Library Collections Search Results
Modify Search  |  New Searchrss icon RSS | Saved Results (0)
Search:
'Jews Ohio Cleveland History' in subject
Results:  30 Items
Sorted by:  
Page: Prev  1 2
Format
Subject
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. (19)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History (11)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History -- Sources. (7)
Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) (5)
Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- History -- Sources. (4)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs. (4)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. (4)
Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. (4)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Ethnic relations (3)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. (3)
Council Educational Alliance (Cleveland, Ohio) (3)
Friendly societies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (3)
Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (3)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. (3)
Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs -- 20th century. (3)
Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) (3)
Bellefaire Jewish Children's Home (University Heights, Ohio) (2)
Benesch, Alfred A. (Alfred Abraham) 1879-1973. (2)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- History -- 20th century (2)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Pictorial works (2)
Cleveland Bureau of Jewish Education (Cleveland, Ohio). (2)
Community welfare councils -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. (2)
Federations, Financial (Social Service) (2)
Hebrew Academy (Cleveland, Ohio) (2)
Human services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Jewish Community Center of Cleveland. (2)
Jewish Family Service Association (Cleveland, Ohio). (2)
Jewish Theological Seminary of America. American Jewish History Center. (2)
Jewish religious schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Jews -- Education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Genealogy. (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Pictorial works (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Population. (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs -- 20th century. (2)
Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Religious life -- 20th century. (2)
League for Human Rights (Cleveland, Ohio) (2)
Old age homes, Jewish -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Orthodox Jewish Orphan Home (Cleveland, Ohio) (2)
Working class -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Administrative Information (1)
Aged -- Care -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Aged -- Care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Alsbacher, Moses (1)
Alsbacher, Yetta (1)
American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. (1)
Photograph CollectionSave
21Title:  Joseph Family Photographs     
 Creator:  Joseph Family 
 Dates:  1845-1990 
 Abstract:  The Joseph Family is a prominent Cleveland, Ohio, Jewish family. The family has been very active in both leadership and support for a number of cultural and social institutions in Cleveland such as the Musical Arts Association (The Cleveland Orchestra), Bellefaire and the Jewish Family Service Association. The collection consists of twenty-three photographic albums and 109 black-and-white and 75 color prints. Most of the photographs in the albums and the 184 prints are family portraits. A lesser number are views from travels of various members of the Joseph family. The collection also contains some individual portraits of prominent Cleveland residents. 
 Call #:  PG 524 
 Extent:  7.60 linear feet (4 containers and 10 oversize volumes) 
 Subjects:  Joseph family -- Photographs. | Blossom Music Center -- Photographs. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History -- 19th century. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History -- Sources. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- History -- Sources. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Intellectual life -- Photographs. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social life and customs -- Photographs. | Europe, Western -- Pictorial works.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
  
Photograph CollectionSave
22Title:  Beth Am Congregation Photographs     
 Creator:  Beth Am Congregation 
 Dates:  1950-1998 
 Abstract:  Beth Am Congregation, a Conservative Jewish congregation in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, was founded in 1933 as the Community Temple by Rabbi Abraham Nowak and a group who belonged to B'nai Jeshurun Congregation (then known as Temple on the Heights). The founders wanted their new synagogue to be more welcoming to all Jews, regardless of their wealth or status. The congregation established administrative offices at 241 Euclid Avenue; services and school classes were held at Coventry School in Cleveland Heights. After meeting at several rented locations, the congregation purchased a large house on Washington Boulevard. By 1940, however, the need was seen for a permanent structure, and a building fund was established. In 1947 Beth Am purchased the Trinity Congregational Church at 3557 Washington Boulevard. The new rabbi, Jack J. Herman, was named the same year. The congregation continued to grow, and by 1956 had 600 families with 500 students in the religious school. A fire in 1957 destroyed much of the lower level of the building, including two Torahs and synagogue records; the congregation met on the campus of John Carroll University until repairs were effected. Rabbi Herman served the congregation until his death in 1969. Rabbi Michael Hecht was installed late in 1970. In 1971 the congregation dedicated a new religious school named for Rabbi Herman, constructed on land adjacent to the synagogue. From 1974 through the congregation's merger with B'nai Jeshurun in 1999, there were financial deficits that made it difficult for the congregation to sustain itself. The Jewish community was moving farther east, and membership decreased. A congregant offered land at the intersection of Cedar and Lander Roads in Mayfield Heights, provided that the membership could raise the monies necessary for a new building. In spite of a positive feasibility study, and plans unveiled by the architectural firm Finegold Alexander and Associates, the fundraising goals were not met and Beth Am sold its Washington Boulevard Building to the New Bible Fellowship Church and merged with B'nai Jeshurun Congregation in 1999. The collection consists of 142 black-and-white and 96 color prints, 17 thirty-five millimeter slides, 24 transparencies, and one rendering. 
