Homeland in the West by Eileen Hallet Stone (2002, Hardcover) LDS, MORMON BOOK

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Item specifics

Condition
Brand New: A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See all condition definitionsopens in a new window or tab
ISBN
9780874807028
Category

About this product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
University of Utah Press
ISBN-10
0874807026
ISBN-13
9780874807028
eBay Product ID (ePID)
1965721

Product Key Features

Book Title
Homeland in the West
Number of Pages
520 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2002
Topic
United States / State & Local / West (Ak, CA, Co, Hi, Id, Mt, Nv, Ut, WY), Sociology / General, Jewish Studies
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Social Science, History
Author
Eileen Hallet Stone
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.5 in
Item Length
10 in
Item Width
7 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2001-003862
Dewey Edition
21
Reviews
"Represents a sound contribution specifically to the history of Jews in Utah, but also to a deeper understanding of ethnic and cultural diversity in the state."-Philip F. Notarianni, Utah State Historical Society, "A fresh and most welcome addition to Utah history."--Helen Papanikolas, author of The Time of the Little Black Bird, "A fresh and most welcome addition to Utah history."-Helen Papanikolas, author of The Time of the Little Black Bird, "Represents a sound contribution specifically to the history of Jews in Utah, but also to a deeper understanding of ethnic and cultural diversity in the state."--Philip F. Notarianni, Utah State Historical Society "A fresh and most welcome addition to Utah history."--Helen Papanikolas, author of The Time of the Little Black Bird, "Represents a sound contribution specifically to the history of Jews in Utah, but also to a deeper understanding of ethnic and cultural diversity in the state."--Philip F. Notarianni, Utah State Historical Society
Grade From
Twelfth Grade
Dewey Decimal
978.2/004924
Table Of Content
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction A Brief History of Jews in the West: Early Jews of the West 1. A Wandering Jew on the Thirty-eighth Parallel: Solomon Nunes Cavalho 2. European Jewry: An Overview, by Peter Black 3. Early Jewish Utah Pioneers "Fannie, Let Us Take Our Few Dollars and Go West": Julius and Fannie Brooks Gentile Pioneer Merchants: Samuel H. Auerbach From Tie Camp to Political Ties: Simon Bamberger "Anna Got Her Gun": Anna Rich Marks A Newhouse Monogram: Samuel Newhouse A Pioneer in Underground Mining Machinery: Joseph Rosenblatt 4. Turn-of-the-Century Arrivals For Love of Yiddish: Abe B. Cline Collateral: Character, Faith and Whatnot: Simon Frank Naches in Nephi: Eva Siegel With the Encouragement of Strangers: Sol J. Selvin Keeping Kosher in Vernal: Claire Steres Bernstein Born of Immigrant Parents: Abe Bernstein Red-Hot Coals: Esther Klein The Traveling Salesman: Simon Shapiro 5. Minyan in a Railroad Town An Ogden Native: Ralph Benowitz Farm Life and the Jewish Daily Forward: Doris Neiditch 6. Back to the Land A Brief View of Clarion, by Robert Alan Goldberg The Agricultural Colony Clarion: A Retrospective, by Several Clarion Colonists 7. Networking Before the Talkies: Howard Marcus Radio Days: Sid Fox The Newsies, by Richard McGillis: Charlie McGillis Judaism, Politics, PR, and War: A. Wally Sandack 8. Shochets and Cattle Dealers Schmaltz for the Holidays: Harry J. Doctorman "The Bumper," by Paula Block Draper: Paul Weinstein Block 9. Knishes and Kashrut Devotion to Tradition: Ed Eisen Cheverta Kiddish, an Honor: Sade Tannenbaum Everyone's Going Meshugge in the Kitchen: Jean Eisen A Boat to America: Abe Guss Goyisheh Potatoes and Kosher Homes: Rose Guss Nord It's in the Bag: I.J. Wagner Wolfes in the West: Michael Wolfe Sweet Tooth: Tony Sweet 10. Standing Up to Bigotry Ragtown: Sidney Matz Peddler in the Storm: Ruth Matz McCrimmon A Minority Child: Berenice Matz Engelberg "The Jewish Kid": Eugene Levetan 11. L'Chaim Merchants, Mavins, Military, and Mergers: Ralph Tannenbaum "The Americans Are Here!": Harry Miller 12. Surviving Escape from Kristallnacht: Minna Margaret Loser Praijs and John Price "I Had on Working Clothes and a Coat, That's All": Isaac Rose Forced Labor, Lost Youth: Michael Schafir Revisioning the Holocaust: Hilda Parker Liberating Dachau, a Soldier's Observations: Joel Shapiro Stalag 19: Dr. Ernst Beier 13. Tzedakah Worldly Experiences: Joanne Spitzer McGillis The CCC Camp: Anne Dolowitz "Busy as a Bird Dog": Esther Rosenblatt Landa The Mount Sinai Poker, Canasta, and S****** Club, by Carol Landa 14. Landsmen Soviet in Salt Lake: Alla Branzburg Frontier Jews: Harris Lenowitz Afterword Appendix A: The Memories Are Many, the Stores Now Few A Partial List of Jewish-Owned Businesses in Utah, Pre- and Post-World War II Appendix B: Traditional Jewish Foods Compiled by Donna Barnow Blandrin Appendix C: Yiddish Glossary, Hebrew Terms, and Some Expressions Notes Bibliography Index
Synopsis
