Beth Israel Congregation (Ann Arbor, Mich.) records, 1938-2016 (majority within 1956-2016)
9.06 linear feet — 3.9 GB (online) — 4 oversize folders
9.06 linear feet — 3.9 GB (online) — 4 oversize folders
The History series contains data compiled by members of the Beth Israel Congregation from 1948 until 2016. This includes historical data on the congregation, its founders and note-able members including Osias Zwerdling and Thomas Cook. This series also contains data on the congregation's current and previous locations, Building Committee records, certificates, resolutions, social issues, data on the first Jewish cemetery in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the Beth Israel Memorial Garden. This series also contains publications highlighting the congregation's membership, programs, and affiliations throughout the years, as well as images of some of the founding members, building locations, and dedication ceremonies, and other events. Located within this series are color slides of the Ten Commandments in Hebrew as well as a digitized audio recording of Osias Zwerdling discusing the founding/history of the congregation.
0.2 linear feet — 7.48 GB (online)
The Interviews series (7.47 GB online) includes full materials from recording sessions conducted by StoryCorps. Each interview consists of a 45 minute sound recording, a transcript (produced by members of Beth Israel), log files that document key points in the conversation and corresponding time stamps, and photographs of the storytellers and interviewers. Every interview was conducted in a group of two to three people with some level of familiarity with each other, recorded by StoryCorps, who processed and compiled all materials accept for the aforementioned transcripts.
The Betsey Ann Cowles Palmer series (2 folders, approx 243 MB) contains correspondence to family in Montana, Michigan, and elsewhere. Topics include family matters and news, including settling the estate of her husband, Charles Henry Palmer, who died without making a will. The series also includes Betsey Palmer's obituary.
1.5 linear feet — 17.4 GB (online)
The Miscellaneous Personal Papers (0.3 linear feet) include biographical information, photographs, some of her journals and schoolwork, and five audio cassettes of sermons and a workshop. Newspaper articles of interviews are included with the biographic materials. Several journals are included in spiral bound notebooks.
0.1 linear feet — 42.5 MB (online)
(The diary contains additional information and images that were presumably contributed by Clare M. Cory)
The Biographical series includes Mack's biography, images from Mack's time as a college student and as a basketball coach with the Castle Valley Job Corps in Price, UT; Mack's resumes, newspaper articles and press releases, and materials from a 1976 testimonial put on in Mack's honor by the members of the Region One Board. The latter also includes photographs and an audiocassette recording of the event. Of particular note is a digitized conglomeration of news clips and television interviews pertaining to Mack and his tenure with the Board.
The Biographical Information series contains a short biography of Eugene Tann prepared by his children Dorothy Collens and Lewis Tann in 2018. The biography traces Eugene Tann's birth and early life in Czechoslovakia, his immigration to the United States, and his career in the manufacturing industry in Detroit. The statement also provides background information about Tann's parents and siblings and what happened to them during the World War II.
3 linear feet, 122 MB (online)
The Biographical/Personal files contain biographical information about Binkowski, including photographs and a photo CD, genealogical research, and correspondence with family, judges, and politicians. Digital content includes image files of a 2006 event and various historical and Polish American figures.
11.4 linear feet (in 13 boxes) — 1 oversize folder — 122 MB (online)