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  1. The Bunce Court School was an independent, private boarding school in the village of Otterden, in Kent, England. It was founded in 1933 by Anna Essinger, who had previously founded a boarding school, Landschulheim Herrlingen in the south of Germany, but after the Nazi Party seized power in 1933, she began to see that the school had ...

  2. 12 de jul. de 2022 · July 12, 2022. After the first group of students arrived at Bunce Court came hundreds more, traumatized by the ever-escalating catastrophe in Europe. Courtesy of the Oliner family. It took Anna...

  3. 11 de jul. de 2022 · Culture. How a Jewish teacher uprooted and relocated her school to escape the Nazis. In a new book, the heroic story of Anna Essinger finally gets its due. Former Bunce Court students at the...

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  4. 22 de abr. de 2022 · One is an account of the heroic actions of Anna Essinger, a pioneering educator and visionary who founded a unique school in England, Bunce Court, where she and other like-minded individuals nourished, instructed, and healed refugee children in the years leading up to and during the Second World War.

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  5. Ruth came to Britain with her parents from Breslau to escape Nazi persecution in 1939. Shortly afterwards her parents were interned and Ruth was sent to Bunce Court School in Otterden, Kent. This was a pioneering school founded by Anna Essinger and two of her sisters in the Swabian town of Herrlingen in 1926.

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  6. 1 de dic. de 2016 · Ruth Boronow Danson | Bunce Court School memories - YouTube. Jacqueline A. 6 subscribers. Subscribed. Like. 457 views 7 years ago. This video is a recording of a talk given by Ruth Boronow...

  7. 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.