Difference between revisions of "Category:Chateau de La Guette (subject)"

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* [[Holocaust Refugee Children, France]] --
* [[Holocaust Refugee Children, France]] --
See [https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7001&context=etd Searching for Home at Château de la Guette and Beyond] (2018 dissertation by Sarah Schneider, University of Central Florida)


== Overview ==  
== Overview ==  


Chateau de La Guette was a mansion owned by Edouard and Germaine de Rothschild, located near Paris, France, which served as a home for around 134 Jewish refugee children from Germany and Austria. Fifty-seven of the children were female and seventy-seven were male. About sixty-six lived in Austria, primarily in or around Vienna, prior to their departure for France, and about sixty-eight of the children lived in Germany prior to leaving for France.
Chateau de la Guette was a mansion owned by Edouard and Germaine de Rothschild located in the Seine-et-Marne district near Paris. Between March 1939 and May 1940, la Guette served as a home for 134 Jewish refugee children between the ages of nine and fifteen. Fifty-seven of the children were female and seventy-seven were male. About sixty-six lived in Austria, primarily in or around Vienna, prior to their departure for France, and about sixty-eight of the children lived in Germany prior to leaving for France.
 
The home was a major project of Le comite israelite pour les enfants verrant d'Allemagne et l'Europe Centrale, an assistance committee founded by Germaine de Rothschild in the wake of the Kristallnacht pogrom, to get Jewish children out of Nazi Germany and Austria. The children arrived in March and April 1939, in convoys from the Palatinate, Berlin and Vienna. La Guette was directed first by Willy Katz and subsequently by Ernst Jablonski.
 
In the summer of 1939, nine fourteen and fifteen-year-old girls were sent to a boarding school in St. Briac (Bretagne) to learn French. The other children remained in la Guette until it was evacuated in May 1940 to the village of La Bourboule in the Massif Central region where it was directed by Flore Loinger, wife of Georges Loinger. Henry Pohoryles served as an educator. There, the children were housed at the Hotel des Anglais. Some of the older girls worked at the hotel and other establishments in the village, while the older boys were hired as farmhands or apprenticed to local aritsans. Others were sent to a boarding school in Clermont-Ferrand to further their education. At the end of 1941, after the departure of the Rothschilds for the U.S., the home was integrated into the OSE network, and the children were transferred to various centers. In 1942, two groups of children were allowed to emigrate to the U.S. via Lisbon. Of those who remained in France, ten were later deported and all but one perished. A few managed to escape to Switzerland or joined the resistance, and the rest survived on false papers, hidden in monasteries or with French families until the end of the war.
 
 
[[File:La Guette Children.jpg|600px]]
 
Group portrait of Jewish refugee children at the Château de la Guette children's home. Back row left to right: [[Heinrich Rosenthal]], [[Markus Lustig]], [[Karl Schwarz]], [[Hans Blum]], [[Herbert Ruhm]], [[Arthur Pacht]], [[Renate Tauber]], [[Ursula Matzdorff]], [[Lotte Szampanier]], Henri Pohoryles (teacher), [[Erika Reiss]], [[Ruth Klopstock]], [[Lore Heinemann]], [[Suzie Guttmann]], [[Gisela Edel]], [[Ellen Rosen]], [[Minnie Engel]] and [[Ingeborg Rosenthal]]. Seated and kneeling: [[Raoul Kunstadt]], [[Ludwig Scheucher]], [[Eduard Weiss]], [[Kurt Moses]], [[Heinz Alexander]], [[Werner Neuberger]], [[Hans Schoenfrank]], [[Berty Heiberg]], [[Marcel Kamil]], [[Trautchen Feith]], [[Ilse Bodenheimer]], [[Eva Guttmann]], and [[Gertrude Weihsmann]].
 
 
[[File:La Guette Children2.jpg|600px]]
 
A group of girls stand in a line holding flowers in the Chateau de La Guette children's home. From right to left: xxx, Ellen Schwerin, [[Helli Buchholz]], [[Rita Buchholz]], [[Berty Heiberg]] (avec le bandeau blanc), xxx. (USHMM).
 
== The La Guette Children (AJPN List) ==
 
In 1939, 134 German and Austrian Children arrived at the Chateau.
This AJPN list is incomplete. See the 1940 JDC list ([[Refugees, France]])
 
At least 12 La Guette Children were arrested and deported, nine of them perished.
 
29 La Guette Children escaped to Switzerland.
 
 
* + [[Irene Abraham (F / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France>
* [[Heinz Alexander (M / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] <Hidden in France> <Active in the Resistance>
* Ernst Appenzeller (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France> <Leader of the Resistance>
* Martin Axelrad (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France>
 
* [[Erika Felicitas Beyth (F / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor]] <Leader of the Resistance>
* [[Hans Blum (M / Austria, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland / birthdate changed)
* [[Ilse Bodenheimer (F / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Spain/Portugal/Palestine)
* [[Helli Buchholz (F / Austria, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Spain/Portugal/United States)
* [[Rita Buchholz (F / Austria, 1929), Holocaust survivor]] (Spain/Portugal/United States)
 
* [[Gisela Edel / Naomi Elath (F / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Spain/Portugal/Palestine)
* [[Minnie Engel (F / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Trautchen Feith (F / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Eva Guttmann (F / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Suzie Guttmann (F / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Berty Heiberg (F / Austria, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland / birthdate changed)
* [[Lore Heinemann (F / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland)
* [[Daisy Hermann (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Marcel Kamil (M / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Ruth Klopstock (F / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Raoul Kunstadt (M / Austria, 1927), Holocaust survivor
 
* [[Markus Lustig (M / Austria, 1928), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Hilde Mann (F / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] - 16 Jan 1927 - Rodalben/Pfalz (D)
* [[Ursula Matzdorff (F / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland)
* [[Werner Matzdorff (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Alice Menkes (F / Austria, 1929), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Herbert Menkes (M / Austria, 1925-1942), Holocaust victim]] (Deported)
* [[Kurt Moses (M / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Werner Moses (M / Germany, 1929), Holocaust survivor
* [[Edith Moses]] (??)
 
