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The Anne Frank House (Dutch: Anne Frank Huis) is a writer's house and biographical museum dedicated to Jewish wartime diarist Anne Frank. The building is located on a canal called the Prinsengracht , close to the Westerkerk , in central Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
Anne, her sister and their parents hid in the annex with four other Jews from July 1942 until they were arrested in August 1944 and deported to concentration camps. Only her father, Otto Frank ...
Model of the former Opekta front building (left) and rear building / Secret Annex (right) where Anne Frank stayed. On 13 July 1942, the Franks were joined by the Van Pels family, made up of Hermann, Auguste, and 16-year-old Peter, and then in November by Fritz Pfeffer, a dentist and friend of the family. Frank wrote of her pleasure at having ...
Anne Frank: the Biography. Foreword by Miep Gies. Bloomsbury. Francine Prose (2009). Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0061430794. Joop van Wijk-Voskuijl and Jeroen De Bruyn (2023). The Last Secret of the Secret Annex: The Untold Story of Anne Frank, Her Silent Protector, and a Family Betrayal. Simon ...
Johannes Hendrik Voskuijl (15 January 1892 – 27 November 1945) was one of the people who helped to hide Anne Frank and the other people of the Secret Annex in Amsterdam. In the earliest editions of Het Achterhuis, known in English as The Diary of Anne Frank, Voskuijl is referred to as "Mr. Vossen", as he was the father of helper Bep Voskuijl, who is named "Elli Vossen" in the diary.
Secret Annex may mean: Act of Seclusion , also described as a secret annex to the Treaty of Westminster Anne Frank House , which contained the secret annex in which the Frank family lived in hiding
One of Anne Frank's close friends is opening up about her final encounter with the young Jewish icon and the history of her diary. ... the Franks were hiding in a secret annex in Amsterdam.
The Anne Frank Tree is also the name of an interactive project started by the Anne Frank House in 2006, when it was opened by Emma Thompson. [10] Visitors to the museum are able to leave their name and location on a "leaf" of the tree, showing their affinity with Anne Frank. [11]