Immigration & Refugee Policy During WWII
- Activities of the Hilfsverein in the Field of Emigration
- Advertisements in the Jewish Chronicle Requesting Families to Offer Hospitality to Refugees
- Bergier Report on Swiss Refugee Policy
- The Dominican Republic’s Haven for Jewish Refugees
- The Evian Conference
- Europa Plan
- The Fate of Jews Who Emigrated from Germany
- From a Pamphlet Championing the Admission of German Refugees into Britain
- Guenther Plaut On Jewish Immigration To The U.S.
- Hull Note to the French Ambassador on the Refugee Problem in France
- Jews Could Have Been Saved But U.S. Kept Them Out of Virgin Islands
- Ickes Recommends Allowing Jews Into Virgin Islands (October 10, 1942)
- Ickes Rejects Renewal of Proposal to Allow Jews Into Virgin Islands (January 13, 1943)
- Immigration Policies
- Jewish Emigration From Germany 1933-1939
- Memo Regarding Discussions at the Bermuda Conference
- Memo on U.S. Plans to Discuss Refugee Issue with Britain
- Newspaper Applauds Rejection of Wedgwood's Call for Admission and Naturalization of Refugees
- Roosevelt Informed State Department Approves Entry of 1,000 Jewish Children (September 11, 1942)
- Roosevelt Statement on Refugees in Palestine
- The Sinking of the Struma
- Swiss Immigration Policy
- What Americans Thought of Jewish Refugees Prior to World War II