* [[Werner Neuberger (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor]] <Labor camp / Survived>
 
* [[Arthur Pacht (M / Austria, 1925), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Georg Walter Pacht (M / Austria, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland) - 11 Jan 1925 - Vienna (A)
* [[Erika Reiss]] - 21 May 1927 - Vienna (A) (??)
* [[Ellen Rosen (F / Germany, 1926-1942), Holocaust victim]] (Deported)
* [[Heinrich Rosenthal (M / Austria, 1925-1942), Holocaust victim]] (Deported)
* [[Ingeborg Rosenthal (F / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland) - 13 Mar 1927 - Potsdam/Bornstadt
* [[Edith Rosenthal (F / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland) - 26 Nov 1928 - Potsdam/Bornstadt.>
* [[Herbert Ruhm (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Ludwig Scheucher (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor]] (Deported / Survived)
* [[Hans Simon Schonfrank (M / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Karl Schwarz (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland)
* [[Ellen Schwerin (F / Germany, 1929), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Ruth Strauss / Ruth Schloss (F / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor]]
* [[Lotte Szampanier (F / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Renate Tauber (F / Austria, 1927), Holocaust survivor]]
 
* [[Gertrude Weihsmann (F / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland)
* [[Eduard Weiss (M / Austria, 1927), Holocaust survivor]] (Switzerland)


== External links ==  
== External links ==  


* [https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7001&context=etd Thesis]
* [https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7001&context=etd Thesis]

Latest revision as of 11:21, 17 April 2023

Chateau de La Guette (see Holocaust Children Studies)

See Searching for Home at Château de la Guette and Beyond (2018 dissertation by Sarah Schneider, University of Central Florida)

Overview

Chateau de la Guette was a mansion owned by Edouard and Germaine de Rothschild located in the Seine-et-Marne district near Paris. Between March 1939 and May 1940, la Guette served as a home for 134 Jewish refugee children between the ages of nine and fifteen. Fifty-seven of the children were female and seventy-seven were male. About sixty-six lived in Austria, primarily in or around Vienna, prior to their departure for France, and about sixty-eight of the children lived in Germany prior to leaving for France.

The home was a major project of Le comite israelite pour les enfants verrant d'Allemagne et l'Europe Centrale, an assistance committee founded by Germaine de Rothschild in the wake of the Kristallnacht pogrom, to get Jewish children out of Nazi Germany and Austria. The children arrived in March and April 1939, in convoys from the Palatinate, Berlin and Vienna. La Guette was directed first by Willy Katz and subsequently by Ernst Jablonski.

In the summer of 1939, nine fourteen and fifteen-year-old girls were sent to a boarding school in St. Briac (Bretagne) to learn French. The other children remained in la Guette until it was evacuated in May 1940 to the village of La Bourboule in the Massif Central region where it was directed by Flore Loinger, wife of Georges Loinger. Henry Pohoryles served as an educator. There, the children were housed at the Hotel des Anglais. Some of the older girls worked at the hotel and other establishments in the village, while the older boys were hired as farmhands or apprenticed to local aritsans. Others were sent to a boarding school in Clermont-Ferrand to further their education. At the end of 1941, after the departure of the Rothschilds for the U.S., the home was integrated into the OSE network, and the children were transferred to various centers. In 1942, two groups of children were allowed to emigrate to the U.S. via Lisbon. Of those who remained in France, ten were later deported and all but one perished. A few managed to escape to Switzerland or joined the resistance, and the rest survived on false papers, hidden in monasteries or with French families until the end of the war.


La Guette Children.jpg

Group portrait of Jewish refugee children at the Château de la Guette children's home. Back row left to right: Heinrich Rosenthal, Markus Lustig, Karl Schwarz, Hans Blum, Herbert Ruhm, Arthur Pacht, Renate Tauber, Ursula Matzdorff, Lotte Szampanier, Henri Pohoryles (teacher), Erika Reiss, Ruth Klopstock, Lore Heinemann, Suzie Guttmann, Gisela Edel, Ellen Rosen, Minnie Engel and Ingeborg Rosenthal. Seated and kneeling: Raoul Kunstadt, Ludwig Scheucher, Eduard Weiss, Kurt Moses, Heinz Alexander, Werner Neuberger, Hans Schoenfrank, Berty Heiberg, Marcel Kamil, Trautchen Feith, Ilse Bodenheimer, Eva Guttmann, and Gertrude Weihsmann.


La Guette Children2.jpg

A group of girls stand in a line holding flowers in the Chateau de La Guette children's home. From right to left: xxx, Ellen Schwerin, Helli Buchholz, Rita Buchholz, Berty Heiberg (avec le bandeau blanc), xxx. (USHMM).

The La Guette Children (AJPN List)

In 1939, 134 German and Austrian Children arrived at the Chateau.

This AJPN list is incomplete. See the 1940 JDC list (Refugees, France)

At least 12 La Guette Children were arrested and deported, nine of them perished.

29 La Guette Children escaped to Switzerland.


  • + [[Irene Abraham (F / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France>
  • Heinz Alexander (M / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France> <Active in the Resistance>
  • Ernst Appenzeller (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France> <Leader of the Resistance>
  • Martin Axelrad (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor <Hidden in France>

External links

Pages in category "Chateau de La Guette (subject)"

The following 80 pages are in this category, out of 80 total.

1