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Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies Guide to English-Language ...

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USHMM, <strong>Center</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Advanced</strong> <strong>Holocaust</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> � 135<br />

Provenance: During his service with the OCCWC, Drexel Sprecher collected the briefs as<br />

part of his duties. In 1986 he allowed the USHMM Archives <strong>to</strong> copy the material, after<br />

which the Museum returned it <strong>to</strong> him.<br />

<strong>Language</strong>: <strong>English</strong> 1946–1947<br />

2.5 linear inches<br />

Source of Acquisition: Drexel Sprecher<br />

Finding aid: Table of contents<br />

RG-10.038 --- Shlomo Goldberg Papers<br />

This collection contains the diary of Shlomo Goldberg and other documents relating <strong>to</strong><br />

his life in Europe and the United States. Goldberg was a native of Luck, Poland, but in<br />

the wake of the Nazi conquest of western Polan he fled <strong>to</strong> Byelorussia in the Soviet<br />

Union where he worked as an engineer. Due <strong>to</strong> his location and occupation during the<br />

war, his life was spared.<br />

Provenance: Shlomo Goldberg started the diary after the end of World War II. The<br />

pho<strong>to</strong>graphs of his family in Poland were brought <strong>to</strong> the United States at the time of his<br />

emigration. Other materials were collected up until the time of his death.<br />

<strong>Language</strong>: <strong>English</strong> 1945–1991<br />

1 linear inch<br />

Source of Acquisition: Brenda Senders<br />

RG-10.025 --- Emil Singer Papers<br />

This collection contains correspondence between Emil Singer and Philip Ellovich<br />

concerning the emigration of the Singer family from Austria. The letters written by Philip<br />

Ellovich in the 1940s and 1950s concern his search <strong>for</strong> Emil and Grete Singer after<br />

World War II. Also included is an article written by Ed Leffingwell concerning an<br />

exhibition of Singer‘s artwork at the Insignia Gallery in Youngs<strong>to</strong>wn, Ohio.<br />

Provenance: Philip Ellovich collected the correspondence during and after World War II.<br />

Biographical/his<strong>to</strong>rical note: Emil Singer, a Jew of Austrian citizenship and an etcher,<br />

was born on August 17, 1881, in Gaya, Moravia. He resided with his wife, Grete, in<br />

Vienna until their deportation <strong>to</strong> Poland on May 12, 1942. Documents in the collection<br />

suggest that the Singers were killed in the Izbica camp in Poland.<br />

<strong>Language</strong>s: German, <strong>English</strong> 1939–1955<br />

.25 linear inches<br />

Source of Acquisition: Joseph Ellovich<br />

Restrictions: Published materials protected under copyright

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