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Letter from Sol Mayer in New York to Jules Kaufmann in Havana concerning the emigration of the Hermanns family from Germany.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 31678

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    Letter from Sol Mayer in New York to Jules Kaufmann in Havana concerning the emigration of the Hermanns family from Germany.
    Letter from Sol Mayer in New York to Jules Kaufmann in Havana concerning the emigration of the Hermanns family from Germany.

Julius Hermanns, Sol Mayer's brother-in-law, was interned in Buchenwald and released only a few days before this letter was written.

    Overview

    Caption
    Letter from Sol Mayer in New York to Jules Kaufmann in Havana concerning the emigration of the Hermanns family from Germany.

    Julius Hermanns, Sol Mayer's brother-in-law, was interned in Buchenwald and released only a few days before this letter was written.
    Photographer
    Max Reid
    Date
    1939 April 19
    Locale
    New York City, NY United States
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Werner & Inge Berg Katzenstein, Photo by Max Reid

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Werner & Inge Berg Katzenstein
    Source Record ID: Collections: 1989.305.16

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Julius Hermanns was a Jewish textile merchant in Moenchengladbach, Germany. He was arrested in September 1939, deported to Dachau and then transferred to Buchenwald. In mid-April 1939, having agreed to emigrate immediately, he was released. His brother-in-law in New York arranged the purchase of a Cuban landing certificate for him, and Julius booked passage on the St. Louis. He was unable to pay, however, for additional tickets for his wife, Grete, and teenage daughter, Hilde, so they remained in Germany. When the St. Louis was forced to return to Europe, Julius was given refuge in France, where he hoped his wife and daughter could join him. When France declared war on Germany, Julius was arrested as an enemy alien and later evacuated to the south of France. He was sent to Saint Cyprien, an internment camp near the Spanish border, where he was detained with some 50 other St. Louis passengers. After transfers to the Gurs and Les Milles internment camps, Julius was sent with 235 other prisoners to the Drancy transit camp in Paris on August 11, 1942. Three days later, he was deported to his death in Auschwitz. His wife, daughter, and other relatives were deported to the Riga ghetto on December 11, 1941, where they were probably killed.
    Record last modified:
    2008-07-18 00:00:00
    This page:
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