Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (U.S.)
Found in 863 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from Werbelovsky to C.D. Spivak, 1911 September 7
Letter from Y. Cohen to C.D. Spivak, 1911 September 25
Handwritten letter from Mrs. Yetta Cohen to C.D. Spivak. Yetta thanks Spivak for the kindness he has shown her son. She admits that it has been impossible to provide her son with the care and attention he needs because her own health has been poor and she is under a doctor’s order as well. She hopes that JCRS has a happy new year.
Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak, 1916 October 23
Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak from the JCRS superintendent that the Malbin children are not a danger to infection the other children at the Sheltering home and that he had informed Mrs. Fannie Lorber.
Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak, 1916 October 27
Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak from JCRS superintendent that Ida Malbin had been transferred to the Denver Sheltering Home.
Letter to Rabbi A. B. Rhine, 1916 October 11
Letter to Rabbi A. B. Rhine from JCRS informing him that Dora Malbin and her two children, Ida and Sammy, have been admitted to the JCRS.
Letter to Secretary Mr. N. Halpern, 1916 October 23
Letter to Secretary Mr. N. Halpern from Dr. Spivak at the JCRS stating the Malbin children, Ida and Sammy, are free of infectious disease.
Letter to Superintendent Dr. M. I. Marshak, 1916 October 20
Letter to Superintendent Dr. M. I. Marshak of the JCRS asking for his opinion as to if the Malbin children are well enough to go to the Denver Sheltering Home.
Limousine in Front of Texas Pavilion at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, between 1940-1950
Limousine in Front of Texas Pavilion for Women at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, 1940-1950
An unidentified woman shakes hands with a physician in front of a limousine belonging to the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). The limousine is parked in front of the Texas Pavilion for Women Building. The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver.