Correspondence to Alma Mahler, 1939.

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Correspondence to Alma Mahler, 1939.

Responding to a letter from Alma Mahler, Bingham explains that the tourist visas which Alma and Franz Werfel had obtained nearly a year earlier, in 1938, were no longer valid, and that they would now have to apply for a different type of visa (titre d'identité et de voyage, sauf-conduit français). A sheet of regulations concerning the visas is included.

1 item (2 leaves).

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United States. Consulate (Marseille, France)

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Bingham was the son of Hiram Bingham (1875-1956), who had been a governor and then a U.S. senator of Connecticut. Hiram Bingham, Jr. (as he signs his name here) was the Vice Consul at the consulate. Alma Mahler had written to the consulate from Sanary-sur-mer, where she and Franz Werfel had established an exile residence following their flight from Austria in 1938, at the time of the Anschluss. From the description of Correspondence to Alma Mahler, 1939. (University of Pennsylvania L...

Bingham, Hiram, 1903-1988.

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