Ernst Maass, the only relative present at Magnus Hirschfeld's death. Maass/Mann Papers, Brooklyn, N.Y. Credit: Don McLeod |
Don McLeod is a librarian, the acquisitions coordinator at the University of Toronto Libraries, and has been a volunteer at the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives for more than twenty-five years. In this paper, he discusses his research about Ernst Maass, the grandson of Hirschfeld's maternal uncle Dr Julius Mann, who was the only relative present when Hirschfeld died in 1935. Don McLeod wonders what happened to Ernst Maass. Did he survive the war? Did he receive any of Magnus Hirschfeld's possessions?
What do you think about that "with the advent of modern research tools such as Google, Ancestry.com, online phonebooks and directories, and the instant communication afforded by e-mail, with good luck important forgotten research materials may be uncovered with a few clicks of the keyboard"? What are the chances and downfalls of these new possibilities of online research?
This paper should be read together with Ralf Dose's paper "Thirty Years of Collecting Our History- Or: How to Find Treasure Troves" about the belongings of Magnus Hirschfeld that we already published on this blog on the 18.06.2012. You can find it further down this page.
Click "read more" to read Don McLeod's complete paper. Discuss, comment, enjoy and share.
What do you think about that "with the advent of modern research tools such as Google, Ancestry.com, online phonebooks and directories, and the instant communication afforded by e-mail, with good luck important forgotten research materials may be uncovered with a few clicks of the keyboard"? What are the chances and downfalls of these new possibilities of online research?
This paper should be read together with Ralf Dose's paper "Thirty Years of Collecting Our History- Or: How to Find Treasure Troves" about the belongings of Magnus Hirschfeld that we already published on this blog on the 18.06.2012. You can find it further down this page.
Click "read more" to read Don McLeod's complete paper. Discuss, comment, enjoy and share.
Serendipity
and the Papers of Magnus Hirschfeld: The Case of Ernst Maass
Donald
W. McLeod
Introduction
The German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld
(1868–1935) was one of the most important figures in the history of the
liberation of LGBTI people. He was co-founder in 1897 of the Wissenschaftlich-humanitäre
Komitee (WhK) [Scientific
Humanitarian Committee], the first organization to
advocate for homosexual and transgender rights. Hirschfeld was a prolific
researcher, writer, and lecturer. In 1919 he founded the Institut für
Sexualwissenschaft [Institute for Sexual Science] in Berlin, which became
world-famous for providing medical consultations and educational services
concerning sexuality; the Institute also contained Hirschfeld’s large library
and a museum of sex.[i]
By
the time Hirschfeld embarked on a world lecture tour in 1930–32, he was at the
peak of his career and was hailed in America and elsewhere as the “Einstein of
sex”. Whether he also knew that this tour marked the beginning of the end of
his career in unknown. Hirschfeld likely knew that he was facing several
problems. For example, in a letter to Harry Benjamin he joked that he might not
survive the tour.[ii] Although he
was only sixty-two, Hirschfeld’s health was poor. He was plagued by heart
disease, obesity, and diabetes. His health worsened after he contracted malaria
on the tour. And, there must have been some thought as to what he would do
after the tour. The situation in Germany was particularly unsettling. As early as
1920, because of his work Hirschfeld had been attacked in the street by thugs
and left with a fractured skull.[iii]
Increasingly, his public lectures were disrupted. The rise and strength of the
National Socialist (Nazi) party in Germany by 1932 made it too dangerous for
him to return to Germany; he remained in exile, mostly in France, for the rest
of his life. Hirschfeld’s fate was sealed on May 6, 1933, only fourteen weeks
after Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, when the Nazis
arranged for the destruction of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft and the
subsequent burning of its library.
In
November 1934, Hirschfeld finally settled in Nice, on the sunny Mediterranean
coast, which at that time was a centre for German intellectuals in exile. In February
1935 he moved into an apartment at the luxurious Gloria Mansions I, 63,
promenade des Anglais. Built in 1924, the six-storey building contained
apartments of about 130 square metres, with three large windows on the front
and a balcony. We do not know for sure which apartment was Hirschfeld’s other
than that it was on the fifth floor and that it had a southern exposure,
overlooking a large garden with exotic plants and palm trees, and the sea.
