This photo is of a stove and china cabinet in the Epp home. The china cabinet is beside the door on the right side of the room. A few plates can be seen behind the glass doors. The cabinet is of dark wood. In the corner on the adjoining wall is a stove. It is a tall white structure with fancy moulding at the top. The room has a wooden floor.
This photo is of the last Mennonite church in Fürstenwerderfeld, Poland [also known as Fürstenwerder, Poland]. The church is now used as a granary/storehouse. It is an unpainted wooden structure with windows at various levels. Charlotte Wiebe is standing in front of the building. There are trees on the right side of the photo at the end of the building. Sugar beets are growing on the graves at the front of the photo.
This photo is of the tombstone of Charlotte Wiebe's parents. Only part of the tombstone can be seen.There is a German inscription on the tombstone. The tombstone is lying on its side on the ground.
This photo is of the retirement home of Deacon G. Wiens in Bärwalde, Poland. The photo shows one side of a wooden house with windows along the side. A partial window can be seen on the end of the building. The windows all have shutters. A fence surrounds the building. There are trees on the right at the end of the house. This building now belongs to the state. Charlotte Wiebe and four others are standing on the dirt road in front of the building. Mrs. Wiebe is holding a bouquet of flowers. The gentleman with a young boy on the right of the photo is an administrator. The men on either side of Mrs. Wiebe are carrying cameras.
This photo is of Charlotte Wiebe and five young people standing on a cobblestone street in Bärwalde. There are tall trees along the side of the street. Mrs. Wiebe is holding flowers. Charlotte's son, Alfred Wiebe is standing second from left.
This photo is of the Penner family home in Bärwalde, Poland. The house is tan in colour. There are windows along the side and end of the house and two windows at the end on the second floor. There is a barrier [firewall?] on the roof separating it from a second structure. There are two small trees on the right side. A wire mesh fence with a gate surrounds the yard. Charlotte Wiebe's father was born in this house.
This photo is of the Fast family home in Neumünsterberg, Poland. It is a large two and a half storey half-timbered building. There are columns at the front of the building. An attached wing of the building is of wooden construction. There are trees behind the house and on the left side. Three young men are standing on the sidewalk in front of the house. The road in front is of it is paved with cobblestone. This house is preserved as an historical monument.
This photo is of the entrance to the Fast home in Bärwalde, Poland. There are steps with a railing on either side leading up to a double door. There is one window on the left side of the doors in the photo.
This photo is looking at a market hall on a square in Danzig which is somewhat destroyed but still in use. There is a man in the foreground and several other people in the background.
This photo is of the entrance to the Wiebe family home in Neumünsterberg, Poland. The doorway is arched. One step leads up to the door. There are small windows on either side of the door. A bench is on the right side of the door. The house is in the half-timbered style. The area in front of the door is dirt.
This photo is of the top half of a stove in the home of Rev. Ernest Wiebe in Fürstenwerder, Poland. The side of the stove appears to be made of white tiles. There are mouldings along the edges and the top. The moulding at the top has a lot of detail in it. There is also a moulding across the centre and an arch-shaped moulding in the centre close to the top of the stove.
This is a photo of Charlotte Wiebe and five young people sitting on a railing at the edge of a street crossing the Weichsel-Haff Canal. Right behind the railing are tall electrical transmission poles. The large building in the background is the residence of the Lutheran minister in Baarenhof, Poland. The building is made of brown bricks and has windows on two levels, as well as an additional dormer window. In the past, this building was used as a private school which was also attended by Mrs. Wiebe. There are large trees on either side of the building.
This photo is of three members of the Harder family sitting on a sled in Damerau, Germany. The sled is being pulled by two horses and is in front of a long building. The building is constructed of brick on the first floor and wood on the second floor. A ladder is propped against an open window on the second floor. There is snow on the ground and on the roof.
This photo is of a long building which is a combination of a barn, stable, and storehouse. In front of the building is a fence and an empty field is in front of that. There are a few trees in front of the barn and a few behind it. On the right side of the photo are some short bushes.