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Blade for a manual hair clipper used in a concentration camp

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Washington, United States

Replacement blade used by Alexander Stankiewicz while an inmate at Mauthausen concentration camp where he worked as a barber. Stankiewicz was a Roman Catholic Pole, living in Wloclawek, (Leslau) Poland, who was arrested in 1941 by the occupying Germans for his membership in a Polish political and literary organization. At Mauthausen, his prisoner number was 24993. After the war ended in 1945, he returned to Poland.

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  • Title: Blade for a manual hair clipper used in a concentration camp
  • Location: Poland--History--Occupation, 1939-1945.
  • Provenance: The clipper blade was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005 by Jan Niebrzydowski.
  • Subject Keywords: Concentration camp inmates--Austria. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Poland--Personal narratives, Polish. Political prisoners--Poland--Biography. World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons, Polish.
  • Type: Personal Equipment and Supplies
  • Rights: Permanent Collection
  • External Link: See the full record at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Medium: Square, metal plate with sharp comb teeth on one edge and rounded teeth on the opposite edge. The flat sides are grooved and have a square hole in the middle. Most of the teeth are broken.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

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