Jews
Found in 5096 Collections and/or Records:
Leaded Glass Mogen Davids (Stars of David)
Leaded stained glass Mogen Davids (Stars of David that have clear glass in the centers and yellow striated glass in the stars.
Leadership Dinner
Group of people seated at tables at the Metropolitan Life Insurance Leadership Dinner of the Terrace Park Staff at the Hotel Kansas Citian in Kansas City Mosouri.
Leather Business Card Case, between 1924-1952
Leather Notebook With Symptoms and Treatments, between 1924-1952
A black leather notebook with six metal rings inside having an appearance of an address book, but used as a way to categorize symptoms and medical treatments. The back cover has flap and several medical charts and treatments are inside. There is a handwritten label inside: ''A.L. Esserman; 1595 Gilpin; Denver, COLO.'' Dr. Arthur L. Esserman (born 1898) was an intern at Children's Hospital in Denver, Colorado from 1924 to 1926 and practiced pediatric medicine in Denver from 1926 to 1952.
Leather Syringe Case, between 1924-1952
A black leather case with zipper on one side. The inside has a leather band for holding syringes in place. Belonged to Dr. Arthur L. Esserman (born 1898) who was an intern at Children's Hospital in Denver, Colorado from 1924 to 1926 and practiced pediatric medicine in Denver from 1926 to 1952.
Legal Committee, 1977
Correspondence to and from Richard Bluestein regarding the legal committee
Legal Committee, 1976-1980
Correspondence related to Richard Bluestein and the Legal Committee for NJH
Lehrman Family
Nathan Lehrman recovered from TB at National Jewish Hospital in Denver. His wife, Rose, traveled on a buckboard wagon to Lafayette, Louisville and other small towns to peddle sewing notions to the farmers. In 1910 the Lehrman family moved to Brighton, Colorado, and opened a general store, Lehrman Mercantile Co. Nathan and Rose had five children: Frances, Abe, Minnie, Sarah, and Cecelia.
Lena Bloch Memorial Home at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, circa 1941
Exterior of the Lena Bloch Memorial Home for Nurses, on the campus of the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). 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.