A Certain Ambivalence: Florida's Jews and the Civil War (original) (raw)

Southern Jewish History, v. 21 (2018), full issue

Southern Jewish History, 2018

COVER PICTURE: Passover seder conducted at the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary in 1958. Harry Weissman and his son Donald appear at the right end of the head table. The article by Mark K. Bauman and Leah Burnham on pages 1–60 traces the interaction of members of the local Jewish community with Jewish prisoners, including such seders. (Harry Weissman Papers, courtesy of the Cuba Family Archives for Southern Jewish History at the Breman Museum, Atlanta.) TABLE OF CONTENTS The Atlanta Federal Penitentiary and Area Jews: A Social Service Case Study, by Mark K. Bauman and Leah Burnham Insiders or Outsiders: Charlottesville’s Jews, White Supremacy, and Antisemitism, Phyllis K. Leffler PRIMARY SOURCES: The Galveston Diaspora: A Statistical View of Jewish Immigration Through Texas, 1907–1913, Bryan Edward Stone BOOK REVIEWS Michael R. Cohen, Cotton Capitalists: American Jewish Entrepreneurship in the Reconstruction Era, reviewed by Edward S. Shapiro Arlo Haskell, The Jews of Key West: Smugglers, Cigar Makers, and Revolutionaries, 1823–1969, reviewed by Raymond Arsenault Shari Rabin, Jews on the Frontier: Religion and Mobility in Nineteenth-Century America, reviewed by Lee Shai Weissbach EXHIBIT REVIEWS The Legacy of the Hebrew Orphans’ Home: Educating the Jewish South Since 1876, reviewed by Caroline Light Kehillah: A History of Jewish Life in Greater Orlando, reviewed by Mark I. Pinsky WEBSITE REVIEW The Texas Slavery Project, reviewed by Joshua Furman

Southern Jewish History, v. 25 (2022), full issue

Southern Jewish HIstory, 2022

COVER PICTURE: Max and Trude Heller announcing Max’s candidacy for mayor of Greenville, South Carolina, 1971. Heller’s life and career are documented in the article by Andrew Harrison Baker in this issue. (Courtesy of Special Collections and Archives, Furman University.) TABLE OF CONTENTS Maryland’s Jews, Military Service, and the American Revolutionary Era: The Case of Elias Pollock, by Owen Lourie “Did You Ever Hear of Judah Benjamin?” Fictional Representations of the Jewish Confederate, by Michael Hoberman Max Moses Heller: Jewish Mayor in the Sunbelt South, by Andrew Harrison Baker PRIMARY SOURCES: “A Good Place to Emigrate to Now”: Recruiting Eastern European Jews for the Galveston Movement in 1907, by Joshua J. Furman MEMOIRS From the Memoirs Section Editors Lance J. Sussman and Karen S. Franklin Contextualizing Rabbi Davidow’s Memoir: A Historical Introduction To Jewish Life in the Mississippi Delta, 1943–1961, by Lance J. Sussman and Paul Finkelman Growing Up Jewish in the Mississippi Delta, 1943–1961: A Rabbi’s Memoir, by Fred Davidow BOOK REVIEWS Review Essay: Memoirs and Archives: Celebrating the Jews of Atlanta, by Jacob Morrow-Spitzer Howard Ball, Taking the Fight South: Chronicle of a Jew’s Battle for Civil Rights in Mississippi, reviewed by Fred V. Davidow Andrew Feiler, A Better Life for Their Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools that Changed America, reviewed by Deborah Dash Moore Marilyn Grace Miller, Port of No Return: Enemy Alien Internment in World War II New Orleans, reviewed by Shael Herman T. K. Thorne, Behind the Magic Curtain: Secrets, Spies, and Unsung White Allies of Birmingham’s Civil Rights Days, reviewed by Raymond Arsenault James Traub, Judah Benjamin: Counselor to the Confederacy, reviewed by Michael Hoberman EXHIBIT REVIEWS The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, reviewed by Irwin Lachoff History with Chutzpah: Remarkable Stories of the Southern Jewish Adventure, 1733–Present, reviewed by Leah Lefkowitz A Source of Light, reviewed by Ashley Walters WEBSITE REVIEW Jewish Merchant Project, reviewed by Diane Vecchio

