© Anne Frank Stichting
The chestnut tree
The people in hiding don’t go outside for two years. Anne feels imprisoned. The chestnut tree in the garden is very important for her.
During the years that Anne is in hiding her desire for freedom and nature grows and grows. The attic window in the secret annex is not covered. Through this window, Anne can see the sky, the birds and the chestnut tree. Its branches nearly touch the secret annex.
Diary
In her diary Anne writes about the tree three times, for the last time on 13 May, 1944:
‘Our chestnut tree is in full blossom. It is covered with leaves and is even more beautiful than last year.’
Blown down
Anne’s tree isn’t there anymore. The 170 year old tree, a white horse chestnut tree, stood in the garden of a house on the Keizersgracht 188, opposite the secret annex. It was one of the oldest chestnut trees in Amsterdam. The tree, which was not healthy, blew down in August 2010.
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Prinsengracht 263
On 1 December 1940, Otto Frank moves his business from the Singel to a larger building on the Prinsengracht at number 263 near the Westerkerk (church). From 6 July 1942 to 4 August 1944 the Frank family and four others hide in the secret annex behind this building.
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