"Studying the Holocaust changed the way I make decisions." - Student

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

National Archives and Footnote.com Announce New Digital Holocaust Collection

Collection includes Holocaust-related photos and records available online for first time

Washington DC and Lindon, UT –September 29, 2009

The National Archives and Records Administration and Footnote.com today announced the release of the internet’s largest Interactive Holocaust Collection. For the first time ever, over one million Holocaust-related records – including millions of names and 26,000 photos from the National Archives– will be available online. The collection can be viewed at: http://www.footnote.com/holocaust/ .

“We cannot afford to forget this period in our history,” said Dr. Michael Kurtz, Assistant Archivist of the United States and author of America and the Return of Nazi Contraband: The Recovery of Europe's Cultural Treasures. “Working with Footnote, these records will become more widely accessible, and will help people now and in the future learn more about the events and impact of the Holocaust.”

Included among the National Archives records available online at Footnote.com are:
  • Concentration camp registers and documents from Dachau, Mauthausen, Auschwitz, and Flossenburg

  • The “Ardelia Hall Collection” of records relating to the Nazi looting of Jewish possessions, including looted art

  • Captured German records including deportation and death lists from concentration camps
    Nuremberg War Crimes Trial proceedings
Access to the collection will be available for free on Footnote.com through the month of October.
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