1942 color street map of Litzmannstadt (Łódź), Poland

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn523618 an entity of type: RecordSet

The map of Litzmannstadt was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2006 by Gil Rosenberg. 
irn523618 
1942 color street map of Litzmannstadt (Łódź), Poland 
overall: Height: 37.125 inches (94.298 cm) | Width: 27.000 inches (68.58 cm) 
1942 map of Litzmannstadt (Łódź), Poland with an alphabetical street directory. The city had been occupied and annexed by Nazi Germany one week after the September 1, 1939, invasion. The Germans renamed the city Litzmannstadt, after the General Karl Litzmann, who had conquered the city during World War I. Łódź had the second largest Jewish population in Poland and, in February 1940, they were relocated to a small, closed ghetto. By September 1942, 70,000 Jews, neary half the population, had been deported to the Chelmno killing center. The ghetto was emptied by mass deportations and destroyed in August 1944. 
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Paper street map with German text and graphics in in black, blue, gray, green, and red ink. It is in portrait orientation with the map outline in black with a white border. There are identifying marks for the parks, water features, railroad, and cemeteries and the different districts within and outside the city are highlighted with red labels. The title is in the upper right corner and there is a legend in the lower left corner. On the reverse is an alphabetical directory of the streets with corresponding map locations in black ink. front, upper right border, pencil : 400.- 

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