THE JEW IN AMERICA
Cincinnati [Ohio]: Issued By The Central Conference Of American Rabbis, 1909. Item #37439
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 16 pages; 22 cm. In English. From the series: Jewish tracts; no. 2. “David Philipson (1862 –1949) was an American Reform rabbi, orator, and author. The son of German-Jewish immigrants, he was a member of the first graduating class of the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati… he was one of the leaders of American Reform Judaism and a philanthropic leader in his adopted hometown of Cincinnati. ” (Wikipedia, 2016) Here, Philipson gives a brief overview of Jews in America for the 250th anniversary of the landing of the Jews in America. He outlines key events in Jewish American History from Columbus’ voyage to the present day. David Philipson (1862–1949) was a “U.S. Reform rabbi….[H]e was one of the first group of rabbis who received their ordination in 1883. After serving as rabbi of Har Sinai Congregation, Baltimore, from 1884 to 1888, Philipson returned to Cincinnati to become rabbi of the B'nai Israel Congregation in 1888, remaining there for the rest of his life. Philipson participated in the conference which drew up the Pittsburgh Platform (1885); he was a rounder of the Central Conference of American Rabbis serving as president in 1907–09; and he was an influential figure in Hebrew Union College, where he taught for many years, and in the Union of American Hebrew Congregations….He was a member of the board of translators of the Jewish Publication Society for the translation of the Holy Scriptures (1916), an editor of Selected Writings of Isaac M. Wise (1900), and translator of Reminiscences of Isaac M. Wise (1901, 1945). An autobiography, My Life as an American Jew, appeared in 1942 and a volume of occasional writings, Centenary Papers, in 1919. Philipson verbalized and gave a universal dimension to the optimism of the prospering Midwest Jews among whom he lived and, surviving most of its exponents, came to be regarded as a representative spokesman of "classic" Reform Judaism” (EJ). SUBJECT(S): Jewish festival-day sermons. OCLC: 9982516. OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide, none at any Ivy League Institution. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- United States -- History. Creased. Front wrapper is smudged. Some edwear. Overall about good condition. (AMR-48-63).
Price: $100.00