Hirschfeld settled in, with the remainder of his library and collection, and
continued to research, write, and receive visitors. For exercise, Hirschfeld
liked to walk along the promenade des Anglais, often in the company of friends
or guests.[iv]
May
14, 1935
Magnus Hirschfeld began the morning of his
sixty-seventh birthday at the Gloria Mansions I, in the company of Robert Kirchberger,
a secretary, and Ernst Maass.[v] Maass, the
grandson of Hirschfeld’s maternal uncle Dr Julius Mann (1853–1931), lived in
Milano and had come down to visit and to help celebrate Hirschfeld’s birthday. Maass’
own twenty-first birthday was later in the month. The trio spent time opening
the birthday mail, and then went for a brief walk. They returned to Gloria
Mansions I, where Hirschfeld suddenly collapsed and died before noon.
The shock of Hirschfeld’s sudden death must
have been considerable, especially to Ernst Maass, who was suddenly thrust into
the spotlight. As the only relative present in Nice at the time, it fell to him
to arrange Hirschfeld’s funeral. A service was held at the Cimetière Israélite du Château on May 21, 1935; Hirschfeld was later cremated, and his remains
were placed in the Cimetière
de Caucade. His simple, elegant tombstone, completed in
1936, was designed by the
sculptor Arnold Zadikow (1884–1943).[vi]
After
his death, Hirschfeld’s possessions, including books and papers, were removed
from his apartment at Gloria Mansions I. We know from article five of Hirschfeld’s
final testament that Li Shiu Tong (1907–1993), Hirschfeld’s student and
companion, was to receive all books, papers, artwork, etc., located in
Hirschfeld’s apartment in Nice.[vii] Karl Giese
(1898–1938), Hirschfeld’s assistant, was at that time living in exile in Brno,
Czechoslovakia. He arrived in Nice to attend Hirschfeld’s funeral and deliver a
eulogy; Giese likely also took some material back to Brno, including the Exile Guestbook.[viii]
And what about Ernst Maass? Do we know if he received any of Hirschfeld’s
papers or possessions?
Who
Was Ernst Maass, and What Became of Him?
Hans Soetaert, a Belgian archivist and
researcher, and I were able to visit Nice in October 2009 and pick up the trail
of Hirschfeld. We were particularly interested to see where he had lived and
the details of his life in Nice, where Hirschfeld was buried, the details of
his funeral, and so on. We published our findings in Mitteilungen der
Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, the publication of the
Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft (M-H-G) in Berlin.[ix]
As we were preparing the article, we were in e-mail contact with Ralf Dose, the
director of the M-H-G, trying to tie up loose ends. One question that kept recurring concerned the fate of Ernst Maass. He was very young when Hirschfeld
died. What happened to
him, subsequently? Did he survive the war?
Ralf said that there were few clues, including the fact that Maass had been
born in 1914 and that it was known that he had emigrated to America in 1938.
This was not much to work with, but I decided to try to solve the mystery of
Ernst Maass.[x]
Technology
Comes to the Fore
I began the search in earnest on December
1, 2009. The first place I looked was Ancestry.com, the world’s largest online
family history resource. I’m keen on genealogy, have searched my own family
history extensively there, and have a personal subscription to this resource.
It is international in scope and includes databases with access to millions of
records relating to immigration and emigration, births, deaths, marriages,
census and military files, border crossings, and passenger lists.
I
went to the “Search All Records” tab and filled in the search terms Ernst [first
name] Maass [last name] 1914 [estimated birth year]. The first hit in the list
was an entry for an Ernst Maass, born about 1915 in Germany, part of the “New
York Passenger Lists, 1820–1957” database. This was a digital copy of the
microfilm of the “List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the United States” kept
by the United States Department of Labor. The manifest was a detailed list of
“all aliens arriving at a port of continental United States from a foreign port
or a port of the insular possessions of the United States, and all aliens
arriving at a port of said insular possessions from a foreign port.” I examined
the manifest carefully. It was for passengers sailing on the Ile de France from
Le Havre, France, on March 9, 1938, arriving at the port of New York on March
16, 1938. The entry for Ernst Maass stated that he was a twenty-three-year-old
single male working as a clerk in a travel agency, that he could read and
write, that he was familiar with German, English, French, Italian, and Hebrew,
that he was a German national of the Hebrew race, that he had been born in
Stettin, Germany, that his visa had been issued in Jerusalem on December 18,
1937, and that his last permanent residence had been in Jerusalem, Palestine.
