By staff
Title: Ghetto and Camp Currency, Correspondence and Related Artifacts, 1908-1945
Predominant Dates:1939 -- 1945
ID: RG-06/RG-06
Primary Creator: Gutkind, Jurek
Other Creators: Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts, Jonski, Jozef (1912-), Kasimir, Fidor, Medley, Jane, Veronika (Vera) Komlos (née Somogyi), (1901-1944), Jewish female, a resident of Budapest (-- 1944)
Extent: 0.0
Arrangement:
The arrangement scheme for the record group was imposed during processing in the absence of an original order. Materials are arranged by subject/creator, then by the identifier, as assigned by the processor.
Record group is comprised of seven collections: 1. Collection of ghetto and camp money; 2. Numismatic collection; 3. Collection of camp and ghetto correspondence; 4. Eva Beckman collection; 5. Collection of Nazi Germany emigration bonds; 6. Collection of Nazi-counterfeited British bank notes; 7. Collection of Sonderkommando tags.
Subjects: Ghetto-issued monetary scripts, wartime, Lodz ghetto monetary receipts, Monetary signs, receipts, scripts as substitute matters of ghetto money, wartime, Monetary signs and receipts in the Lodz Ghetto, 1940 -- 1944, Monetary surrogates in term of scripts, receipts, ghetto paper money issued in Theresiensdatd ghetto, Paper money and coins, Lodz ghetto, Theresienstadt Ghetto issued banknotes, design and appearance, Theresienstadt ghetto monetary receipts
Forms of Material: A Westerbork camp coupon for 10 cent, 1944, Eine Mark (One Mark) bill, signed by Mordechaj Rumkowski, the Jewish Elder of Lodz Ghetto May 1940, Fifty Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Five Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Monetary surogate scripts issued by the Westerbork internment camp administration, 1944, One hundred Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, One Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Ten Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Ten Mark coin, issued in 1943, authorized by Mordechaj Rumkowski, Jewish Elder of the Lodz Ghetto, Twenty Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Two Kronen bill, issued 1 January 1943, signed by Jacob Eidelstein, Der Alsteste Der Juden, Zwanzig Mark (Twenty) bill, signed by Mordechaj Rumkowski, Jewish Elder of the Lodz Ghetto May 1940, Zwei Mark (Two) bill, signed by Mordechaj Rumkowski, Jewish Elder of the Lodz Ghetto May 1940
Languages: German, Dutch;Flemish, Polish
The record group includes the banknotes of several European countries issued in the course of the 19th and 20th centuries; bonds issued by the Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts paid to German Jews for confiscated property; multiple artifacts related to ghetto and camp life, such as camp uniform, pottery from the Sobibor concentration camp, and Sonderkommando tags; and ghetto and camp correspondence, including letters and postcards written from the places of incarceration to relatives and friends. The camp correspondence collections includes Józef Jon ski’s correspondence from Dachau concentration camp, Jurek Gutkind’s corresponded with Anna Lipszyc from the Lublin prison and Buchenwald concentration camp, and there is a letter from Kasimir Fidor from Oranienburg concentration camp.
This record group is comprised of collections--specifically those related to ghetto and camp scripts, a German-introduced surrogate for monetary signs. First, for example, Lodz and Theresienstadt ghettos printed the scripts of their own, while the other ghettos circulated local or German currency. Contrarily, many Nazi-German concentration camps operated with the scripts of their own. This coupon-like currency, printed by the camp administrations, was good only for inter-camp use. Also, in ghettos and camps, cigarettes and food could often serve as a currency-like commodities. (Food rarely had any true monetary value and often emerged on the initiative of the Jewish administration in Lodz and Theresienstadt.)
A monetary sub-collection contains banknotes of Weimar Republic. Once issued in the year of 1923, they illustrate an iniquitousness of hyperinflation, overwhelming the Weimar Republic. The very denominations of one hundred thousand and one hundred million serve as a proof of economic and financial crisis.
