Lotte Hanf

CORNWALL — Lotte Hanf died at Noble Horizons on April 22, 2007,  two months short of her 96th birthday.

Born in Munich, Germany, in 1911, she was the second of four children of Meta and Moritz Wallach. With his brother, Moritz founded the Volkskunsthaus Wallach in Munich, a museum and design center for European folk art, textile and costume design, and antiques. A Munich landmark, it flourished from its inception in 1900, until it was confiscated by the Nazis in 1939.

The family scattered. With her husband, Eric Hanf, and her small daughters, Brigitte and Catherine, Mrs. Hanf emigrated to Australia.  The Hanfs spent the duration of the war in Warrandyte, a village in the bush outside Melbourne.

After the war, they were reunited with Mrs. Hanf’s parents and siblings in the United States.

Mr. Wallach reopened his folk art enterprise in the old casino in Lime Rock, and later also had the Munich business restored to him. The saga of Volkskunsthaus Wallach will be the opening exhibition of the newly created Jewish Museum in Munich. The exhibit will open on June 26 of this year.

Mrs. Hanf worked for many years in her husband’s clothing business, and later at Thornhill Flower Shop with her friend, Winnie Van Duyl. She studied Italian, took cello lessons, and traveled extensively with her friend, Mary Schieffelin. She was an excellent multicuisine cook, and a first-rate seamstress and knitter.

Predeceased by her husband, Eric, and her daughter, Brigitte Hanf-Enos, she is survived by her daughter, Catherine Hanf Noren of Cornwall; her granddaughter, Eve Hanf-Enos of Keene, N.H.; her sister, Ann of Roslyn, N.Y.; and her brother, Fred, of Sarasota, Fla.

A memorial service for Mrs. Hanf will take place at the North Cornwall Congregational Church on Saturday, June 9, at 2:30 p.m.

The Kenny Funeral Home in Sharon has charge of the arrangements.

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