And, he was travelling with his widowed mother, Lotte Maass, aged forty-nine;
her entry was directly below his in the manifest. Surely this was a good
candidate for our Ernst Maass, but additional evidence was needed to remove all
doubt.
The
other results in the search for “Ernst Maass” under “Search All Records” proved
to be disappointing. From my previous experience with family records I knew
that personal names on records are sometimes misspelled, or that people
sometimes slightly change the spelling of their names over time. I decided to
use “Search All Records” again, but for the anglicized name “Ernest Maass”.
Incredibly, the first five entries in the results list related to an Ernest
Maass, born May 29, 1914. The first two entries, from the U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 2, listed Maass’s date of birth,
and an address: 15076 Village Road, Jamaica, NY, 11432-1013. The third entry
was from the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850–2009, which listed for Ernest Maass a birth
date (May 29, 1914), a death date (January 24, 1975), a social insurance number
(055121215), an enlistment date (June 10, 1943), and a release date (October
30, 1944). The results from the Social
Security Death Index confirmed that Ernest Maass, S.I.N. 055121215, was
born on May 29, 1914, died in January 1975, and that his last residence had
been in Jamaica, Queens, New York. The U.S.
World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938–1946 provided more information
about Maass’s service record: that he was born in 1914 in Germany, had enlisted
on June 10, 1943, as a private, that he was single, with dependents, and that
at that time he had completed four years of college education and that his
civil occupation was as a library assistant and attendant. Finally, the search
for Ernst Maass took a fascinating turn with the search results for “Ernest
Maass” from the Biography and Genealogy
Master Index (BGMI), which listed citations to biographical entries for an
Ernest Maass, born in 1914, in Who’s Who
in Library Service: A Biographical Directory of Professional Librarians in the
United States and Canada (1966), and in A
Biographical Directory of Librarians in the United States and Canada
(1970).[xi]
I found these books at the University of Toronto’s iSchool Inforum library collection,
and they revealed that Ernest Maass became a distinguished professional
librarian, eventually working at the Dag Hammarskjöld Library at the United
Nations in New York City.[xii]
It
was December 2, 2009, one day after the search began, and I felt positive now
that this was the Ernest Maass we were looking for, the young man who had visited
Hirschfeld on his birthday and who had been present at his death.[xiii]
But, where to go from here? The U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850–2009 had listed a
death date of January 24, 1975. Through my account at the University of Toronto
Library I was able to enter the online ProQuest
Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1851–2008), and in particular the New York Times (1923-Current file). I limited the
search to the Obituary section, for the period January–February 1975 only, under
the name “Maass”. There was one result, for January 25, 1975:
MAASS —Ernest,
beloved husband of Ann, devoted father of David and Bobby. Sunday, 9:45 A.M.,
Schwartz Brothers. Service “Forest Park Chapel,” Queens Blvd. and 76th Rd.,
Forest Hills.[xiv]
This led me to search the current telephone
White Pages online (www.whitepages.com)
for the name Maass in New York City. One of the people listed in the results
was a Robert D. Maass, 158 E. 7th Street, Apt E4, New York, NY 10009-6282, who
was said to be 50–54 years old. A button for “Additional Information”
redirected me to PeopleFinders (www.peoplefinders.com),
which listed a Robert D. Maass, age 53, who had lived in New York, NY,
Brooklyn, NY, and Jamaica, NY. There was no doubt that this Robert Maass was
the son of Ernst Maass.
I
did a Google search (www.google.com) for
“Robert Maass” “New York” and the first entry to come up was the website for
Robert Maass (www.robertmaass.com).
