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Gordon family papers

The collection consists of official and private documents belonging to the members of the Gordon, Auerbach, Heimann and Buchan families, including their correspondence and photographs. The letters between Alfred and Lore Gordon, most of which were written between June 1938 and January 1946, represent about two fifths of the entire collection. In addition there is a large body of correspondence between Lore and her parents in Germany, including some letters and Red Cross telegrams sent during the war. <p>The collection contains papers created and collected by Alfred and Lore Gordon, two German-Jewish refugees from Elberfeld (Wuppertal). Alfred Gordon né Auerbach (1916-2003) came to Britain in 1939 with the help of a relative who was already in the country. With Lore Heimann (1923-2020), whom he knew from the Jewish Sports Club in Elberfeld (Wuppertal), he arranged for several children to escape to Britain, including Lore and her sister Ursula. Alfred and Lore maintained contact in Britain and married in July 1942. They had three children: Richard (b. 1947), Margaret (b. 1952) and Barrie (b. 1954). </p><p>In addition to the papers of the immediate Gordon family, the collection contains materials on Alfred’s and Lore’s extended family, the Auerbachs and the Heimanns respectively. The Auerbachs were Alfred’s parents, Max (1866-1919) and Paula (1877-1950), and brothers, Eugen (1898-1944) and Rudolf (1900-1960). Max Auerbach had owned a business selling flour and animal feed; after he died, Alfred's brother Rudolf took over Max’s role. Paula, Rudolf and Claire, Rudolf's wife, came to Britain with Alfred’s help, while Eugen fought in the French Foreign Legion before being captured and sent to Auschwitz. </p><p>The Heimanns were Josef (1893-1961) and Carla (1891-1954), Lore’s parents, her brother Albert (1921-1995) and her sister Ursula (1926-2015). Josef and Carla had met at the Heimann family store, Gebrüder Kaufmann, where Carla was head of the workroom. The Heimann children came to Britain before the outbreak of war, while the older generation remained in Germany: Carla was a Christian, and this may have helped delay Josef, who was Jewish, being deported before 1944, when he was sent to the Theresienstadt ghetto. Both Carla and Josef survived the war. </p><p>The collection also contains documents belonging to the Buchans, the family Lore stayed with as a child refugee. These include the papers of Gertrude (1882-1950), with whom Lore first lived when she arrived, and Harry (1874-1956) and Ethel (1876-1956), who took her in after Gertrude was called up to serve in a hospital, as well as Harry and Ethel’s daughter Joy (1917-1988), with whom Lore remained friends for the rest of their lives.</p> Open

Plaats
Collectie
  • EHRI
Type
  • Archief
Rechten
Identificatienummer van European Holocaust Research Infrastructure
  • gb-003348-wl2129
Trefwoorden
  • Migration
  • Gordon, Lore
  • Wuppertal
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