Jews
Found in 5058 Collections and/or Records:
Portrait of Mrs. Annette G. Machlin and Mrs. Pauline Greenberg, between 1945-1960
Portrait of Mrs. H. Moses of Trinidad, Colorado, circa 1877
Portrait of Mrs. H. Moses in her wedding dress standing next to a couch. She was married to Harry Moses. They traveled from Missouri to Trinidad, Colorado in 1879.
Portrait of Mrs. Ida Sloan Stutman of Kansas City, between 1945-1960
Mrs. Ida Sloan Stutman of Kansas City.
Portrait of Mrs. Louis Dinowitz and an Unidentified Man, between 1940-1955
Portrait of Nathan Bernstein, circa 1913
Studio portrait of Nathan Bernstein wearing a suit and bow tie with a watch chain.
Portrait of Nathan Bernstein, circa 1913
Studio portrait of Nathan Bernstein wearing a suit and bow tie with a watch chain.
Portrait of Nathaniel Goldstein, circa 1951
Nathaniel Goldstein, Attorney General for the State of New York from 1943 to 1954. Goldstein was a personality and supporter 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.
Portrait of Philip Hornbein Reading, 1938
Philip Hornbein is reading in a chair with a cigarette in his hand. Hornbein was one of Colorado's top trial lawyers, a leader in the fight against the Ku Klux Klan, and chairman of Colorado's Democratic Party during the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. He graduated from the University of Denver School of Law, practiced in Cripple Creek, then Denver, Colorado.
Portrait of Philip Hornbein Reading, 1938
Philip Hornbein is reading in a chair. Hornbein was one of Colorado's top trial lawyers, a leader in the fight against the Ku Klux Klan, and chairman of Colorado's Democratic Party during the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. He graduated from the University of Denver School of Law, practiced in Cripple Creek, then Denver, Colorado.
Portrait of Philip Trounstine, circa 1870
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.
