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1
Date Created1957
DescriptionThe newspaper clipping of 1957 focus on the successful resettlement of the Hungarian refugees to United States. The reproduced documents represent one folder from the Hungarian Refugee Relief Files,...
Time Period1957
2
Date Created1942
DescriptionSent on stationery from Lowry Field in Denver and portraying images of Denver on the back, this letter from Corporal Louis Kiraly thanks the Hungarian Defense Council for a carton of cigarettes they...
3
Date Created1985
DescriptionThe newspaper clippings from 1958 provide reports on Hungarian students in universities, and the high unemployment rate among Hungarian refugees.
4
Date Created1956-12
DescriptionThe newspaper clippings of December 1956 focus on President Eisenhower’s efforts to raise the quota for Hungarian refugees from 6,000 to 21,500 in U.S. to ease the growing unrest in Austria amongst...
5
Date Created1928
DescriptionWorking as a midwife, Magdalene Kovacs delivered many infants in New Brunswick in the 1920s. Here she records the birth of William Kovacs, whose parents had emigrated from Hungary.
6
Date Created1976
DescriptionThis poster advertises a Hungarian festival that was to occur on Saturday, September 11, 1976 at the Garden State Arts Center. The poster features pictures of dancers, musicians, and other...
7
Date Created1920-1940
DescriptionTypical family portrait at the wedding of the brother of Mrs. Horvath, Jack Klement.
Time PeriodThe Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930)
8
Date Created1920-1940
DescriptionMembers of St. Joseph's Theater Group after a performance.
Time PeriodThe Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930)
9
Date Created1920-1940
DescriptionPortrait of a group of men and women on the stage at a Hungarian play put on in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Time PeriodThe Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930)
10
Date Created1940
DescriptionThe "Bugac Puszta" was a one week charity camp established on a farm in Dayton, New Jersey in the 1930s by the New York Children's Charitable Association for Hungarian children from New York City.
Time PeriodThe Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)