Anne Frank House, museum dedicated to German Jewish diarist Anne Frank located in the canal house in Amsterdam, Netherlands, where Frank and her family and four other Jewish people hid from Nazis from 1942 until they were betrayed and discovered by the Gestapo in 1944. The museum, which opened in 1960, also includes two adjacent buildings.
Frank’s father, German businessman Otto Frank, had taken his family—his wife and two daughters—from Germany to Amsterdam before the outbreak of World War II, to escape Nazi persecution. In 1940 he moved his food products business to 263 Prinsengracht, a canal house that was originally built in 1635. The building had a back house, which is now known as the Secret Annex, that was hidden from view by the surrounding buildings, and it was there that the group of eight people secluded themselves, never going out and relying on provisions brought by friends and some of Otto’s workers. Though the house was emptied by German troops after the raid, an employee, Miep Gies, was able to salvage the vivid diary that the lively teenage Anne had kept. Gies later gave it to Otto, the only one of the group to survive the extermination camps to which they had been sent.
Otto devoted himself to editing and getting the diary published; it was first published in Dutch in 1947. The Anne Frank Foundation was founded, with Otto’s cooperation, in 1957, with the aim of preserving the canal house as a museum. The number of visitors was initially overwhelming, and the museum was renovated and expanded in 1999.
The museum recreates the atmosphere and period of the Franks’ experience. Documents and possessions belonging to the eight people who hid here are displayed in the annex, and the front of the house has been restored to its 1940s state. Anne’s original diary is displayed in the renovated 265 Prinsengracht, next door to the original hideaway.