Heiden, Konrad
1901-1966, publisher, fled to the Saar region in 1933 then into exile in France and the USA; he wrote one of the first biographies of Hitler as well as several books about Nazism
Heine, Heinrich
1797-1856, German poet and writer, emigrated to Paris in 1831 due to political hostility
Helga Prinzessin zu Löwenstein
1910-2004. Emigration to Austria in 1933, to England in 1935, and to the USA in 1936. As a lecturer, she worked to educate people about National Socialism. Supporter of the American Guild for German Cultural Freedom
Hemingway, Ernest
1899-1961, US writer and journalist, received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954
Hepworth, Bearbara
(1903-1975) was a significant British sculptor and the wife of Ben Nicholson.
Hermann-Neiße, Max
1886-1941, German author or prose and poems, one of Berlin’s most popular literary figures in the 1920s, emigrated with some diversions to London in 1933, where he died almost totally forgotten
Herrmann-Neiße, Max
1886-1941, deutscher Schriftsteller, der 1933 nach London emigrierte, wo er mit Lion Feuchtwanger, Rudolf Olden und Ernst Toller den Exil-P.E.N. gründete. 1936 erschien bei Oprecht sein Gedichtband Um uns die Fremde.
Herz, Peter
Austrian author, librettist and features writer, emigrated to London via Zurich and Paris in 1938; after a period of internment on the Isle of Man, he served as the director and compère of the Blue Danube Club cabaret until 1954.
Herzfelde, Wieland
1896–1988, worked from 1917 to 1947 as a publisher, founded among other things the publishing house Malik Verlag with his brother John Heartfield. He spent his exile years in Czechoslovakia and the USA. From 1949, he was professor for literature at Leipzig University.
Hesse, Hermann
1877-1962, also known under the pseudonym Emil Sinclair, German writer, Swiss citizen from 1924, pacifist, supported many emigrants.