Robert Maass is a distinguished photojournalist who worked on contract for Newsweek magazine for ten years and is
now a freelancer. He is also a film maker (his feature-length documentary Gotham Fish Tales was released in 2003),
and has authored and illustrated more than ten books for children. His website
lists a contact link for sending messages to Maass.
While
I was conducting these searches I was in regular e-mail contact with Ralf Dose
at the M-H-G in Berlin. I have known Ralf since 2006, and have been able to
visit Berlin and the M-H-G once per year since then. It was at this point of
the search for Ernst Maass that I became nervous. I felt that it would be inappropriate
for me to approach Robert Maass directly to ask him about his father, or to
inquire about any Hirschfeld memorabilia that might have survived in his
father’s papers. I was worried that such questions, asked by a stranger, might
seem like an invasion of privacy, and that the Maass family would not react
well. By December 7, 2009, I had sent all of my search information to Ralf
Dose, including the e-mail contact information for Robert Maass, and encouraged
him, as a representative of the M-H-G, to contact Maass.[xv]
Ralf
did not hesitate, and sent an e-mail to Maass asking if he was related to Ernst
Maass, born in Stettin in 1914. Robert (known as Rob) Maass replied that he was
the son of Ernst Maass. Ralf asked if the family had any memorabilia relating
to their distant relative Magnus Hirschfeld. Rob replied that they had plenty
of family records, going back to the nineteenth-century, and that there was
some material relating to Hirschfeld, including photographs, letters, and so
on. Ralf, of course, was ecstatic that a new trove of Hirschfeld material had
been found. He continued a friendly e-mail correspondence with Maass.
Unfortunately, Maass could not provide a list of items, as the large amount of
material needed sorting, and Ralf was handicapped in that he could not easily
fly from Berlin to New York to view the collection. I consulted with Ralf, and
volunteered to go to New York to see the collection on behalf of the M-H-G.
Ralf agreed, and on December 16, 2009, I was introduced into a three-way e-mail
correspondence with Ralf and Rob.
A Scouting
Trip to New York
On February 5, 2010, my fifty-third
birthday, I arrived on the doorstep of Rob Maass at his brownstone in Brooklyn,
New York. He had taken time out from his busy schedule to allow me
to poke through his family papers. Rob was a perfect host, and was
somewhat bemused that anyone would be interested in these old papers. He knew a
bit about Hirschfeld, and we talked about Hirschfeld and Ernst Maass and Li
Shiu Tong and others as we spent the next five hours looking through the
material. This was not actually enough time to see everything, as there was one
suitcase stuffed with material, several boxes, and also loose items. We
concentrated on the photographs and the suitcase, which Rob placed on
the dining room table. I made some notes,
and also took photographs.
The more we looked through the material,
the more excited I became. There was an inscribed copy of Hirschfeld’s doctoral
thesis from 1892; family photographs; letters from Hirschfeld and also
postcards sent during his world tour; original photographs (and negatives) of
Hirschfeld’s funeral taken by Ernst Maass; letters from Hirschfeld’s assistant
Karl Giese to Maass; correspondence from Hirschfeld’s executor Franz Herzfelder
concerning the disposition of Hirschfeld’s estate (Maass received a bequest);
Hirschfeld’s passport from his world tour; and on and on. Rob confessed that
the material had only recently come into his possession, as it had been stored
in a closet at his mother’s house.[xvi] His mother
was still alive and was clearing up her home in preparation for moving. She had
wanted to dispose of the suitcase and other materials. Rob insisted that he wanted to look though the material first, and moved the things to his home in Brooklyn.
