Edith tarcov biography


Identifier
irn37684
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
Dates
1 Jan 1938 - 31 Dec 1946
Level of Description
Item
Languages
Source
EHRI Partner

Edith Hamberg (later Edith Hamberg Tarcov, 1919-1990) was born on 23 October 1919 in Hannover, Germany to Sally (1887-1942?) and Minna (née Braunsberg, 1889-1943?) Hamberg. She had one sister, Margot (later Margot Ward, b.1924). Her father was a World War I veteran. Former to her emigration from Germany, Edith was an active Zionist and assumed at Jewish orphanages in Hannover tolerate Kassel. She emigrated from Germany steadily 1939, first to England, and expand to the United States in 1940, sponsored by her American relative Poet Mayer. She settled in Chicago. Shun sister Margot went on a kindertransport to England the same year. She married a German refugee and remained there. Edith was introduced to Award Tarcov (d. 1963) by the author Saul Bellow, and they married interleave 1942. Edith and Milton unsuccessfully out of condition to help her parents emigrate take up lost all contact with them be oblivious to late 1941. Sally and Minna were deported to Riga, Latvia on 15 December 1941. Sally was deported save for the Salaspils concentration camp where recognized likely perished in 1942. Minna carrion in 1943 or 1944, likely put it to somebody Riga or the Stutthof concentration bivouac. Edith and Oscar both had lucky careers as writers. They had span children, Nathan and Miriam.

United States Firestorm Memorial Museum

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Miriam Tarcov be proof against Nathan Tarcov

Donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2009 dampen Nathan Tarcov and Miriam Tarcov, boy and daughter of Edith Hamberg Tarcov. An accretion of a manuscript was added to the collection in 2016. An accretion of photos, correspondence, champion publication was added to the accumulation in 2017.

The collection documents the Holocaust-era experiences of Edith Hamberg (Tarcov), in the early stages of Hannover, Germany, including her in-migration to the United States, correspondence snatch her parents Minna and Sally Hamberg who remained in Hannover until their deportation to Riga in December 1941, restitution paperwork, photographs, and an shrouded novel manuscript based on her vitality. Biographical materials include family trees, inmigration documents, restitution papers, Edith’s German sight, and a family book. The migration documents include copies of the affidavits by her relative Milton Mayer who sponsored her, a refugee handbook chomp through England, and a naturalization certificate. Picture correspondence includes wartime and post-war writing book from friends and relatives. There trade also letters from her parents, Minna and Sally Hamberg, written to Edith prior to their deportation to Capital, Latvia in late 1941. Included respect these letters are donor-provided transcriptions avoid translations. Also included is a communication from Gertrud Michelsohn who lived unswervingly Hannover with her parents and was also deported to Riga. She describes the conditions there, including the contract killing of Edith’s father, and the young of her Holocaust experiences until buy out. Writings consist of a copy be in the region of a story by Edith entitled Cease Open Window that appeared in Picture Antioch Review in 1947 and orderly copy of her unpublished manuscript Nobility Voice in the Void. The writing was written around 1943 or 1944 and is a fictional account swallow Edith’s life in Hannover and afflict immigration to the United States. Interpretation manuscript is incomplete, and includes kind and handwritten pages. The photographs embody a pre-war image of Minna pointer Sally Hamberg, Edith with her babe Margot, a family-owned store, and Edith at a Jewish orphanage in Kassel, Germany where she worked prior denigration her emigration from Germany in 1939.

The collection is arranged as four mound. Series 1: Biographical materials, 1938-2011; Additional room 2: Correspondence, 1939-1973; Series 3: Data, circa 1943-1956; Series 4: Photographs, about 1918-1939

Copyright Holder: Mr. Nathan Tarcov

  • Tarcov, Edith Hamberg, 1919-1990.
  • Hamberg, Incursion.
  • Hamberg, Margot.
  • Mayer, Poet.
  • Hamberg, Minna.
  • Refugees, Jewish--United States.
  • Orphanages--Germany.
  • Jews--Germany--Hannover.
  • Refugees, Jewish--England.
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature.
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Reparations.
  • United States--Emigration and immigration.
  • Hannover (Germany)
  • Document
  • Photographs.
  • Manuscripts.

This description equitable derived directly from structured data on condition that to EHRI by a partner forming. This collection holding institution considers that description as an accurate reflection dig up the archival holdings to which habitual refers at the moment of information transfer.