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Family of Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN and Eugenia LUNTZ

Husband: Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN (1884-1950)
Wife: Eugenia LUNTZ (1908-1970)
Children: Living HORNSTEIN ( - )
Marriage c. 1929 Hamburg, Germany

Husband: Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

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Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN

Name: Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN1,2
Sex: Male
Father: Joseph MULLER (1849-1903)
Mother: Jenny HARTMANN (1849-1924)
Birth 11 Oct 1884 Hamburg, Germany3
Occupation c. 1920 (age 35-36) Teacher; Hamburg, Germany
Address: Bernuth Conservatory
Occupation btw 1923 and 1933 (age 38-49) Lecturer; Hamburg, Germany
Address: Hamburg University
Occupation btw 1931 and 1933 (age 46-49) German Radio
Immigration 1937 (age 52-53) to London, England
Residence Dorking, Surrey, England
Address: Westdene, St Paul's Road
Death 15 Dec 1950 (age 66) Dorking, Surrey, England4,5
Cause: Cerebral Haemorrhage
Probate 3 Apr 1951 Dorking, Surrey, England
Address: Westdene, St Paul's Road

To Elisabeth £461 13s 5d

Wife: Eugenia LUNTZ

Name: Eugenia LUNTZ6,7
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1 Feb 1908 Saint Petersburg, Russia8,9
Departure New York, USA10
Arrival 20 Jun 1958 (age 50) Plymouth, Devon, England11
Death 30 Sep 1970 (age 62) Dorking, Surrey, England12

Child 1: Living HORNSTEIN

Name: Living HORNSTEIN
Sex: Female

Note on Husband: Robert Gerson MULLER-HARTMANN - shared note

After the outbreak of war in September of 1939 the British government became very concerned with identifying enemy aliens. Robert Müller-Hartmann had only just begun trying to build a new life in England, but by May of 1940 the political climate was such that a policy of mass internment of Jewish refugees was begun and Churchill ordered, Collar the lot. In what must have been a horrendous and unimaginable time for his family and friends, he was forced to leave Dorking, sent by boat and interned in a camp on the Isle of Man with thousands of others. Müller-Hartmann was released from the camp on the Isle of Man in the autumn of 1940.

 

The 1934 Hamburg directory listing for their residence was Tonküstler, GBorst, Wolterst 32.

 

Robert and Lisbeth Müller-Hartmann arrived in London in 1937, jobless and with little money. They first lived at 7 Durweston Mews, near Crawford Street, but within a short time they too made the move to Dorking and lived with the Hornsteins at a house on Ladygate Road with the Welsh-derived name Craigelly.

 

In later years Müller-Hartmann also kept an address in London, 68B Belsize Park Gardens (1939-1950s directories).

 

Robert Müller-Hartmann was a kind, polite and truly gentle man. He had an excellent command of the English language, but like his wife, of course, he spoke with a heavy German accent. Having an innate ability to distinguish subtleties in musical tones, others sometimes found it humorous that he had difficulty choosing between words that sounded similar, e.g. than and then, when conversing in English. He was very literate and read voraciously; Charles Dickens was his favourite author. A lover of opera, he also loved teaching people about opera while playing arias on the piano. Perhaps, in common with almost all other exiled Jewish musicians, he seemed somewhat embittered that circumstances prevented him from being perceived as more successful.

 

http://dearmuller-hartmann.com/DearMuller-Hartmann/SKW.htmlSettled in Eng., 1933, becoming a close friend of Vaughan Williams, whose The Pilgrim's Progress he partially translated into German. Vaughan Williams, Imogen Holst (sole daughter of Gustav Holst) and Genia Hornstein helped him find work and establish a new life in a foreign land. Robert Müller-Hartmann was a significant composer in his own right. His works included Sym. (1927), ov., Leonce and Lena (1922), Variations on a Pastoral Theme (1925), Sinfonietta (1943), Craigelly Suite (1944), chamber music, pf. pieces, and songs.

 

Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote these letters to fellow composer Robert Müller-Hartmann between 1938-1950. The two were first introduced by mutual friends Imogen Holst and Genia Hornstein through associations with the Bloomsbury House in London and the Dorking & District Refugee Committee. Müller-Hartmann was a Jewish German refugee who fled with his family to England in 1937 to escape Nazi oppression.

 

Over the next twelve years he and Vaughan Williams developed a strong friendship and Müller-Hartmann became an important collaborator with Vaughan Williams. The last project they worked on together was the German translation of Vaughan Williams's life-long creative dream, his opera The Pilgrim's Progress.

 

The letters give a rare glimpse into Vaughan Williams's thoughts during these important times in his later years. Robert Müller-Hartmann was a significant composer in his own right but certainly remains under-recognized.

 

In early 1950, while Müller-Hartmann was working on the German translation of The Pilgrim's Progress, the three Müller-Hartmanns moved to their own home in Dorking on St. Paul's Road called West Dene, a short walking distance from Craigelly. Only months after moving to West Dene, at a relatively young age, Robert Müller-Hartmann died suddenly from a cerebral haemorrhage on December 15, 1950. The funeral was in Dorking and his friend Yanya Hornstein gave the eulogy.13 Vaughan Williams was extremely saddened and deeply affected by the death of his fellow composer and close friend, a relationship formed late in his life, and he would miss his ideas, his opinions and their regular talks. Undoubtedly his loss evoked emotions akin to those he felt in 1934 after the death of Gustav Holst.

Note on Wife: Eugenia LUNTZ - shared note

In addition to her refugee work, Genia Hornstein was always active in many musical organizations. She was charismatic, vivacious and ebullient and spoke with a delightful Russian accent. She loved to entertain and in her later years, when visiting New York, she always loved to shop at Bloomingdale's.

 

Genia Hornstein was in love with Susanne's father, Robert Müller-

Hartmann. Ursula Vaughan-Williams was probably one of the first to learn from Genia, even before the Hornstein's youngest daughter, Eva, was born that Robert Müller-Hartmann was actually her father.

Sources

1Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 1: ""

2Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, Death Index, 1916-2007" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2007;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 2: ""

3Ibid.
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Citation 3: ""

4Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 4: ""

5Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, Death Index, 1916-2007" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2007;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 5: ""

6Ancestry.com, "UK, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2008;). Class: BT26; Piece: 1406; Item: 65.
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 6: ""

7Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, Death Index, 1916-2007" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2007;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 7: ""

8Ancestry.com, "UK, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2008;). Class: BT26; Piece: 1406; Item: 65.
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 8: ""

9Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, Death Index, 1916-2007" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2007;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 9: ""

10Ancestry.com, "UK, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2008;). Class: BT26; Piece: 1406; Item: 65.
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 10: ""

11Ibid. Class: BT26; Piece: 1406; Item: 65.
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Citation 11: ""

12Ancestry.com, "England & Wales, Death Index, 1916-2007" (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2007;).
Ancestry.com.
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Citation 12: ""


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