MACK, JULIAN W. (1866-1943).
Papers, 1831-1975. 0.8 linear ft.
Correspondence, photographs, and miscellaneous material used by Harry Barnard, in research for the book, The Forging of an American Jew: The Life and Times of Julian W. Mack.
MAGRISH, JAMES . (1901-1972).
Papers, 1888-1992. 3.6 linear ft.
Correspondence relating to Magrish's personal and public life (1918-1972), records of his service as counsel to the War Production Board (1943-1945), and material relating to his leadership in Jewish and secular organizations on a national and local level. Also includes a scrapbook containing articles and pictures compiled while Magrish was chairman of the 1958 Jewish Welfare Campaign in Cincinnati, Ohio. Inventory available
MAILERT FAMILY.
Papers, 1832-1861. 0.4 linear ft.
Photocopies of personal correspondence between family members and friends about social and economic life in Germany and the United States.
MANN, MIRIAM S. (1910-1997)
Papers. 1941-1993. 3.6 linear ft.
Papers document the life of Miriam S. Mann, an active member of Pioneer Women, the Labor Zionist Alliance, the Union of Jewish Women of South Africa and the Jewish Community Relations Council and other Zionist organizations both nationally and in Cincinnati, Ohio. Materials include correspondence, research, book reviews and addresses. Inventory available
MANNHEIMER, JENNIE [JANE MANNER] (1872-1943).
Papers, 1887-1954. 0.8 linear ft.
Correspondence, scrapbooks, diaries, and miscellaneous material relating to her activities. The collection includes programs and advertisements as head of the Cincinnati School of Expression and as an interpretive reader, Cincinnati, Ohio; New York, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Baltimore, Maryland. Also, photographs, including one in which Ms. Mannheimer is teaching Vilma Banky, 1888-ca. 1928; news articles from the Cincinnati Times Star, and The Jewish Tribune, November 15, 1929; a memorial booklet and address of her brother, Rabbi Eugene Mannheimer, Des Moines, Iowa, 1954; and a picture of a window ventilator invented and patented by Louis Mannheimer.
MARCUS, JACOB R. (1896-1995).
Papers, 1910-1979. 7.2 linear ft.
Correspondence, diaries, journals, minutes, reports, and other papers dealing with the activities of rabbi, professor of Jewish history at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and founder of the American Jewish Archvies. Included are notes on the history of the Marcus family and material relating to miscellaneous Jewish affairs, the clothing industry, and the American Jewish Archvies, American Jewish Commtitee, American Jewish Historical Society, Central Conference of American Rabbis, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Inventory available
MARCUS, MERLE JUDITH (1929-1965).
Papers, 1929-1966. 1.2 linear ft.
Papers consist of correspondence, performance programs, school papers, personal items, probate records, and photographs. Of special interest in the collection is the correspondence between Merle Marcus and her father, Dr. Jacob Rader Marcus. The bulk of the collection spans the years 1950-1965. Inventory available.
MARSHALL, JAMES (1896-1986).
Papers, 1899-1986. 20 linear ft.
Papers describe the career of James Marshall, lawyer, leading member of the American Jewish Committee, and active participant in the field of education. The collection includes correspondence, reports, minutes, newsclippings, writings, addresses and personal items. The bulk of the material in the collection spans the years 1940-1980. Inventory available.
MARSHALL, LOUIS (1856-1929).
Papers, 1891-1930. 50.4 linear ft.
Lawyer, civic and communal leader, civil rights advocate and labor union meditator, Marchall's papers include personal and business correspondence; letters and reports relating to Palestine, anti-Semitism, politics, and Zionism; legal opinions; and printed matter concerning Marshall's participation in public affairs. Correspondence deals with the American Bar Association, (1926-1927), the American Jewish Committee (1899-1926), the American Jewish Relief Committee (1915-1924), the Council of the Y.M.H.A. (1898-1924), the Federation for the Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies, of New York (1917-1918), the HIAS (1908-1929), the Hebrew University in Jerusalem (1923-1928), the Immigration Commission of the State of New York (1907-1912), the Jewish Welfare Board (1917-1922), the Kehillah of New York City (1908-1922), the Palestine Economics Corporation (1920-1929), the Romanian question (1916-1919), Alliance Israelite Universelle (1899-1929), American Jewish Congress (1902-1925), American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (1894-1929), American Red Cross (1917-1921), Central Conference of American Rabbis (1899-1928), Council of Jewish Communal Institutions (1908-1915), Council of Jewish Women (1908-1922), Educational Alliance (1891-1929), Federation of American Zionists (1899-1909), Intercollegiate Menorah Association (1914-1921), Jewish Chautauqua Society (1894-1924), Jewish Theological Seminary of America (1899-1939), National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (1919-1929), and Union of American Hebrew Congregations (1894-1929). Some of the correspondents included in the collection are Michael Aaronsohn, Cyrus Adler, Felix Adler, Max Adler, Simon Adler, Paul Baerwals, Newton D. Baker, Joseph Barondess, Bernard M. Baruch, James