1,369,123 research outputs found
Letter from A. F. Rath to Eugene Burdick Regarding Beaded Moccasins, February 20, 1941
This letter dated February 20, 1941, from A. F. Rath to Eugene Burdick, requests information about beaded moccasins that Burdick may have available for sale. Rath specifically requests a list of items and prices.
See also:
Letter from Eugene Burdick to A. F. Rath Regarding Beaded Moccasins, February 25, 1941https://commons.und.edu/burdick-papers/1066/thumbnail.jp
Pioneer personal history, A. F. Rath
Typescript of answers by August F. Rath of Moab for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey, based on an interview by Frank Silvey, Date: April 22-23, 193
Interview with Margaret and Bob Rath
An interview with Margaret and Bob Rath regarding their experiences in a one-room school house.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/ors/1038/thumbnail.jp
Snapshot of Arthur Rath, pictured with an unidentified friend.
Digital ImageArthur Rath was born in Essen, Germany in 1919. He escaped persecution in Germany in September 1938 by fleeing to Holland, and after several years in Westerbork and Franeker, ultimately immigrated to the United States in December of 1951. On October 10, 1965, Arthur married Harriet Cherksy, and they lived together in Forest Hills, Queens. After working as a librarian for the Queens Public Library, Arthur volunteered for the Leo Baeck Institute's Library and Archives until his death in September 2017
Frederick L. Rath, Jr. papers
Papers of Frederick L. Rath, Jr., a pioneer of historical conservation. Rath served from 1949 to 1956 as the director of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, newly created by Congress to succeed the National Council for Historic Sites and Buildings, which he had also headed. The papers document Rath's time at the National Trust, as well as his later career at the New York State Historical Association, where he became vice-director in 1957; at New York State's Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, where he was deputy commissioner from 1972 until 1979; and at the Eastern National Park and Monument Association, where he was chief executive officer from 1979 to 1987. Also included are personal papers documenting Rath's early education at Dartmouth and Harvard, and his time in the Army during World War II, as well as his work as historian at the home of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park, New York
Arthur Rath collection 1908-2013 1942-1960
This collection contains the archival papers of Arthur Rath. Most of it consists of correspondence with friends and family members. Primary topics of the collection are Arthur’s life in Switzerland towards the end of World War II and the decades immediately after; correspondence with friends who were also Jewish refugees from Germany after the war; and Arthur Rath’s life decisions following the displacement of his family during the war.Arthur Rath was born in Essen, Germany in 1919, the son of furniture-store owner Adolf (Avraham) Rath and his wife Anna (Chane Malke) née Schoenbach,. At the age of six, Arthur was sent with his brother to a Jewish school in Gettingen, Bavaria and then to Gymnasium in Amberg, Oberpfalz, where Arthur graduated in 1935. In April 1938, Arthur enrolled at the University of Hamburg.In September 1938 Arthur crossed the border illegally into Holland. Two weeks later the rest of the family arrived in the Netherlands, settling in the Hague. In June 1939 Arthur was detained by Dutch officials, and consequently detained in a number of internment camps for German and Austrian Jews, including in Westerbork (where he was one of the first inmates) and Franeker. During a leave in Amsterdam, Arthur sent a fake suicide note to the Nazi authorities in Westerbork, and went underground with the rest of his family.After crossing the border into Belgium and then France, the family separated. Arthur and his father spent the summer hiding in Marseilles. Arthur managed in August 1942 to reach Switzerland, followed by other family members. At the request of the Jewish Refugee Committee, he asked Swiss authorities for asylum and lived in a series of Swiss internment camps (mainly in Raron) for the next two and a half years.In December 1944, Arthur was released from the Swiss internment camp system and attended the universities of Bern and Basel, studying French, English, and History. He graduated and became a high-school teacher in Switzerland. In December 1951, Arthur immigrated to the United States, where various siblings had settled. He studied librarianship in Boston and then moved to Queens, New York, starting a career at the Queens Public Library.Arthur Rath married Harriet Cherksy on October 10, 1965; they lived in Forest Hills, Queens. In September 2017, Arthur spent some time at a home for the elderly in Sarasota, Florida, where he died.Finding aid available onlineProcesseddigitize
Das Rechnen auf der Oberstufe : mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der einklassigen Schule
von F. Rat
Eat Move Sleep : How Small Choices Lead to Big Changes
#1 "New York Times" bestselling author Tom Rath delivers a book that will improve your health for years to come in three of interconnected areas: eating, moving, and sleeping.Quietly managing a serious illness for more than 20 years, Rath has assembled a wide range of information on the impact of eating, moving, and sleeping. He offers advice that will help you make good decisions automatically, in all three of these interconnected areas. With every bite you take, you will make better choices. You will move a lot more than you do today. And you will sleep better than you have in years.x+227p.;14x21c
Clara Mae Rath with a Canoe 01
Clara Mae Rath standing next to a canoe holding a wooden paddle. The original sleeve included Rath, Clara Mae .https://scholarworks.uni.edu/uniphotos/1278/thumbnail.jp
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