""Even my Dad had a hard time finding a place when he and my mother were first married...Momma was pregnant with Berenice, and he went to a woman who had a house. He asked if they could rent a place. She said, no, she couldn t rent to Jews. Dad said, 'Well, now I know why Jesus was born in a manger.'"" Ruth Matz McCrimmon, "A Homeland in the West" Rather than a history of Utah Jews, this is a book of Utah Jewish histories. "A Homeland in the West" collects the stories and the voices of men and women drawn west by choice or by chance, people who made their way and earned their living in a culture often alien, occasionally hostile, sometimes welcoming. These are the stories of immigrants and explorers, artists and merchants, senators and soldiers. Culled from countless hours of oral histories comprising more than ninety current and archived interviews, Eileen Hallet Stone has gathered reminiscences that tell a tale of life in Utah from a seldom-heard perspective. These singular threads supplemented with stirring photographs, traditional recipes, and a Yiddish glossary weave a rich and varied tapestry of Utah s enduring Jewish heritage. Every page is a testament to the individuals who help create the state s collective history. Meet: Solomon Nunes Carvalho, who was invited by Colonel John C. Fremont to join his final, near-fatal expedition across the Rocky Mountains in search of a viable route for the country s first transcontinental railroad. The Auerbach brothers, who opened their first store in Salt Lake City in 1864 and who, by 1883 saw it become a mercantile enterprise worth half a million dollars in sales and real estate. Simon Bamberger, who was elected governor in 1916 the first Democrat, first non-Mormon, and only Jew to hold the office. Anna Rich Marks who made a fortune in real estate and mining and who at one point held the representatives of the Denver and Rio Grand Railroad at gunpoint demanding they pay her price to cross her land. Joel Shapiro, who, as a soldier during World War II, found himself in the detachment from his unit assigned to join the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. With their own voices, in their own words, "A Homeland in the West" speaks to the dichotomy of living as 'gentiles' in Mormon 'Zion, ' testifying to the ways in which memory and tradition, lifestyles and legacies layer together to form the whole of a person, the whole of a community.", "Even my Dad had a hard time finding a place when he and my mother were first married...Momma was pregnant with Berenice, and he went to a woman who had a house. He asked if they could rent a place. She said, no, she couldn't rent to Jews. Dad said, 'Well, now I know why Jesus was born in a manger.'" --Ruth Matz McCrimmon, A Homeland in the West Rather than a history of Utah Jews, this is a book of Utah Jewish histories. A Homeland in the West collects the stories and the voices of men and women drawn west by choice or by chance, people who made their way and earned their living in a culture often alien, occasionally hostile, sometimes welcoming. These are the stories of immigrants and explorers, artists and merchants, senators and soldiers. Culled from countless hours of oral histories comprising more than ninety current and archived interviews, Eileen Hallet Stone has gathered reminiscences that tell a tale of life in Utah from a seldom-heard perspective. These singular threads--supplemented with stirring photographs, traditional recipes, and a Yiddish glossary--weave a rich and varied tapestry of Utah's enduring Jewish heritage. Every page is a testament to the individuals who help create the state's collective history. Meet: * Solomon Nunes Carvalho, who was invited by Colonel John C. Frémont to join his final, near-fatal expedition across the Rocky Mountains in search of a viable route for the country's first transcontinental railroad. * The Auerbach brothers, who opened their first store in Salt Lake City in 1864 and who, by 1883 saw it become a mercantile enterprise worth half a million dollars in sales and real estate. * Simon Bamberger, who was elected governor in 1916--the first Democrat, first non-Mormon, and only Jew to hold the office. * Anna Rich Marks who made a fortune in real estate and mining and who at one point held the representatives of the Denver and Rio Grand Railroad at gunpoint--demanding they pay her price to cross her land. * Joel Shapiro, who, as a soldier during World War II, found himself in the detachment from his unit assigned to join the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. With their own voices, in their own words, A Homeland in the West speaks to the dichotomy of living as 'gentiles' in Mormon 'Zion,' testifying to the ways in which memory and tradition, lifestyles and legacies layer together to form the whole of a person, the whole of a community., "Even my Dad had a hard time finding a place when he and my mother were first married...Momma was pregnant with Berenice, and he went to a woman who had a house. He asked if they could rent a place. She said, no, she couldn't rent to