A copy of Hirschfeld's thesis from 1892, inscribed to his maternal uncle Dr Julius Mann, found in the Maass/Mann Papers, Brooklyn, N.Y. Credit: Don McLeod.
|
Reaction
in Berlin, and a Second Site Visit
Unfortunately, I was only able to visit
with Rob Maass for the one day. In our conversations, I stressed how important
the Hirschfeld material was for scholarship, and hinted that it should really
be repatriated to the M-H-G in Berlin. We said goodbye, and promised to
correspond further by e-mail. As soon as I arrived back in Toronto I loaded the
photographs
A postcard from Hirschfeld to his uncle, Dr Julius Mann, sent during his world tour, 1931. From the Maass/Mann Papers, Brooklyn, N.Y. Credit: Don McLeod. |
Karl Giese to Ernst Maass, January 21, 1938, less than two months before Giese committed suicide. From the Maass/Mann Papers, Brooklyn, N.Y. Credit: Don McLeod. |
I’d taken onto my computer and sent them as
e-mail attachments to Ralf at the M-H-G. Ralf and others at the M-H-G were very
excited to see this material, which had been unknown to
them.[xvii]
We continued our three-way correspondence, and later in 2010 Ralf Dose was able
to visit Rob Maass in Brooklyn himself, to have a closer look at the material
and to negotiate for its possible donation to the M-H-G. Rob was entirely
amenable, agreeing that the material should be preserved and made available for
research purposes. He agreed to begin donating the papers and other materials
relating to Hirschfeld and his circle to the M-H-G. In May 2011, Rob and his
partner Carroll Bogert were able to visit Berlin for a conference, and also
took time to visit the M-H-G. They brought a portion of the collection with
them, which they donated to the M-H-G.[xviii]
Some of this has already been displayed at the Schwules Museum in Berlin.[xix]
Additional donations will be forthcoming as the material is examined and
sorted.[xx]
Conclusion
The rediscovery of material relating to
Magnus Hirschfeld in the papers of Ernst Maass involved straightforward
research and considerable good luck. The story also has a happy ending. In some
ways it seems incredible that so few clues could lead to this result, and so
quickly. It was also remarkable that virtually all of this information was
found through my home computer. I didn’t have to leave home to do this
research. Until a few years ago, the level of manual research required to find
these papers would have been overwhelming, and perhaps impossible. But with the
advent of modern research tools such as Google, Ancestry.com, online phonebooks
and directories, and the instant communication afforded by e-mail, with good
luck important forgotten research materials may be uncovered with a few clicks
of the keyboard. What is more remarkable is that we are only in the infancy of the
development of online research tools and databases. In the future, online
searching will be much more powerful. There are likely many more forgotten
suitcases and trunks filled with historical documents and materials of interest
to LGBTI history, just waiting to be rediscovered. Someday, with research and
serendipity, we may find them.
Donald W. McLeod is a librarian, the
acquisitions coordinator at the University of Toronto Libraries, and has been a
volunteer at the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives for more than twenty-five
years. He is the author or editor of several books and articles on Canadian gay
history including Lesbian and Gay
Liberation in Canada: A Selected Annotated Chronology, 1964–1975 (1996),
and its successor volume for 1976–1981, currently in preparation.
The author would like to thank Ralf
Dose, who made helpful comments on a previous draft of this paper. The images
from Hirschfeld’s Exile Guestbook on pages 3–6 have been reproduced with the
permission of the Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach.
[i] The standard biography of Hirschfeld in English is by Charlotte
Wolff, Magnus Hirschfeld: A Portrait of a
Pioneer in Sexology (London: Quartet Books, 1986). Other important
book-length studies include Ralf Dose, Magnus
Hirschfeld: Deutscher – Jude – Weltbürger. Jüdische Miniaturen 15 (Berlin: Hentrich & Hentrich, 2005), Manfred
Herzer, Magnus Hirschfeld: Leben und Werk
eines jüdischen, schwulen und sozialistischen Sexologen, Second ed., rev. (Berlin:
MännerschwarmSkript Verlag, 2001), and Elena Mancini, Magnus Hirschfeld and the Quest for Sexual Freedom: A History of the
First International Sexual Freedom Movement. Critical Studies in Gender,
Sexuality, and Culture (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
[ii] Magnus Hirschfeld letter to Harry Benjamin, February 25, 1931. Magnus Hirschfeld Archive for Sexology, Humboldt-Universität
zu Berlin. (http://www2.hu-berlin.de/sexology/GESUND/ARCHIV/TRIP.HTM), viewed May 23, 2012.
[iii] See Wolff, 196–98.
