Correspondence
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- Envelope belonging to the letter from Ruth Linder, London, to Mrs Roy Sorell, Long Street, Cape Town, 1940
- An envelope belonging to the letter from Ruth Lindner, London, to Mrs Roy Sorell, Long Street, Cape Town, 1940. At the top right-hand corner of the envelope is a British stamp featuring Queen Victoria and George V, the latter the reigning monarch of Britain at the time.
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- Envelope which contained a letter to Edith Bruch, Amsterdam, sent from Germany, 1934
- An envelope which contained a letter to Edith Bruch in Amstderdam, sent from Germany. The author of the letter is unknown.
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- Letter from Ernst (last name unknown), Durham, North Carolina, to Edith Bruch, Cape Town, South Africa, 1937
- A letter from Ernst (last name unknown), Durham, North Carolina, to Edith Bruch, Cape Town, South Africa, 1937.
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- Letter from Frau Loeb, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch (?), Germany, 1936
- A letter from Frau Loeb, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch (?), Germany, 1936.
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- Letter from Herta and Jakob, Montevideo, Uruguay, to Edith and Roy Sorell, South Africa, 1976
- A letter from Herta and Jakob, Montevideo, Uruguay, to Edith and Roy Sorell, South Africa, 1976.
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- Letter from Margarete (last name illegible), possibly in Bonn, to Frau Sorell, 1940
- A letter from Margarete (last name illegible), possibly in Bonn, to Frau Sorell (née Bruch), 1940.
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- Letter from Nora Loeb, Amsterdam to Edith Bruch, Germany, 1936
- A letter from Nora Loeb, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch, Germany, 1936.
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- Letter from Ruth Lindner, London, to Mrs Roy Sorell, Long Street, Cape Town, South Africa, 1940
- A letter from Ruth Lindner, London, to Mrs Roy Sorell, Long Street, Cape Town, South Africa, 1940. The following is conveyed in the letter: congratulations from Ruth on the birth of a son to Edith and Roy; Ruth discusses her minor operation then talks of the German invasion of Holland (May 1940) and the stress she went through to determine whether her relations were alright. She tells how she eventually found out that they were, but states that she cannot bear for them to live ''under the government of these barbarians'' (ie. under the government of Nazi Germany).
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- Memo concerning a letter from Fritz Loeb to Edith Bruch, undated
- A memo concerning a letter from Fritz Loeb to Edith Bruch, undated.
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- Memo concerning a letter from Nora Loeb in Amsterdam to Edith Bruch in München (Munich), Germany, 1935
- A memo concerning a letter from Nora Loeb to Edith Bruch, with a small drawing of a dog. The letter describes how Edith arrived in Munich and Nora's husband went to a fair in Leipzig, Germany.
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- Memo concerning a letter/postcard from the Loeb family, Amsterdam to Edith Bruch, 1935
- A memo concerning a letter/postcard from the Loeb family, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch.
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- Memo concerning a postcard from Fritz Loeb in Düsseldorf (Germany) to Edith Bruch in Amsterdam, 1934
- A memo concerning a postcard from Fritz Loeb in Düsseldorf (Germany) to Edith Bruch in Amsterdam, 1934.
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- Postcard from (first name unknown) Levy, München (Munich), Germany, to Edith Bruch, München (Munich), Germany, 1936
- A postcard from (first name unknown) Levy, München (Munich), Germany, to Edith Bruch, München (Munich), Germany, 1936. There is a Chancellor Paul von Hindenburg stamp on the postcard.
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- Postcard from Els (last name unknown) to Mrs E. Sorrell (née Bruch), Hospital Penthurst, England, 1938
- Postcard from Els (last name unknown) to Mrs E. Sorrell (née Bruch), Hospital Penthurst, England, 1938. The front of the postcard shows a painting of a ringing churchbell in the belltower by Dutch painter Anton Pieck. The postcard also features a Queen Wilhelmina stamp.
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- Postcard from Lisel Alsberg, Cape Town to Edith Bruch, Green Point (Cape Town, South Africa), 1937
- Postcard from Lisel Alsberg, Cape Town to Edith Bruch, Green Point (Cape Town, South Africa), 1937. On the front of the postcard is a photograph of a farmer ploughing a field with a horse-drawn plough. There is a South African Springbok stamp on the reverse.
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- Postcard from Nora Loeb, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch, München (Munich), Germany, 1935
- A postcard sent from Nora Loeb, Amsterdam, to Edith Bruch, München (Munich), Germany, 1935. The stamp depicts Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands.
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- Postcard, possibly from former classmates in Düren (Germany) to Edith and Kurt Bruch, Amsterdam, 1934
- Postcard depicting St. Peter (Keys of Heaven) at the gates of Heaven, with some school children. There is text and a German President Paul von Hindenburg stamp on the back of the postcard.