 Call #:  PG 525 
 Extent:  0.22 linear feet (1 container and 2 oversize folders) 
 Subjects:  Beth Am Congregation (Cleveland Heights, Ohio). | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History -- Sources. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs -- 20th century. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Religious life -- 20th century. | Jews -- United States -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Conservative Judaism -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- 20th century. | Synagogues -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- 20th century. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- History -- Sources. | Administrative Information
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
  
Photograph CollectionSave
23Title:  Workmen's Circle of Cleveland Photographs, Series III     
 Creator:  Workmen's Circle of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1930-1995 
 Abstract:  The Workmen's Circle of Cleveland (f. 1904) is a secular Jewish fraternal organization formed in the United States to perpetuate Yiddish language and culture, support and promote a liberal political agenda, offer both health and death benefits, and provide a meeting place for fellowship. Its Yiddish cultural programming includes lectures, readings, concerts, third Passover Seders, and the I.L. Peretz Workmen's Circle School, a supplementary program for children. Following World War II and the Holocaust and the continuing acculturation into American life of the descendants of its Yiddish-speaking Jewish immigrant founders, the Workmen's Circle, in Cleveland, Ohio, and nationwide, has been experiencing significant and continuous loss of membership. The Workmen's Circle's group health plan and death benefits, both of which are available on a non-sectarian basis, are the major source of membership. The collection consists of approximately 850 images of the activities of the Workmen's Circle of Cleveland, Ohio, particularly Branch 671E and the I.L. Peretz School. 
 Call #:  PG 560 
 Extent:  0.80 linear feet (2 containers and 1 oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  Workmen's Circle (U.S.) -- Photographs. | Workmen's Circle (U.S.) -- Photograph collections. | I.L. Peretz Workmen's Circle School (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History -- Sources. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs -- 20th century. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. -- Photographs. | Fraternal organizations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Working class -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Education -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Yiddish language -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
  
Manuscript CollectionSave
24Title:  Judah Rubinstein Papers     
 Creator:  Judah Rubinstein 
 Dates:  1825-2003 
 Abstract:  Judah Rubinstein was an archivist, historian, author, and research associate for the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland, Ohio, and a well-known authority on Cleveland Jewish history. He helped to establish the Cleveland Jewish Archives at the Western Reserve Historical Society in 1976. He provided research for a number of books on Cleveland Jewish history and co-authored the book Merging traditions: Jewish life in Cleveland. The collection consists of correspondence, research notes, lectures and slide presentation scripts, newspaper clippings, reports and oral history transcripts. Nineteenth century materials are photocopies. 
 Call #:  MS 4907 
 Extent:  3.01 linear feet (3 containers and 1 oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  Rubinstein, Judah | Rubinstein, Sonia, 1900-1982 -- Correspondence | Western Reserve Historical Society. Cleveland Jewish Archives | Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio). Archives and History Committee | Camp Wise (Euclid, Ohio) | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Interviews | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. -- History | Jewish press -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionSave
25Title:  Cleveland Jewish History Sources     
 Creator:  Cleveland Jewish History Sources 
 Dates:  1819-1956 
 Abstract:  The Cleveland Jewish History Sources Collection is a card file assembled between 1954-1956 by the American Jewish History Center of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, to support a planned volume on the history of Cleveland, Ohio, Jewry. This intention was realized with the publication of History of the Jews of Cleveland by Lloyd P. Gartner in 1978. Source material for this card file, which covers the span from the early nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth, includes both the national Anglo-Jewish press and local Cleveland sources, including the general press, the Anglo-Jewish press, and Jewish communal records. Rabbi Jack J. Herman and Judah Rubinstein were the local Cleveland researchers for the project. The collection consists of 16,000 index cards containing information about Cleveland's Jewish community that was obtained primarily from newspapers. These cards have been arranged into fourteen broad categories: Arts; Charities; Clubs and Societies, Various; Community Services; Economic Life; Education; Political Affairs; Population; Sermons and Lectures; Social Life; Synagogues; Synagogue Related; Umbrella Organizations, and Zionism. Within these categories, primary and sometimes secondary sub-headings are arranged alphabetically and then chronologically. As prescribed by the AJHC, each research finding was typed on 4x6, un-ruled index cards and described in the following top-down order: top left, the city and chronological period; top right, topical classification; single line description of the finding; excerpt(s) from the finding. In many instances, the researchers stapled to the card photocopies of pertinent portions of the source material. The collection, however, contains exceptions to this general procedure: a number of 3x5 cards with handwritten entries (evidently, unprocessed research findings) and a number of 4x6 cards with attached paper negative photocopy, i.e., white-on-black and mirror-image text. 
