Gerda Mayer: personal papers
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/gb-003348-wl1809-eng-71189_eng an entity of type: Instantiation
Gerda Mayer: personal papers
The Stein family came originally from Karlovy Vary (Karlsbad), Czechoslovakia. Arnold Stein (born in 1890 in Karlovy Vary), was a women's clothes shopkeeper. He got married to Erna Eisenberger (1897-1943) with whom he had a daughter, Gerda Kamilla (born in 1927), and one stepdaughter, Johanna Travnicek (1920-2007), from Erna's previous marriage. Erna owned a knitwear manufacturing business in Karlsbad. The family fled to Prague in 1938 shortly before Hitler's occupation of the Sudentenland. Gerda was sent to England on a Kindertransport flight one day before the Nazi-German invasion in March 1939, aged eleven. Her rescuer was Trevor Chadwick whose family she stayed with and who took over the rescue operation in Prague from Nicholas Winton. Arnold Stein was last heard of by his daughter Gerda in June 1940 from Lemberg (Russian occupied Poland, now Lviv in Ukraine). He perished in the Holocaust, allegedly in a Russian camp near Moscow, whilst his brothers and step-mother perished presumably in Auschwitz. Gerda's mother, Erna, was deported from Prague to Theresienstadt concentration camp in October 1942. She was transferred to Auschwitz in January 1943 where she perished. Gerda's half-sister Johanna was half-Jewish. She survived the war and was working as a bank clerk in Prague during the Second World War. She settled down in East Germany after the war having been hospitalised there in the immediate aftermath. Gerda continued her education at various boarding schools in England. She got married to Adolf Mayer, a fellow refugee from Vienna in 1949. He had emigrated in 1939 and served in the British Army from 1940 to 1946. After the war he worked as office manager and set up his own import business in 1960. Gerda Mayer published poetry ('Contemporary poets') and contributed to several magazines and anthologies with poetry for adults and children.
Gerda Mayer: personal papers