Jews. Dad said, 'Well, now I know why Jesus was born in a manger.'" -Ruth Matz McCrimmon, A Homeland in the West ......, "Even my Dad had a hard time finding a place when he and my mother were first married...Momma was pregnant with Berenice, and he went to a woman who had a house. He asked if they could rent a place. She said, no, she couldn't rent to Jews. Dad said, 'Well, now I know why Jesus was born in a manger.'" --Ruth Matz McCrimmon, A Homeland in the West Rather than a history of Utah Jews, this is a book of Utah Jewish histories. A Homeland in the West collects the stories and the voices of men and women drawn west by choice or by chance, people who made their way and earned their living in a culture often alien, occasionally hostile, sometimes welcoming. These are the stories of immigrants and explorers, artists and merchants, senators and soldiers. Culled from countless hours of oral histories comprising more than ninety current and archived interviews, Eileen Hallet Stone has gathered reminiscences that tell a tale of life in Utah from a seldom-heard perspective. These singular threads--supplemented with stirring photographs, traditional recipes, and a Yiddish glossary--weave a rich and varied tapestry of Utah's enduring Jewish heritage. Every page is a testament to the individuals who help create the state's collective history. Meet: - Solomon Nunes Carvalho, who was invited by Colonel John C. Fr mont to join his final, near-fatal expedition across the Rocky Mountains in search of a viable route for the country's first transcontinental railroad. - The Auerbach brothers, who opened their first store in Salt Lake City in 1864 and who, by 1883 saw it become a mercantile enterprise worth half a million dollars in sales and real estate. - Simon Bamberger, who was elected governor in 1916--the first Democrat, first non-Mormon, and only Jew to hold the office. - Anna Rich Marks who made a fortune in real estate and mining and who at one point held the representatives of the Denver and Rio Grand Railroad at gunpoint--demanding they pay her price to cross her land. - Joel Shapiro, who, as a soldier during World War II, found himself in the detachment from his unit assigned to join the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. With their own voices, in their own words, A Homeland in the West speaks to the dichotomy of living as 'gentiles' in Mormon 'Zion, ' testifying to the ways in which memory and tradition, lifestyles and legacies layer together to form the whole of a person, the whole of a community., "Even my Dad had a hard time finding a place when he and my mother were first married...Momma was pregnant with Berenice, and he went to a woman who had a house. He asked if they could rent a place. She said, no, she couldn't rent to Jews. Dad said, 'Well, now I know why Jesus was born in a manger.'" -Ruth Matz McCrimmon, A Homeland in the West Rather than a history of Utah Jews, this is a book of Utah Jewish histories. A Homeland in the West collects the stories and the voices of men and women drawn west by choice or by chance, people who made their way and earned their living in a culture often alien, occasionally hostile, sometimes welcoming. These are the stories of immigrants and explorers, artists and merchants, senators and soldiers. Culled from countless hours of oral histories comprising more than ninety current and archived interviews, Eileen Hallet Stone has gathered reminiscences that tell a tale of life in Utah from a seldom-heard perspective. These singular threads-supplemented with stirring photographs, traditional recipes, and a Yiddish glossary-weave a rich and varied tapestry of Utah's enduring Jewish heritage. Every page is a testament to the individuals who help create the state's collective history. Meet: * Solomon Nunes Carvalho, who was invited by Colonel John C. FrEmont to join his final, near-fatal expedition across the Rocky Mountains in search of a viable route for the country's first transcontinental railroad. * The Auerbach brothers, who opened their first store in Salt Lake City in 1864 and who, by 1883 saw it become a mercantile enterprise worth half a million dollars in sales and real estate. * Simon Bamberger, who was elected governor in 1916-the first Democrat, first non-Mormon, and only Jew to hold the office. * Anna Rich Marks who made a fortune in real estate and mining and who at one point held the representatives of the Denver and Rio Grand Railroad at gunpoint-demanding they pay her price to cross her land. * Joel Shapiro, who, as a soldier during World War II, found himself in the detachment from his unit assigned to join the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. With their own voices, in their own words, A Homeland in the West speaks to the dichotomy of living as 'gentiles' in Mormon 'Zion,' testifying to the ways in which memory and tradition, lifestyles and legacies layer together to form the whole of a person, the whole of a community.
LC Classification Number
F835.J5H66 2001

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