 Call #:  MS 4621 
 Extent:  7.50 linear feet (15 containers) 
 Subjects:  Kalisch, Isidor, 1816-1886. | Hahn, Aaron. | Mayer, Jacob. | Gries, Moses J., 1868-1918. | Machol, Michael, 1846-1914. | Jewish Theological Seminary of America. American Jewish History Center. | B'nai B'rith. | Jewish Orphan Asylum (Cleveland, Ohio ) -- History. | National Council of Jewish Women. Cleveland Section. | Council Educational Alliance (Cleveland, Ohio) | Council Religious Schools (Cleveland, Ohio). | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Genealogy. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Politics and government. | Synagogues -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Zionism -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionSave
26Title:  Western Reserve Manuscripts (Western Reserve Historical Society Manuscript Vertical File)     
 Creator:  Various 
 Dates:  1636-1991 
 Abstract:  The Western Reserve Manuscripts is a collection of small manuscript accessions that have been donated to the Western Reserve Historical Society since its founding in 1867. These manuscripts often consist of one document but can include multiple items contained in one folder. This collection of material documents numerous subjects and themes in the history of Cleveland, Ohio, and the region of northeast Ohio known as the Western Reserve. The collection consists of advertisements, agreements, applications, articles, autobiographies, autograph books and autographs, biographical sketches, certificates, correspondence, deeds, diaries, drawings, envelopes, genealogies, histories, indentures, invoices, letters, lists, manuscripts, memoranda, newspaper clippings, notes, papers, photographs, poems, receipts, reports, scripts, speech transcripts, telegrams, and other material. Western Reserve Historical Society library staff began to describe these manuscripts in this finding aid in 2015. This is an ongoing project that will be updated for public access as the project progresses in real time. 
 Call #:  MS 5362 
 Extent:  27.80 linear feet (29 containers) 
 Subjects:  Western Reserve (Ohio) -- History. | Western Reserve (Ohio) -- Surveys. | Pioneers -- Ohio -- Western Reserve. | Real property -- Ohio -- Western Reserve. | Surveyors -- Ohio -- Western Reserve. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- History. | Connecticut Land Company. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Business enterprises -- Ohio -- Cleveland | United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Sources. | Slavery -- United States -- History -- Sources. | United States -- History -- 19th century. | United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- 19th century. | Temperance -- Ohio -- Societies, etc. | Antislavery movements -- Ohio.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionSave
27Title:  Sidney Z. Vincent Papers     
 Creator:  Vincent, Sidney Z. 
 Dates:  1940-1982 
 Abstract:  Sidney Z. Vincent (1912-1982) served as Assistant Director of the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland, Ohio, from 1951 to 1965 and as Executive Director from 1965 until his retirement in 1975. Throughout his career, he worked in tandem with Executive Vice-President Henry L. Zucker, making the Federation the primary organizing instrument for the Jewish community in northeast Ohio. Vincent led major studies of Jewish education, Federation-synagogue relations, cultural life, and Jewish community histories, and coordinated programs linking Cleveland and Israel. In 1969, Vincent served as the American Director of the World Conference on Human Needs in Israel. He also served as President of the National Conference of Jewish Communal Service and as Chairman of the International Conference of Jewish Communal Service in 1971. Before beginning his career in Jewish community service, Vincent taught English at Glenville High School, his alma mater. Throughout his career, Vincent also wrote poems, stories, and scripts for various occasions. Vincent wrote some scripts for WBOE, the radio station of the Cleveland Board of Education, in the late 1940s. Vincent's autobiography Personal and Professional tells the story of his life and his involvement in the Jewish community. The collection consists of correspondence, a memorial book, a retirement tribute, scripts, and short stories. 
 Call #:  MS 5095 
 Extent:  0.40 linear feet (1 container) 
 Subjects:  Vincent, Sidney Z. | Zucker, Henry L., 1910- | Metzenbaum, Howard M. -- Biography. | Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Community Council (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | Glenville High School (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Services for -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Education (Higher) -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Human services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Education, Higher -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews, Soviet -- Emigration and immigration. | Jews -- Soviet Union -- Social conditions. | Jewish literature -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish poetry -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionSave
28Title:  Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland Records     
 Creator:  Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1839-1982 
 Abstract:  The Jewish Community Federation is a central policy making and fundraising agency for the Jewish community of Cleveland, Ohio, which traces its origin to the Federation of the Jewish Charities of Cleveland (founded 1903). The Federation of the Jewish Charities of Cleveland changed its name to the Jewish Welfare Federation of Cleveland in 1926, and in 1930, added a fundraising arm, the Jewish Welfare Fund of Cleveland. In 1951 the Jewish Welfare Federation merged with the Jewish Community Council to become the Jewish Community Federation. The collection consists of correspondence, trustee and committee minutes and reports, annual reports, surveys, membership lists, newspaper clippings, publications, research papers, and scrapbooks. The collection also includes material pertaining to the Federation and its antecedents, as well as to local, national, and international organizations with which the Federation was involved; and subjects of concern to the local Jewish community including the Jewish Welfare Fund. Also, there are numerous surveys, as well as a wide range of material relating to local, national, and international Jewish history. 
