Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (U.S.)
Found in 6172 Collections and/or Records:
JCRS Patient #5469 Lena Williamson, 1921 January 26 - 1921 April 26
JCRS Patient #5469. Patient application, correspondence, handwritten letters, receipts, and bills.
JCRS Patient #5470 Maurice Sutker, 1921 January 19 - 1921 March 7
JCRS Patient #5470. Patient application, correspondence, handwritten letters, receipts, and bills.
JCRS Patient #5471 Ralph Savitz, 1921 January 27 - 1921 May 1
JCRS Patient #5471. Patient application, correspondence, handwritten letters, receipts, and bills.
JCRS Patient #5472 Max Gold, 1921 January 27 - 1921 January 28
JCRS Patient #5472. Patient application, correspondence, handwritten letters, receipts, and bills.
JCRS Patient Activities - Collage, between 1930-1939
Collage with three photographs of patients in the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society. Patients are reading, playing checkers and dominoes and listening to the radio. The photographs are mounted on a cardboard sheet with brown tape around the edges.
JCRS Patient #Joseph Shear, 1919 February 7 - 1919 October 5
JCRS Patient #4712. Patient application, correspondence, handwritten letters, receipts, and bills.
JCRS Patient Record, 1909
Shana Mabovitz was in both National Jewish Hospial for Consumptives and in Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). The file contains copies of her JCRS record from 1909, where she was a patient from April 22, 1909 to July 15, 1909
JCRS Plaque, circa 1910
JCRS Researcher at Microscope , circa 1960-1969
This series contains a photo album, photographs, bulletin pages, drawings, lithographs, and contact sheets of the campus and buildings, patients and family, staff and volunteers, auxiliaries and conventions, and activities connected with the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society and the AMC Cancer Research Center.
JCRS Rude Medical Building, between 1920-1929
I. Rude Medical Building at JCRS on the main road. A man and a car are in front of the 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. The sanatorium was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver.
