I am a Daughter of the American Revolution in North Carolina. My hope is to help save & restore Congregation Emanuel in Statesville, NC.
History related to Henrietta Szold is there. The cornerstone of Congregation Emanuel's building has important documents that the Lewis Gordon Family helped preserve years ago.
Honoring our Jewish Patriots in America and Preserving the history helps restore hope of freedom and justice for all.
The Jewish Museum of Maryland's exhibition and catalog "Daughter of Zion: Henrietta Szold and American Jewish Womanhood" is an example of what the DAR is currently doing to preserve our history.
The DAR Library’s collection contains resources pertaining to several different under- represented groups. The staff is actively working to expand the Library’s holdings pertaining to members of marginalized populations, with a particular focus on histories of the colonial and early federal eras. The Library welcomes suggestions of new resources to add to further strengthen the collection to better serve all visitors.
For individuals pursuing research on Jewish ancestors, patrons can begin with the general religions section (GEN RELIGIONS JUDAISM) or by focusing on the geographic location the ancestor lived in the states collection. A partial list of the
most frequently requested books and resources is below. As always, it is best to start with a search of the Library catalog, which is accessible from any computer terminal and on the internet at www.dar.org/library.
https://jewishnc.org/138-year-old-congregation-emanuel-restored-to-orig…
I am a Daughter of the American Revolution in North Carolina. My hope is to help save & restore Congregation Emanuel in Statesville, NC.
History related to Henrietta Szold is there. The cornerstone of Congregation Emanuel's building has important documents that the Lewis Gordon Family helped preserve years ago.
Honoring our Jewish Patriots in America and Preserving the history helps restore hope of freedom and justice for all.
The Jewish Museum of Maryland's exhibition and catalog "Daughter of Zion: Henrietta Szold and American Jewish Womanhood" is an example of what the DAR is currently doing to preserve our history.
The DAR Library’s collection contains resources pertaining to several different under- represented groups. The staff is actively working to expand the Library’s holdings pertaining to members of marginalized populations, with a particular focus on histories of the colonial and early federal eras. The Library welcomes suggestions of new resources to add to further strengthen the collection to better serve all visitors.
For individuals pursuing research on Jewish ancestors, patrons can begin with the general religions section (GEN RELIGIONS JUDAISM) or by focusing on the geographic location the ancestor lived in the states collection. A partial list of the
most frequently requested books and resources is below. As always, it is best to start with a search of the Library catalog, which is accessible from any computer terminal and on the internet at www.dar.org/library.