 Call #:  MS 4563 
 Extent:  44.30 linear feet (61 containers) 
 Subjects:  Benesch, Alfred A. (Alfred Abraham) 1879-1973. | Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Hebrew Academy (Cleveland, Ohio) | Bellefaire Jewish Children's Home (University Heights, Ohio) | Orthodox Jewish Orphan Home (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Family Service Association (Cleveland, Ohio). | Jewish Community Center of Cleveland. | Jewish Infant Orphan's Home (Cleveland, Ohio). | Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. | League for Human Rights (Cleveland, Ohio) | Cleveland Bureau of Jewish Education (Cleveland, Ohio). | Council Educational Alliance (Cleveland, Ohio) | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish camps -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish soldiers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | World War, 1939-1945 -- Participation, Jewish. | World War, 1939-1945 -- Refugees. | Aged -- Care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Old age homes, Jewish -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Child care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish orphanages -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Demographic surveys -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Population. | Educational surveys -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Friendly societies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Federations, Financial (Social Service) | Community welfare councils -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionSave
29Title:  Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland Records, Series II     
 Creator:  The Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1936-1990 
 Abstract:  The Jewish Community Federation is a central policy making and fundraising agency for the Jewish community of Cleveland, Ohio, which traces its origin to the Federation of the Jewish Charities of Cleveland (founded 1903). The Federation of the Jewish Charities of Cleveland changed its name to the Jewish Welfare Federation of Cleveland in 1926, and in 1930, added a fundraising arm, the Jewish Welfare Fund of Cleveland. In 1951 the Jewish Welfare Federation merged with the Jewish Community Council to become the Jewish Community Federation. The collection consists of correspondence, memoranda, trustee and committee minutes, reports, proposals, newspaper clippings, wills, and financial records. Records are organized into three series consisting of administrative files, endowment funds, and social planning and research. 
 Call #:  MS 4835 
 Extent:  107.70 linear feet (111 containers) 
 Subjects:  Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Case Western Reserve University. | Federation for Community Planning. | Baldwin-Wallace College. | Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. | American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. | United Jewish Appeal. | Cleveland Bureau of Jewish Education (Cleveland, Ohio). | Chabad House of Cleveland. | Cleveland College of Jewish Studies. | Jewish Community Center of Cleveland. | Jewish Community Housing, Inc. | Jewish Convalescent Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio). | Jewish Family Service Association (Cleveland, Ohio). | Jewish Vocational Service. | Menorah Park Center for the Aging (Cleveland, Ohio). | Montefiore Home (Cleveland, Ohio) | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Human services. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Federations, Financial (Social Service) | Community welfare councils -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Israel-Arab War, 1967. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Human services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Population. | Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Friendly societies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Old age homes, Jewish -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Photograph CollectionSave
30Title:  Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland Photographs     
 Creator:  Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1860-2002 
 Abstract:  The Jewish Community Federation (f. 1903) is a central policy making and fundraising agency for the Jewish community of Cleveland, Ohio. It also supports national and international Jewish communities. The collection consists of approximately 6,000 images, primarily black and white prints, but also slides, contact sheets, and negatives. 
 Call #:  PG 530 
 Extent:  6.41 linear feet (7 containers and 1 oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  Aged -- Care -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Bellefaire Jewish Children's Home (University Heights, Ohio) | Benesch, Alfred A. (Alfred Abraham) 1879-1973 | Child care -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Cleveland Bureau of Jewish Education (Cleveland, Ohio) | Council Educational Alliance (Cleveland, Ohio) | Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds | Hebrew Academy (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Community Center of Cleveland | Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Family Service Association (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Infant Orphan's Home (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish camps -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jewish old age homes -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jewish soldiers -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. | League for Human Rights (Cleveland, Ohio) | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Orthodox Jewish Orphan Home (Cleveland, Ohio) | World War, 1939-1945 -- Participation, Jewish | World War, 1939-1945 -- Refugees
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
  
Page: Prev  1 2