Matches 51 to 79 of 79
# | Thumb | Description | # Items | Linked to |
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51 | Living At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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52 | Growing up in Roitzheim in the 50s. Roitzheim is located just outside the town of Euskirchen, Rheinland-Westfalen, Germany. The closest large city is Köln (Cologne). In this time period Roitzheim had less than 500 inhabitants who were almost all farmers. Children made do with simple things to amuse themselves. |
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53 | Living At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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54 | Hans Harms - WWII Wounds Album chronicling the time Hans spent in the hospital and in rehabilitation as a result of the wounds he received in action during the Second World War in Italy. |
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55 | Hans Harms Family - Misc. Pictures - Album 1 |
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56 | HARMS, Wilhelmine - Funeral Various pictures from the funeral at Ebenezer Cemetery in Jasper, Texas. |
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57 | Living At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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58 | Jo and Caroline at Camp Honey Creek 2011 Jo and Caroline's second year at Camp Honeycreek in the beautiful Texas hill country. The camp is located just outside of Hunt, Texas. |
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59 | Johannes Harms - World War I. Various pictures of Johannes HARMS while in the army during WWI. |
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60 | Living At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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61 | John H. Goodwin House Pictures of the "John H. Goodwin House". |
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62 | Jürgen Schöne's Ancestor Pass ( The Ahnenpaß (literally, "ancestor passport") documented the Aryan lineage of citizens of Nazi Germany. It was one of the forms of the Aryan certificate (Ariernachweis). The term "Aryan" in this context was used in a sense widely accepted in scientific racism of the time, which assumed a Caucasian race which was sub-divided into Semitic, Hamitic and Aryan (Japhetic) subraces, the latter corresponding to the Indo-European ethno-linguistic phylum. Nevertheless, the de facto primary objective was to create extensive profiling based on racial data. The investigation for lineage was not obligatory as it was a major undertaking to research the original documents for birth and marriage. Many Nazi followers had already begun to research their lineage even before law required it (soon after the NSDAP took power on 30 January 1933). One important law which was issued on 7 April 1933 (after the Nazi assumption of power) was called the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, and it required all public servants to be of "Aryan" descent. The law, however, did not define the term "Aryan" and a subsequent regulation was issued on 11 April as the first legal attempt by the Third Reich to define who was, and who was not, a Jew. The implementing decree followed the pre-Nazi trend found in the Aryan Paragraph and read in pertinent part that: „Als nicht arisch gilt, wer von nicht arischen, insbesondere jüdischen Eltern oder Großeltern abstammt. Es genügt, wenn ein Elternteil oder ein Großelternteil nicht arisch ist. Dies ist insbesondere dann anzunehmen, wenn ein Elternteil oder ein Großelternteil der jüdischen Religion angehört hat.“ Those are not Aryans who descend from non-Aryan, especially Jewish, parents or grandparents. It is sufficient (grounds for exclusion) for one parent or grandparent to be non-Aryan. This is particularly assumable if a parent or grandparent adhered to the Jewish religion. The Ahnenpaß stated that "wherever they might live in the world" Aryans were "e.g. an Englishman or a Swede, a Frenchman or a Czech, a Pole or an Italian". The applicable fields were later enlarged under different laws to include lawyers, teachers, medical doctors and finally requiring a proven Aryan lineage even to attend high school or to get married. Usually, the lineage was investigated four generations back. The Ahnenpass cost .60 Reichsmark. The Ahnenpass was not public record; the document was shown where required and returned to the bearer. |
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63 | Landesparteitag Greifswald, 2 Nov 2013 |
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64 | Lavangsfjorden, Norway - Summer of 2013. 70 years after the crash, the wreckage is still at the bottom of the fjord. Divers explored the crash site and took these amazing pictures of the wreckage of the plane. Photo credit: Frank Bang |
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65 | Letter - Edna Cook from Lula Lankford A letter, dated July 5, 1938 from Lula Leake Lankford to her sister Edna Leake Cook. |
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66 | Letter - Leake Felton Pierce from R D McCollum Letter dated Oct 27, 1932 from R D McCollum to Felton Pierce Leake |
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67 | Narvik Soldier's Cemetery at Narvik, Norway |
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68 | Oscar Garza Pictures from Graduation and his stint in the US Marine Corps. |
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69 | Ralf OEHLMAN Miscellaneous snapshots through the years. |
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70 | Robert and Ann's day at the Zoo. An outing to the Houston Zoo with mom, grandma and grandpa. |
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71 | Robert and Ann's Kindergarten graduation Pictures taken in May 2012 when Robert and Ann graduated from their Kindergarten class and were promoted into 1st grade. |
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72 | Service Record - COOK, Donald E. Copy of Service Record of Donald E. Cook. |
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73 | Sombreretillo Views of Sombreretillo and the surrounding coutryside |
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74 | Special edition of the magazine Magazine courtesy of the "friends of Tanja and Mirko". |
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75 | The Harms family in print Miscellaneous newspaper and magazine article featuring members of the Harms family. |
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76 | The Soldier's Cemetery at Narvik, Norway. In the Soldier's Cemetery of Narvik, Norway, the casualties of "Gebirgsjaegerregimentes 139" and crews of the destroyer flotilla Bonte found their final resting place. Also buried here are some of the recovered victims of the 1944 crash of a German Luftwaffe plane carrying service members back to Germany. The cemetery was started by the German Wehrmacht in 1940 and is a part of the city cemetery of Narvik, which is located near the Rombakken fjord. The cemetery is maintained by "The Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge e. V." which is a humanitarian organization which is charged by the Federal Republic of taking care of registering the German war dead abroad and to ensuring that it is updated and monitored. The German Public Alliance advises relatives of war grave care, supervises public and private sites, supports international cooperation and assists within the sector of war grave care and fostering the engagement of young people in the last resting-place of the war-dead. |
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77 | The tragedy at Banak, Norway. Pictures and documents chronicling Erika's tenure as a "Stabshelferin" in the German Wehrmacht. In 1944 Erika was a passenger in a Focke-Wulf FW 200 C-4 Condor flying back to Germany. There were 46 passengers on board, mostly German Wehrmacht nurses. The plane was enroute from Finland to Narvik, Norway with a stopover in Banak. After taking off from Banak airport the plane was either shot down or had a structural malfunction and went down near Lavangsfjorden, approximately 40km west of Narvik. All 46 passengers and the crew of 5 including the pilot, Leutnant Hans Gilbert perished. 41 of the bodies were recovered and are buried at Narvik, Norway. Erika was one of the recovered victims. |
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78 | Living At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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79 | Wilma - 89th Birthday Wilma surrounded by her great-grandchildren for her birthday. |
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