top of page

<message>

<PARTNERlINK>
IMG_7512.jpg

Get Transcript

Read the transcript online.

View Tape 1

Name

Born:

N/A

Place of Birth:

N/A

Date of Interview:

05/06/16

Place of Interview:

Interviewed by:

Name (Clickable)

5.jpg

It looks like this interview is hosted by one of our partners

Please click the link below to be redirected...

Visit Partner Website

INTERVIEW:

<name>

Born:

00/00/0000

Place of Birth:

Vienna

<name>

Born:

00/00/0000

Place of Birth:

Institution:

<partnerName>

Collection:

Date of Interview:

05/06/16

Interviewed By:

Dr Bea Lewkowicz

View Tape 2
View Tape 3
View Tape 4
View Tape 5
View Tape 6
View Tape 7
View Tape 8
View Tape 9
View Tape 10
View Tape 11
View Tape 12
View Tape 13
View Tape 14
View Tape 15
View Tape 16
View Tape 17
View Tape 18
View Tape 19

Interview Summary

Freddy Kosten was born Manfred Kösten in November 1928 in Vienna. His mother came from a large family in Krakow – Freddy recalls visiting the maternal family regularly but not often. Freddy grew up near the Augarten in Vienna in the 20th district and has happy memories of playing there and also skating in the winter time. He does not remember many incidents of Nazi discrimination but thinks this is due to his young and naïve nature and also being protected by his parents.  Freddy’s father, who came from what is now the Ukraine, served in World War I and was a war photographer. Later he worked in the medical instrument supply business and also made use of his knowledge and talent for languages. 


Freddy and his older sister Claire came on a Kindertransport to London and his parents followed shortly after. They were looked after by Benn Levy – a well-known playwright- and his wife, the actress Constance Cummings. They lived in 66 Old Church Street, Chelsea which is a famous building by Walter Gropius. The couple helped the family financially to settle in and paid for the children's schooling. 


His father was interned on the Isle of Man (Camp Douglas) but managed to find work in his profession (medical instrument industry) later. In the camp he had made the acquaintance of Ferdinand Rauter, an Austrian pianist and accompanist (to the singer Engel Lund), who founded the Austrians Musician group and the Refugee Musicians Community. Ferdinand Rauter later married Freddy’s sister Claire. Freddy’s parents joined a synagogue in Chelsea where he also celebrated his Bar Mitzvah, but he has not identified with any religion since. 


After boarding schools in Eastbourne (Aldro) and Brackley (Magdalen College School) he attended Imperial College (1945-49) where he studied mining geology. On graduating he joined the Geological Survey and went to the Gold Coast [a British colony on the Gulf of Guinea in West Africa from 1867 to its independence as the nation of Ghana in 1957]. He remembers many fascinating adventures there and with Balfour Beatty in East Africa and later in Nigeria. He remembers seeing Kwame Nkrumah [first Prime Minster of Ghana] and Jomo Kenyatta [first Prime Minister of Kenya] in the course of his work. He married Helen – a colleague of his sister (the headteacher of Primrose Hill Infants for many years) - in 1962; they spent a year in Nigeria, and visited East Africa several times during the 1960s. He joined the Natural Environment Research council (NERC) in 1971, and later taught, and wrote about, data protection at the Greater London Council and in the private sector until his retirement at the age of 70. He identifies as European- British. Freddy is grateful that the tragedies in his life turned into opportunities coming to Great Britain. 

View Tape 20
View Tape 21
View Tape 22
bottom of page