Denver (Colo.)
Found in 55917 Collections and/or Records:
Series One: Publications, 1992
Series One contains publications listing Jeanne Abrams as an author or contributor.
Service Awards (NJH employees), 1970
correspondence related to the Modern Talking Picture Service, Inc.
Sets of Twins at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver, between 1930-1935
Three sets of twins seated on a lawn. In the front row are Joey and Esther Karsh, center are Rose and Violet Waterman and flanking the Watermans are Eddie and Sammy Friedman (from left to right). The children were in the care of the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver, which later became part of the National Jewish Hospital.
Seven Solomon Sisters, between 1910-1920
Headshots of all seven Solomon sisters: Esther, Deborah, Theresa, Anne, Flora, Ruth, and Goldie.
Seventh Annual Report, 1911
Seventh Symphony
Tracey Jacobs and Ann Halaby, both of the Hannah Kahn Dance Company, perform Isadora Duncan's ''Seventh Symphony.''
Several Children in Costume, between 1900-1910
Several young children stand in a group with an unidentified woman all wearing costumes.
Sewing Book, circa 1890
The book contains handwritten directions on sewing techniques with examples of each stitch attached on the adjoining page. Fannie Anfenger's name is inscribed on the cover of her sewing exercise book, which she used for classes at Gilpin Elementary School. Fannie Anfenger (1885-1965) was the daughter of Louis and Louise Schlesinger Anfenger. She married Sidney Rinds and they had one son, Louis Rinds.
Sewing Class at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, between 1930-1950
Sewing class at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). Classes were offered to patients as part of rehabilitation. 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.
Sewing Class at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver, between 1928-1940
A group of girls learn to sew during a class at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver. The National Home for Jewish Children at Denver's history began in 1907 as the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children, which was a refuge for lower-income children whose parents were being treated for tuberculosis, or had passed away from tuberculosis. In 1928 the institution changed names to the National Home for Jewish Children in Denver.