The APA Library, which became a library of psychiatric history since APA
moved its headquarters to Arlington, Va., has maintained since its inception
close to 50 years ago an extensive collection of materials on psychiatric
subjects and individuals. The material is drawn from newspaper clippings,
magazine articles, brochures, and publications of significant psychiatric
events. One of the largest files is labeled "Freud." Among the
contents of the Freud file are extensive photographs and descriptions of the
Freud Museum in London.
Freud's home and office at Bergasse 19 in Vienna, where he lived from 1891
to 1938, is marked only with a plaque. In March 1938 Austria was annexed by
Nazi Germany, and attacks on Jews began immediately. Within days Freud's flat
was searched, and Anna Freud was held for an entire day by the Gestapo for
questioning. With the support of powerful friends, Freud managed to escape.
The Nazis allowed Freud to take with him the major furnishings of his office
and library. Of special interest is his office, where he saw patients.
Just before Freud was spirited to London, August Aishorn, a Viennese
psychoanalyst, arranged for a photographer, Edmond Engelmann, to take pictures
of the office. The pictures show the famous couch with an armchair at the
head, a large desk, and an extensive collection of more than 2,000
antiquities, mainly of Egyptian, Greek, and Roman origins. Several authors
have hypothesized that the antiquities represented suppressed memories to
Freud: "the retrieved memory was like the unearthed ancient
object." A photograph of Freud's waiting room shows an armless sofa and
a small table with chairs around it. Framed pictures and manuscripts hang on
the walls.
Engelmann's photos were located with difficulty and eventually came to Anna
Freud. Freud's office at 20 Maresfield Gardens in London was set up as a
replica of his office in Vienna. Anna Freud lived in the house until she died
in 1982. The house is now a museum and has been open to the public since
1986.
An exhibit of some of Freud's antiquities was held at the Jewish Museum in
New York in 1975 and toured the United States for three years (1989-92). A
Freud centenary exhibit was presented by the American Psychoanalytic
Association at APA's annual meeting in Chicago in 1956 and at the Academy of
Medicine also that year. An accompanying brochure shows photos of Freud at age
8 with his father, at age 16 with his mother, with his wife in 1886, and
numerous photos of his later years. The brochure also lists Freud's
publications.
In 1939 the New York Psychiatric Institute acquired 800 volumes from
Freud's library. These were books Freud had sent to a local bookseller when he
left Vienna and were advertised for sale for $500. By chance, Dr. Jacob
Schatsky, the institute's librarian, saw the ad and was able to buy the books,
most of which are old and bound in leather.
In 1976 Engelmann's photos of Freud's home and office were published by
Basic Books with an introduction by Peter Gay. The book was reviewed for the
New York Times "Book World" by Anthony Storr, who found
it of interest that Freud's office contained photographs of two of his pupils,
Marie Bonaparte and Lou Andreas Salome, as well as Yvette Guilbert and
Toulouse Lautrec.
More information on the Freud Museum is posted online at<www.freud.org.uk/>.▪