Banknotes issued in German-occupied countries and territories also exhibit differences in the status of control and occupation. Comparing the following banknotes--Five Kroner of Denmark of 1942, Five Belgian Francs of 1943, and the Five Ukrainian Karbovantsiv of 1942--one can see that Denmark and Belgian retained a currency of their own, in terms of language and design. However, the Ukrainian banknotes, issued by the German authorities in Ukraine reflects the status of an occupied territory, controlled by German military and civil administration.
Ghetto-issued monetary scripts, wartime
Lodz ghetto monetary receipts
Monetary signs, receipts, scripts as substitute matters of ghetto money, wartime
Monetary signs and receipts in the Lodz Ghetto, 1940 -- 1944
Monetary surrogates in term of scripts, receipts, ghetto paper money issued in Theresiensdatd ghetto
Paper money and coins, Lodz ghetto
Theresienstadt Ghetto issued banknotes, design and appearance
Theresienstadt ghetto monetary receipts
Repository: Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust
Access Restrictions: No restrictions
Use Restrictions:
Copyrighted materials, credits to and references to the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust are required
Digital copies might be available upon request
Preferred Citation: RG-06, Ghetto and Camp Currency, Correspondence, and Related Artifacts. Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust Archive.
Processing Information: Materials are primarily described using the local descriptive standards of the LA Museum of the Holocaust.
This collection contains bonds for Reichsmarks.
RG-06.05.01: Bond for Five Reichsmark, Series D Nr. 2793069
Front view of the note:
Bond of the Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts in Berlin (Konversionskasse fuer deutsche Auslandsschulden zu Berlin), issued on the basis of § 4 of its bylaws.
Five Reichsmark is owed by Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts to the bearer of this bond. The redemption will be made according to § 4 of the bylaws of the Conversion Office
Berlin, August 28, 1933
Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts
[Signature]
Back view of the note:
The Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts was founded by § 2 of the “Law about payment indebtedness towards foreign countries” (Gesetz über Zahlungsverbindlichkeiten gegenüber dem Ausland) of June 9, 1933.
§ 4 of its bylaws reads as followed:
“The Conversion Office may issue interest-free bonds in the amount deposits. The Reichsbank establishes the regulations about the redemption of the bonds.”
Series D Nr. 2793069
RG-06.05.02: Bond for Ten Reichsmark, Series B Nr. 075047
Front view of the note:
Bond of the Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts in Berlin (Konversionskasse fuer deutsche Auslandsschulden zu Berlin), issued on the basis of § 4 of its bylaws.
Ten Reichsmark is owed by Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts to the bearer of this bond. The redemption will be made according to § 4 of the bylaws of the Conversion Office.
Berlin, August 28, 1933
Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts
[Signature]
Back view of the note:
The Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts was founded by § 2 of the “Law about payment indebtedness towards foreign countries” (Gesetz über Zahlungsverbindlichkeiten gegenüber dem Ausland) of June 9, 1933.
§ 4 of its bylaws reads as followed:
“The Conversion Office may issue interest-free bonds in the amount deposits. The Reichsbank establishes the regulations about the redemption of the bonds.”
Series B Nr. 075047
RG-06.05.03: Bond for Fifty Reichsmark, Series A. Two notes: Nr. 0223380, Nr.0602700
Front view of the note:
Bond of the Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts in Berlin (Konversionskasse fuer deutsche Auslandsschulden zu Berlin), issued on the basis of § 4 of its bylaws
Fifty Reichsmark is owed by Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts to the bearer of this bond. The redemption will be made according to § 4 of the bylaws of the Conversion Office.
Berlin, August 28, 1933
Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts
[Signature]
Back view of the note:
The Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts was founded by § 2 of the “Law about payment indebtedness towards foreign countries” (Gesetz über Zahlungsverbindlichkeiten gegenüber dem Ausland) of June 9, 1933.
§ 4 of its bylaws reads as followed:
“The Conversion Office may issue interest-free bonds in the amount deposits. The Reichsbank establishes the regulations about the redemption of the bonds.”
Series A Nr. 0223380/ Nr.0602700