired by Zaro Calabrese, an American soldier, in Europe during World War II (1939- 1945). Labor Day (also known as May Day) takes place on May 1 to celebrate laborers and the working classes. In April 1933, after the Nazi party took control of the German government, May 1 was appropriated as the “Day of National Work,” with all celebrations organized by the government. On May 2, the Nazi party banned all independent trade-unions, bringing them under state control of the German Labor Front. This style of mass-produced, die-struck metal pin is often referred to colloquially as a tinnie.
Commemorative pin for Martin Luther's Anniversary Day 1933
Object
It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party pin
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia; possibly a war service pin. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party SS member stickpin
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party German Labor Front stickpin
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
Nazi Party member stickpin
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia; it was possibly worn by a Gauleiter. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
German Worker's Union pin
Object
German Worker's Union pin obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
NSFK: Nazi Flying Corps pin
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
SS badge for Social Member [Foerdernde Mitglieder]
Object
Pin displaying the Nazi party insignia. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
German civilian war service medallion
Object
War service medal awarded to civilians who performed with merit tasks connected with production of war materials. The ribbon was black with white side stripes and adjoining red edges; in center of ribbon was a narrow red stripe. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.
German civilian war service medallion
Object
War service medal awarded to civilians who performed with merit tasks connected with production of war materials. The ribbon was black with white side stripes and adjoining red edges; in center of ribbon was a narrow red stripe. It was obtained during Zaro Calabrese's service in Europe in WWII.