Southern Jewish History, v. 23 (2020), full issue

Southern Jewish History, 2020

COVER PICTURE: Sarah Bentschner Visanska of Charleston, South Carolina. Visanska’s social activism and club leadership is documented by Diane C. Vecchio in the article on pp. 43–75. (Courtesy of the Jewish Heritage Collection, College of Charleston.) TABLE OF CONTENTS Southern Jews, Woman Suffrage, by Leonard Rogoff New Jewish Women: Shaping the Future of a “New South” in the Palmetto State, by Diane C. Vecchio Two Commemorations: Richmond Jews and the Lost Cause during the Civil Rights Era, by David Weinfeld Moshe Cahana, Ethical Zionism, and the Application of Jewish Nationalism to Civil Rights Struggles in the American South, by Timothy R. Riggio Quevillon PRIMARY SOURCES: Resources for Southern Jewish Research: A Family History Perspective, by Karen S. Franklin and Anton Hieke BOOK REVIEWS Mark K. Bauman, A New Vision of Southern Jewish History: Studies in Institution Building, Leadership, Interaction, and Mobility, reviewed by Gary Phillip Zola S. Perry Brickman, Extracted: Unmasking Rampant Anti- semitism in America’s Higher Education, reviewed by Carl L. Zielonka David E. Lowe, Touched with Fire: Morris B. Abram and the Battle Against Racial and Religious Discrimination, reviewed by Jonathan B. Krasner Walker Robins, Between Dixie and Zion: Southern Baptists and Palestine before Israel, reviewed by Yaakov Ariel Marcia Jo Zerivitz, Jews of Florida: Centuries of Stories, reviewed by Kenneth D. Wald EXHIBIT REVIEWS Modern Visions, Modern Art: The Cone Sisters in North Carolina and Modern Visions, Mountain Views: The Cones of Flat Top Manor, reviewed by Leonard Rogoff WEBSITE REVIEW Mapping Jewish Charleston: From the Colonial Era to the Present Day, reviewed by Curt Jackson FILM REVIEW Shared Legacies: The African American-Jewish Civil Rights Alliance, reviewed by Aaron Levi

The Confederacy safe haven for American Jews: Jews in the South 1800-1865

2015

The Confederate South was not racially hostile to every racial group that did not fit the mold of a white Christian, in fact, American Jews found an oasis in the antebellum and Civil War South, free of the anti-Jewish prejudice that was prevalent in the North at that time. Part of the reason was that American Jews joined and found common ground with Southern White Christians and partook in every aspect of Southern life, the good, the bad, slavery, racism, participating in every aspect of the Civil War on the side of the South and the Confederacy. Even from Colonial times, life in America for Jews offered more freedom than they could hope for in Europe. It is an extensive excerpt from the author’s unpublished thesis entitled, “Unconditional Loyalty to the Cause: Southern Whiteness, Jewish Women, and Anti-Semitism, 1800-1913″ for the MA in Judaic Studies program at Concordia University.

Jews and Judaism in Dixie

Religion Compass, 2007

This article advocates the integration of Southern Jewish history into the mainstream study of Southern and American history and religion. It argues that such integration provides greater breadth and depth to those fields as well as a fruitful model for comparison and contrast. This article also provides reference to some of the necessary resources to scholars in other fields and brings the readers' attention especially to a new publication for that purpose: Dixie Diaspora: An Anthology of Southern Jewish History.

THAT OTHER “PECULIAR INSTITUTION”: JEWS AND JUDAISM IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY SOUTH

Modern Judaism, 1987

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Southern Jewish History, v. 27 (2024), full issue