M. Beck, James H. Becker, Nissim Behar, Mendel Beilis, Samson, Benderly, Henry Berkowitz, Meyer Berlin, Isaac W. Bernheim, Herman Bernstein, Samuel Bettelheim, Jacob Billikopf, David Blaustein, Franz Boas, Boris D. Bogen, William E. Borah, Louis D. Brandeis, David M. Bressler, David A. Brown, Fulton Bryslawski, Abraham Cahan, Benjamin N. Cardozo, Emanuel Celler, Henry Cohen, S. Solis Cohen, Calvin Coolidge, Philip S. Cowen, Abraham Cronbach, Harry Cutler, Gotthard Deutsch, Samuel Dickstein, Max Drob, Abram I. Elkus, Nathaniel A. Elsberg; Hyman G. Enelow, Jacob Epstein, Wilhelm Felderman, Bernard Flexner, Henry Ford, Lee K. Frankel, Felix Frankfurter, Harry Friedenwald, Herbert Friedenwald, Israel Friedlaender, Louis Friedman, Henry M. Goldfogle, Richard J. H. Gottheil, Samuel Greenbaum, Daniel Guggenheim, Simon Guggenheim, Samuel B. Hamburger, Max Heller, Maurice B. Hexter, Herbert C. Hoover, Charles Evans Hughes, Mordecai Kaplan, Frances Kellor, Kaufmann Kohler, Max J. Kohler, Nathan Krass, Adolf J. Kraus, Isaac Landman, Albert D. Lacker, Herbert H. Lehman, Irving Lehman, David Leventritt, Adolph Lewisohn, David Lubin, Albert Lucas, Julian W. Mack, Judah L. Magnes, Mendes H. Pereira, Nathan J. Miller, Henry Morgenthau, Adoph S. Ochs, David De Sola Pool, James N. Rosenberg, Julius Rosenwald, Adolph Joachim Sabath, Herbert Samuel, Solomon Schechter, Jacob H. Schiff, Mortimer L. Schiff, Alfred E. Smith, Benjamin Stolz, Harlan F. Stone, Isidor Straus, Oscar S. Straus, Mayer Sulzberger, Cyrus L. Sulzberger, Henrietta Szold, William H. Taft, Henry M. Toch, Samuel Untermyer, Lillian D. Wald, Morris David Waldman, Felix M. Warburg, Paul M. Warburg, A. Leo Weil, Chaim Weizmann, Louis Wiley, Leo Wise, Stephen S. Wise, Simon Wolf, David Yellin, Israel Zangwill, and William Zukerman
MARSHALL, ROBERT (1901-1939).
Papers, 1919-1973. 5.2 linear ft.
Papers describe the life of Robert Marshall, conservationist, forester, and scientific explorer; and the activities of the Robert Marshall Civil Liberties Trust, a philanthropic trust established by the will of Robert Marshall for the purpose of promoting and establishing civil rights and liberties. The span dates for the collection are 1919-1973, with the bulk of the material concerning the Robert Marshall Civil Liberties Trust and spanning the years 1940-1960. Inventory available
MAYER, JESSIE STRAUS (1882- ).
Papers, 1901-1957. 0.4 linear ft.
Correspondence, recital programs and printed matter relating to her career as a violinist; also contains material by and about her husband, Rabbi Eli Mayer; photographs; and Straus family genealogy.
MENKEN, ADAH ISAACS (1835-1868).
Papers, 1932-1960. 3 linear ft.
Correspondence and miscellaneous material of the poetess and actress relating to her biography, Enchanting Rebel, written by Allen Lesser.
MEYER, ANNIE NATHAN (1867-1951).
Papers, 1858-1950. 10.4 linear ft.
Papers of a New York social activist and writer. Ms. Meyer helped found Barnard College, the first woman's college in New York City, was active in the United States anti-suffrage movement, and participated in the World War I home economic movement. Among Ms. Meyer's writings are included Vorbei (1893), Robert Annys, Poor Priest (1901), and The Advertising of Kate (1911). The collection, which includes correspondence, manuscripts, photographs, clippings, and miscellaneous items, is divided into five series. Among the notable correspondents are Benjamin N. Cardozo, Robert Nathan, Eleanor Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, John Haynes Holmes, and Zora Neale Hurston. Inventory available
MINIS FAMILY.
Papers, 1733-1960. 2.1 linear ft.
Photocopies of correspondence, genealogical data, land grants, wills, legal documents, newspaper clippings, and other papers of a Georgia family. In part, transcripts made from originals in the Georgia State Department of Archives and History (Atlanta, Georgia) and photocopies made from originals in the B'nai B'rith Archives (Washington, DC), and the Georgia Historical Society collections.
MOCH FAMILY.
Papers, 1883-1941. 1.7 linear ft.
Correspondence, scrapbooks, pictures, and miscellaneous papers concerning the Fechheimer, Moch, Newburger, and Sachs families of Cincinnati, Ohio.
MONTAGU, LILY H. (1873-1963).
Papers, 1913-1961. 2.8 linear ft.
Papers describe Montagu's career as lay minister, social worker, and co-founder of the World Union for Progressive Judaism. The collection includes sermons and addresses, German writings, Religious Home Worship curriculum and short stories. Inventory available.
MULTER, ABRAHAM J. (1900-1996).
Papers, 1947-1967. 32.5 linear ft.
Correspondence, reports, and legislation relating to Multer's activities in the United States House of Representatives. Included is testimony of the Select Committee on Small Business (1957) Inventory available.
MYERS FAMILY.
Papers, 1766-1908. 22.1 linear ft.
Original and photocopies of personal and business correspondence (1783-1869), account books (1785-1859), daybooks, (1800-1804), ledgers (1818-1864), invoice books (1786-1861), and journals (1832-1862). Papers relate to the family's personal affairs and shipping, banking, trading, and merchantile interests. Persons represented include Moses Myers, merchant of Norfolk, Virginia, his son and partner, John Myers, who was an aide-de-camp to General Robert Taylor during the War of 1812, Myer Myers, and Samuel Myers. |