Ralph Steiner: Apartment in Fasanenstraße 60 second floor where Ralph lived with his parents
Ralph Steiner: Wedding photo of maternal grandparents Moritz Liebmann (1874-1932) and Malli Segall (1837- perished in 1942)
Ralph Steiner: Ralph Steiner
Ralph Steiner: Father's passport
Ralph Steiner: "XK120 Jaguar. That came into my life and it’s still running today. "
Ralph Steiner: "celebration party having won the UK TAD cart racing in the very early days in its class. "
Ralph Steiner: "This is a smart little photograph of me and my little teddy bear. He came
Ralph Steiner: "This is in Arosa with my father and nanny prior to being collected in 1938 to come over to England."
Ralph Steiner: "This is Jenny
Ralph Steiner: "This is my
Ralph Steiner: Mother's passport
Ralph Steiner: Mother's passport
Ralph Steiner: "MGTC which I totally had to rebuild and went over all over Europe with it. Great little motorcar. Served me well."
Ralph Steiner: Father's passport with visa to enter the UK
Ralph Steiner: German typewriter which his father used with MI9 to make false documents in WW2
Ralph Steiner: "This is a photograph outside 33 Belvedere Court which was our flat in the background. With my little brother
Ralph Steiner: Father's passport
Ralph Steiner: Mother (on the right) at the finishing school in 1928 in Strathmore Gardens. The girl on the left is Gerry and it was her mother's house.
Ralph Steiner: First photos after Ralph's birth in a private clinic in Kaiserallee 21 in Berlin: nanny with baby
Ralph Steiner: Father's passport with stamp of arrival in the UK in 1939
Ralph Steiner: Fasanenstraße 60
Ralph Steiner: Photo of his mother's company R&S Segall on the 2nd floor of this building in Berlin; presentation knife given to customers of R&S Segall
Ralph Steiner: "Father sorting out some of the skins with Mr. Wolff
Ralph Steiner: Mother Ilse with her younger brother Alfred who perished in 1942
Ralph Steiner: From the right: father's eldest sister
Ralph Steiner: German typewriter which his father used with MI9 to make false documents in WW2
Ralph Steiner: Parents' engagement photo
Ralph Steiner: German typewriter which his father used with MI9 to make false documents in WW2
Ralph Steiner: Family photo in Hampstead Garden Suburb
Ralph Steiner: RS with his parents 1935
Ralph Steiner: Paternal great-grandparents Isaak (1828-1857) and Rosa (1837-1911) in Ulm
Ralph Steiner: Liebmann family
Ralph Steiner: Maternal grandparents Liebmann in Marienbad in 1927
Ralph Steiner: Mother's passport
Ralph Steiner: "This was at an air meeting which I flew into from Great Britain to Switzerland
Ralph Steiner: Mother's passport
Ralph Steiner: Wedding photo with wife Barbara
Ralph Steiner
Ralph Steiner was born in December 1934 in Berlin
Born: 1934
Place of Birth: Berlin
Arrived in Britain: 01/01/1939
Experiences: Came With Parents or Close Family , Foreign Office War Work
Interview Summary
Ralph Steiner was born in December 1934 in Berlin. His mother’s family company, A&S Segall, were Berlin-based furriers. She had attended finishing school in the 1920s in London, a connection which later helped her find a guarantor when they wanted to emigrate to London.
In 1938 Ralph’s mother saw that the situation for Jews in Germany was untenable. She sent Ralph and his nanny to Switzerland to organise the family’s emigration to the UK. Ralph’s teddy bear was stuffed with money for the stay and it was so well disguised that the German border guard didn’t find it. His father, meanwhile, was interned in Dachau but Ralph’s mother managed to get him out. His parents managed to get to Switzerland and flew from Zurich to London.
Ralph attended nursery school in Hampstead Garden Suburb. The family managed financially as their fur company had a branch in London: Hermann Wolff& Co, in Upper Thames Street. His father worked in the company, and was also briefly involved with the MI9, a splinter group of military intelligence which assisted British spies abroad. His clothes, shoes and underwear were used as templates for agent clothing, and their labels redeployed for spies operating on the Continent. His typewriter was used to produce false documents. Ralph still has the typewriter. Ralph remembers taking shelter from the Blitz and collecting shrapnel with his friend. He was evacuated to North Wales as the V1 and V2 attacks were taking place. Ralph wasn’t traumatised but remembers it rather as exciting times for a boy. In 1943 his brother was born.
After primary school, Ralph had his bar mitzvah and went to a boarding school, Badingham College in Surrey. After finishing school, he joined the Royal Air Force where he trained as a navigator. He enjoyed his technical training, which became the foundation for his later commercial activities. After leaving the RAF, he studied at the College of Aeronautical and Automobile Engineering. He turned his life-long passion for motor cars and aeroplanes into a business, Tungsten Automobile Developments. He remembers many wonderful customers, among them Roger Moore with his Saint car and Peter Sellars with his Mini. He married his first Swedish wife in 1954 and raised a family in Arkley. Peter got his flying licence, bought his first aircraft and enjoyed flying to many places, such as Switzerland and Sweden. With his second wife he enjoys family life and his message to us is: “You need discipline and respect, otherwise a society can’t work. And be happy. Make happy. It’s positive. Don’t look at the negatives. Don’t waste your valuable time ‘cos lives are short.”
Additional Comments:
Key words: Berlin. Ulm. MI9. Blitz. Badingham College in Surrey.RAF. A&S Segall. Hermann Wolff& Co. Adolf Galland- ace pilot of the Luftwaffe.
Place of Birth
My father was involved with MI9. Now MI9 was an organisation splinter group of military intelligence for avoidance and evasion of being captured on the continent, to help the pilots and people escape back to England. Very interesting history on its own. And one day some gentlemen turned up at my – in Belvedere Court and they discussed with my father all the German connections he had. They took his clothes, some clothes away, they took some of his shoes away, they took his underwear away. Wherever there were labels and indications of how the suits and how the Germans made the shoes. The shoelaces were different. The buttonholes apparently in a German suit were different to a British suit. So, they learnt all that from my father who helped them out, and then he had a German typewriter which they said, ‘Can it be used to do false documentations?’ And he was then involved in going to Marylebone Hotel, the grand hotel there, where MI9 was operating and he was making documents with one of his colleagues, false documents, with this German typewriter which I’ve still got here incidentally.
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