[iv] Hirschfeld’s life in Nice is examined in detail in Donald W. McLeod
and Hans P. Soetaert, “« Il regarde la mer et pense à son idéal »: Die
letzten Tage von Magnus Hirschfeld in Nizza, 1934–1935,” Mitteilungen der Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, no. 45 (July
2010), 14–33.
[v] Little is known about Robert Kirchberger. Ralf Dose of the
Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft (M-H-G) has suggested that he served briefly as
Hirschfeld’s secretary in 1935. Ralf Dose e-mail message to Don McLeod,
September 9, 2009.
[vi] Hirschfeld’s death and funeral are covered extensively in McLeod
and Soetaert, , “« Il regarde la mer et pense à son idéal »: Die letzten
Tage von Magnus Hirschfeld in Nizza, 1934–1935”.
[vii] Hirschfeld’s
testament is published in its entirety in “Erstveröffentlichung des Testaments
Magnus Hirschfelds,” Mitteilungen der
Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, no. 4 (October 1984), pp. 7–12, and online
at: http://www.hirschfeld.in-berlin.de/frame.html?http://www.hirschfeld.in-berlin.de/testament.html
(viewed May 23, 2012). The accidental rediscovery in
1993 of Hirschfeld’s possessions held by Li Shiu Tong is detailed in Ralf Dose,
“In Memoriam Li Shiu Tong (1907–1993)
Zu Seinem 10. Todestag am 5.10.2003,” Mitteilungen
der Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, no. 35/36 (2003), 9–23.
[viii] Giese committed suicide in Brno, Czechoslovakia, in March 1938. The
Exile Guestbook, currently in the collection of the Deutsches Literaturarchiv
Marbach, had been rescued from a dustbin in Brno in 1942. The fact that it was
found in Brno strongly suggests that it had once been in the possession of Karl
Giese.
[ix] See McLeod and Soetaert, “« Il regarde la mer et pense à son
idéal »: Die letzten Tage von Magnus Hirschfeld in Nizza, 1934–1935.”
[x] Ralf Dose, e-mail message to Don McLeod, December 1, 2009.
[xi] Lee Ash and B.A. Uhlendorf, eds., A Biographical Directory of Librarians in the United States and Canada,
fifth ed. (Chicago: American Library Association, 1970); Lee Ash and B.A. Uhlendorf, eds., Who’s Who in Library Service: A Biographical
Directory of Professional Librarians in the United States and Canada ([Hamden,
Conn.]: Shoe String Press, 1966).
[xii] See the entry for “Ernest Maass” in Ash and Uhlendorf, eds., A Biographical Directory of Librarians in
the United States and Canada, p. 679.
[xiii] Don McLeod, e-mail message to Ralf Dose, December 2, 2009.
[xiv] “Maass, Ernest,” obituary, New
York Times, January 25, 1975, Sports section, 24.
[xv] Don McLeod, e-mail message to Ralf Dose, December 7, 2009.
[xvi] Rob Maass, e-mail message to Don McLeod, February 1, 2010.
[xvii] Rob Maass later continued to find incredible items relating to
Hirschfeld in the papers, including a diary from his exile in Ascona and his
graduation diploma from medical school.
[xviii] “Schenkung Rob Maass,” in “Chronik,” Mitteilungen der Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, no. 48 (December
2011), 5.
[xix] The exhibition “Hirschfeldforschung Fundstücke aus neuester Zeit
Objekte, Bücher, Dokumente” was held at the Schwules Museum, Berlin, December
7, 2011, to March 31, 2012.
[xx] Ralf Dose has written about the discovery of the Maass papers in
“Es gibt noch einen Koffer in New York — eine vorläufige Bestanssaufnahme,” Mitteilungen der
Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, no. 46/47 (May 2011), 12–20.
However, clients need to be very patient as they wait for the money to reach their account. The privacy of the clients is highly protected here, and anonymity with the online security measures. There has never been an instance whereby the writer revealed the identity of the client or furry porn comictold the school or university that the student asked for their services.
ReplyDeletehttps://saglamproxy.com
ReplyDeletemetin2 proxy
proxy satın al
knight online proxy
mobil proxy satın al
5BEZY