Anna Essinger | |
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Born | 15 September 1879 Ulm, Germany |
Died | 30 May 1960 Otterden, Kent, England |
Nationality | German |
Education | Master of Arts |
Alma mater | University of Wisconsin |
Occupation(s) | Educator, co-founder of Landschulheim Herrlingen |
Years active | early 1900s - 1948 |
Known for | escaping Nazi Germany in 1933 with her entire school and for helping child refugees and Nazi concentration camp survivors |
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Anna Essinger (15 September 1879 – 30 May 1960) was a German Jewish educator. At the age of 20, she went to finish her education in the United States, where she encountered Quakers and was greatly influenced by their attitudes, adopting them for her own. In 1919, she returned to Germany on a Quaker war relief mission and was asked by her sister, who had founded a children's home, to help establish a school with it. She and her family founded a boarding school, the Landschulheim Herrlingen in 1926, with Anna Essinger as headmistress. In 1933, with the Nazi threat looming and the permission of all the parents, she moved the school and its 66 children, mostly Jewish, to safety in England, re-establishing it as the Bunce Court School. During the war, Essinger established a reception camp for 10,000 German children sent to England on the Kindertransports, taking some of them into the school. After the war, her school took many child survivors of Nazi concentration camps. By the time Essinger closed Bunce Court in 1948, she had taught and cared for over 900 children, most of whom called her Tante ("Aunt") Anna, or TA, for short. She remained in close contact with her former pupils for the rest of her life.