John Franklin memoir
John Franklin (1930- ) was born Hans Frankenthal in Würzburg to Max Frankenthal (1886-1945) and Klara Frankenthal (nee Frankenthaler, 1899-1988). His family sought refuge in The Hague, Netherlands, in 1938 and relocated to 's-Hertogenbosch following the German invasion in 1940. He survived the Jewish ghetto in Amsterdam, was deported to Westerbork in 1943, and transferred to Bergen-Belsen later that year. He and his father were evacuated on the so-called "Lost Train" that was headed for Theresienstadt but ended up near the little German town of Tröbitz. His father died on the train. After the war, he was reunited with his mother (who had survived Auschwitz) and grandmother (who had survived in hiding). He and his mother immigrated to the United States in 1947, joined his mother’s relatives in San Francisco, and changed their name to Franklin. Copyright Holder: John Franklin John Franklin's thirteen page memoir, "A Family History," documents his Frankenthal and Frankenthaler relatives from Schwanfeld and Untereisenheim Germany, his family's move to Holland following Kristallnacht, their relocation to the Amsterdam ghetto, and deportation to Westerbork It relates his and his father's survival in Bergen-Belsen, his father's death aboard an evacuation train, his reunion with his mother and grandmother in the Netherlands, and his immigration to the United States. The memoir also documents his mother's survival in Auschwitz, his grandmother's rescue by the Van Hooff family in Boxtel, the deaths of two uncles and two cousins in Auschwitz, and the death of another uncle in Bergen-Belsen.
- EHRI
- Archief
- us-005578-irn500810
- Jews--Germany--Würzburg.
- Personal Narratives.
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