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Trounstine, Philip

 Person

Biography

Trounstine was born in Cincinnati in the mid-1840s. Before arriving in Denver, he served as an officer in the Union Army and courageously resigned his commission to protest General Grant's short-lived order to expel Jews from a large military district in Tennessee and Mississippi. In Denver he was a merchant, investor, traveling merchant's agent, and fireman. He took leadership roles in Temple Emanuel, B'nai B'rith, Emanuel Cemetery, and other institutions. He was related by marriage to Abraham Jacobs, owner of the O.K. Clothing Store (which Trounstine managed for nearly 20 years) and to Abraham's wife, the highly-respected Frances Wisebart Jacobs, Trounstine's sister--in-law.

Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:

Charter of B'nai B'rith No. 171 of Denver, Colorado, 1872

 Item
Identifier: B063.04.0004.00004
Abstract

B'nai B'rith Denver Lodge No. 171 charter listing the names of applicants. A number of Denver's early prominent Jewish pioneers are listed on the charter, including Julius Londoner, David Kline, Fred Z. Salomon and his brother Hyman, Michael Hattenbach, Louis Anfenger, Philip Trounstine, Edward Pisko and Dr. John Elsner.

Dates: 1872

Phillip Trounstine, between 1860-1880

 Item
Identifier: B063.08.0024.00014
Abstract

Formal portrait of Phillip Trounstine, Denver's first fire chief.

Dates: between 1860-1880

Phillip Trounstine, between 1860-1880

 Item
Identifier: B063.08.0016.00027
Abstract

Formal portrait of Phillip Trounstine, Denver's first fire chief.

Dates: between 1860-1880

Portrait of Philip Trounstine, circa 1870

 Item
Identifier: B063.08.0047.00107
Abstract

Portrait of Philip Trounstine dressed in a captain's cavalry uniform of the U.S. Civil War. Trounstine married Mollie Wisebart and managed Abraham Jacob's Denver store as well as working as a volunteer firefighter becoming the first fire chief of Denver, Colorado.

Dates: circa 1870

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Jewish men 3
Photographs 2
Cincinnati (Ohio) 1
Fire fighters 1
Jewish soldiers 1