2024

COVER PICTURE: Portrait of Margaret Anne Goldsmith, by Maurice Grosser, c. 1947. Portions of Goldsmith’s memoir describing her lifelong relationship with the Black woman who raised her appear in this issue. (Courtesy of the Huntsville History Collection.) TABLE OF CONTENTS Mark K. Bauman, In Memoriam: Janice Oettinger Rothschild Blumberg (February 13, 1924 – February 21, 2024) Jay Silverberg, Houses Divided that Remained Standing: Conflicting Loyalties within an Extended Southern Jewish Family Leonard Rogoff, Matisse’s Cosmopolitans in the New South: The Cone Sisters Collect Modern Art Mary Jo O’Rear, The Constitution, Corpus Christi, and the Statue on the Bay Adrienne DeArmas, Primary Sources: The Shapell Roster of Jewish Service in the American Civil War: A Resource for Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century American Jewish History Lance J. Sussman and Lynda Barness, Transcending Race, Religion, and Class: Select Huntsville Memoirs by Margaret Anne Goldsmith BOOK REVIEWS Devery S. Anderson, A Slow, Calculated Lynching: The Story of Clyde Kennard, reviewed by Stephen Whitfield Mark K. Bauman, The Temple and Its People to 2018: The Hebrew Benevolent Congregation: Living Up to the Name and the Legacy, reviewed by Tobias Brinkmann Joel Gereboff and Jonathan L. Friedmann, Jewish Historical Societies: Navigating the Professional–Amateur Divide, reviewed by Dana Herman Jerome Novey, The Life and Letters of Samuel Ellsworth Fleet: An Immigrant’s Tale, reviewed by Marcia Jo Zerivitz Marlene Trestman, Most Fortunate Unfortunates: The Jewish Orphans’ Home of New Orleans, reviewed by Reena Sigman Friedman Diane Catherine Vecchio, Peddlers, Merchants, and Manufacturers: How Jewish Entrepreneurs Built Economy and Community in Upcountry South Carolina, reviewed by Scott M. Langston FILM REVIEWS People of the Crossing: The Jews of El Paso, reviewed by Bryan Edward Stone The Nita and Zita Project, reviewed by Rachel Merrill Moss EXHIBIT REVIEWS A Better Life for Their Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools that Changed America, reviewed by Emily Rena Williams What is Jewish Washington?, reviewed by Andrew Sperling Infinite Poem, reviewed by Nora Katz WEBSITE REVIEW Synagogues of the South: Architecture and Jewish Identity, reviewed by Christopher D. Cantwell

Southern Jewish History, v. 22 (2019), full issue

Southern Jewish History, 2019

COVER PICTURE: Rabbi Edward L. Israel of Baltimore’s Har Sinai Congregation, 1930s. Rabbi Israel’s career as a social activist is examined by Charles L. Chavis, Jr., in the article on pp. 43–87. (Courtesy of the Jewish Museum of Maryland, Baltimore. 2012.108.140.) TABLE OF CONTENTS In Memoriam: Leonard Dinnerstein (1934–2019) “Free From Proscription and Prejudice”: Politics and Race in the Election of One Jewish Mayor in Late Reconstruction Louisiana, by Jacob Morrow-Spitzer Rabbi Edward L. Israel: The Making of a Progressive Interracialist, 1923–1941, by Charles L. Chavis, Jr. A Call to Service: Rabbis Jacob M. Rothschild, Alexander D. Goode, Sidney M. Lefkowitz, and Roland B. Gittelsohn and World War II, by Edward S. Shapiro Hyman Judah Schachtel, Congregation Beth Israel, and the American Council for Judaism, by Kyle Stanton PRIMARY SOURCES: A Foot Soldier in the Civil Rights Movement: Lynn Goldsmith with SCLC–SCOPE, Summer 1965, by Miyuki Kita BOOK REVIEWS Eric L. Goldstein and Deborah R. Weiner, On Middle Ground: A History of the Jews of Baltimore, reviewed by Deborah Dash Moore Charles McNair, Play It Again, Sam: The Notable Life of Sam Massell, Atlanta’s First Minority Mayor, reviewed by Ronald H. Bayor James L. Moses, Just and Righteous Causes: Rabbi Ira Sanders and the Fight for Racial and Social Justice in Arkansas, 1926–1963, reviewed by Marc Dollinger Leon Waldoff, A Story of Jewish Experience in Mississippi, reviewed by Joshua Parshall EXHIBIT REVIEWS The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, reviewed by Elijah Gaddis Gone 2 Texas: Two Waves of Immigration, Soviet and South African, reviewed by Nils Roemer WEBSITE REVIEW: Jewish Heritage Fund for Excellence Jewish Kentucky Oral History Project, reviewed by Joshua Parshall