Ghetto and Camp Currency, Correspondence and Related Artifacts, 1908-1945
| Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust

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.


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.
Author: Staff
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

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

Copyrighted materials, credits to and references to the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust are required
Digital copies might be available upon request

Documents and Files:
RG- 06.03.01, Postacrd from Krakow to camp Ferramonti, Italy, 20 December 1941
RG-06.01.12, Theresienstadt Ghetto Paper Currency
RG-06.01.14, Bills and coins, Lodz Ghetto
RG-06.01.15, Westerbork Camp coupons
RG-06.01.16, Prisoner of war camp coupons
RG-06.01.17, Auschwitz monetary signs
RG-06.01.18, Flossenburg concentration camp monetary signs
RG-06.01.19, Lodz (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto currency, five mark coin, 1943
RG-06.01.20, Lodz (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto currency, ten mark coin, 1943
RG-06.01.21, Lodz (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto currency, twenty mark coin, 1943
RG-06.02.01, Coupon for Ten Francs, 1944
RG-06.02.02, Coupons for 5 and 1 Mark, 1944, issued by Allied Military Authorities
RG-06.02.03, Five Karbovantsiv, 1942, issued by Ukrainian Central Bank in Rowno under German occupation
RG-06.02.04, Five Reichsmark, issued in 1942
RG-06.02.05, One Reichsmark, issued in 1937
RG-06.02.06, One Hundred Mark, issued in Berlin in 1910
RG-06.02.07, One Thousand Mark, issued in Berlin in 1910
RG-06.02.08, One Hundred Mark, issued in Berlin 1908
RG-06.02.09, Twenty Mark, issued in Berlin 1914
RG-06.02.10, Fifty Reichsmark, Weimar Republic, 1919
RG-06.02.11, Fifty Reichsmark, Weimar Republic, 1933
RG-06.02.12, One Hundred Thousand Mark, Weimar Republic, 1923
RG-06.02.13, Twenty Million Mark, Weimar Republic, 1923
RG-06.02.14, One Hundred Million Mark, Weimar Republic, 1923
RG-06.02.15, One Krone, Austria, 1922 with antisemitic inscription on the back side
RG-06.02.16, Twenty Belgian Francs, 1919
RG-06.02.17, Ten Belgian Francs, 1943
RG-06.02.18, Five Belgian Francs, 1943
RG-06.02.19, One Gulden, the Netherlands, 1943
RG-06.02.20, Five Kroner, Denmark, 1942
RG-06.02.21, Ten Kroner, Denmark, 1942
RG-06.02.22, Fifty Algerian Francs, Algeria, 1928
RG-06.02.23, Five Algerian Francs, Algeria, 1933
RG-06.02.24, Five Algerian Francs, Algeria, 1942
RG-06.03.02, Letter from Kasimir Fidor in Oranienburg concentration camp to Stanislawa Fidor inLublin, August 1941
RG-06.03.03, Letter from Jozef Jonski in Dachau to Aunt, First letter, Camp life
RG-06.03.04, Letter from Jozef Jonski in Dachau to Aunt, Thank you
RG-06.03.05, Letter from Jozef Jonski in Dachau to Aunt, Well wishes
RG-06.03.06, from Jozef Jonski in Dachau to Aunt, Questions
RG-06.03.07, from Jozef Jonski, Post-liberation, May 2, 1945
RG-06.03.08, Anna Lipszyc, Letter from Jurek (Georg Gutkin) in Polish, dated by 29 June 1943
RG-06.03.09, Anna Lipszyc, Letter from Jurek (Georg Gutkind) in German, from Lublin prison, dated 15 November 1943
RG-06.03.11, Letter from Westerbork Camp to Amsterdam, December 1943
RG-06.03.12, Postcard from Warsaw to New York dated 18 June 1941
RG-06.03.13, Postcard from Bochnia to interment camp Ferramonto di Tarcia, Italy, May 2, 1942
RG-06.03.14, Postcard from the Camp De Les Milles, France, 1941
RG-06.04.10, Anna Lipszyc, letter from Jurek (Georg Gutkind) in German from Buchenwald Concentration Camp, dated 12 June 1944
RG-06.05.01, Bond for Five Reichsmark
RG-06.05.02, Bond for Five Reichsmark
RG-06.05.03, Bond for Ten Reichsmark
RG-06.05.04, Bond for Fifty Reichsmark, Nr. 0223380
RG-06.05.05, Bond for Fifty Reichsmark, Nr.0602700
RG-06.06.01, Nazi counterfeited Bank of England cashier's check in the amount of 50 pounds sterling
RG-06.06.02, Nazi counterfeited Bank of England cashier's check in the amount of 20 pounds sterling
RG-06.06.03, Nazi counterfeited Bank of England cashier's check in the amount of 20 pounds sterling
RG-06.07.01, Sonderkommando tag, Auschwitz
RG-06.08.01, The Last Letter of Veronika (Vera) Komlos (née Somogyi), November 23, 1944
RG-06.08.02, Portrait of Veronika (Vera) Komlos (nee Somogyi) as a young girl
RG-06.08.04, Counting My Blessings, book excerpt by Gabriella Komlos Rosenfeld, Vera's daughter
Sub-Collection 1: RG-06.01, Ghetto and camp money, 1942 1945
Sub-Collection 2: RG-06.02, Numismatic Collection, 1919 -- 1945
Sub-Collection 3: RG-06.03, Correspondences of inmate like status, 1941--1945
Sub-Collection 4: RG-06.04, Eva Beckman Collection, 1942--1945
Sub-Collection 5: RG-06.05, Emigration Bonds, Nazi Germany, 1933
Sub-Collection 6: RG-06.06, Nazi counterfeited British bank notes, 1942 -- 1945
Sub-Collection 7: RG-06.07, Sonderkommando tags, 1942--1945
Sub-Collection 8: RG-06.08, The Last Letter of Veronika (Vera) Komlos (nee Somogyi)