top of page

<message>

<PARTNERlINK>
IMG_7512.jpg

Get Transcript

Read the transcript online.

View Tape 1

Name

Born:

N/A

Place of Birth:

N/A

Date of Interview:

08/02/04

Place of Interview:

Interviewed by:

Name (Clickable)

5.jpg

It looks like this interview is hosted by one of our partners

Please click the link below to be redirected...

Visit Partner Website

INTERVIEW:

<name>

Born:

00/00/0000

Place of Birth:

Pilsen

Institution:

<partnerName>

Collection:

Date of Interview:

08/02/04

Interviewed By:

Dr Rosalyn Livshin

View Tape 2
View Tape 3
View Tape 4
View Tape 5
View Tape 6
View Tape 7
View Tape 8
View Tape 9
View Tape 10
View Tape 11
View Tape 12
View Tape 13
View Tape 14
View Tape 15
View Tape 16
View Tape 17
View Tape 18
View Tape 19

Interview Summary

Hana Eardley (nee Kohn) was born in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia in 1928. She had a twin brother and elder sister. Her parents were from Pilsen. Her mother's parents had a haberdashery shop on Premyslova Ulica. She knew little of her parents' upbringing or education and thought her father was an accountant. They were not so well off and lived in a second floor apartment on Havlickova 18. She had a happy childhood and attended the local school. Her parents were not religious and they attended Synagogue on the High Holy Days. She knew little of the political situation and was told that she and her twin brother, Hans, were going to England on an extended holiday to learn English. Her older sister Greta was coming on a transport at the beginning of September but this never left due to war. A man from the Sheffield Jewish Refugee Committee had arranged for her brother to stay with the Mulroy family in Rotherham and a Quaker had found her a place with the Crook family in Sheffield. He was the headmaster of the local Primary School. Both families were non-Jewish and were very warm and caring. They ensured the twins met every weekend and spoke on the phone every evening. Hana learnt English quickly and passed for the Grammar School within six months of arriving. She was taken to the Synagogue a few times due to the efforts of the Refugee committee but felt just as comfortable accompanying her foster mother to church. She felt at home here and made many non-Jewish friends. She became deputy head of the Grammar School and then took German and French at Sheffield University. She only discovered what happened to her parents and sister after the war, although her paternal grandmother survived in Theresienstadt and returned to Pilsen after the war. She never saw her before she died. Hana became a teacher with her first job in Whitefield, Manchester from 1951-60. Whilst there she went to Solingen on an exchange to teach for 3 months. Athough apprehensive of older Germans, she realized that there were good people there and one cannot generalize. In 1960 she went to teach in Salzberg for 1 year and was happy there. She returned and taught in Belvedere School in Liverpool and then in Levenshulme for 1 year and then met and married Stephen Eardley, a non-Jewish Liverpudlian.
View Tape 20
View Tape 21
View Tape 22
bottom of page