The history of conflict between New York City’s Irish Americans and east European Jews dates back to the close of the 19th century. They disputed over jobs, union memberships, housing, and frequently over politics. These conflicts crescendoed exponentially in the decade or more of the Great Depression in Gaelic neighborhoods, now more than ever, the word on the street was that the Jews were taking over. The rhetoric and organizations of Michigan-based radio preacher Father Charles Coughlin gave voice and activism to local frustrations. However, in 1940, within a new neighborhood built in the Bronx that attracted a majority of Irish and a large proportion of Jews, there was no organized anti-Semitism, no outbursts of violence, or e...
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was America's first great city, but it fell on especially hard times afte...
I received the invitation to speak at this year-long celebration of Irish Jewish connections while o...
The Jews for Urban Justice is an organization of radical individuals living in the Washington, D.C. ...
The history of conflict between New York City’s Irish Americans and east European Jews dates b...
New York\u27s Irish population in the later nineteenth century has received little scholarly attenti...
Most of the limited historiography on black-Jewish relations in the United States has assumed that t...
The dissertation focuses on Irish and Italian Catholics and Jews in New York City and examines the i...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
More than two million Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe to the USA between 1880 and 1910. Most of t...
This article explores the experience of Scotland's largest Jewish community in Glasgow, as part of a...
This article explores the experience of Scotland's largest Jewish community in Glasgow, as part of a...
More than two million Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe to the USA between 1880 and 1910. Most of t...
This dissertation examines how German- and Irish-Americans, the two main ethnic groups in New York C...
Nestled along Erie Canal in upstate New York, Rochester hosted the second largest Jewish population ...
This study examines New York's Jewish families, neighborhoods, and communal institutions during the ...
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was America's first great city, but it fell on especially hard times afte...
I received the invitation to speak at this year-long celebration of Irish Jewish connections while o...
The Jews for Urban Justice is an organization of radical individuals living in the Washington, D.C. ...
The history of conflict between New York City’s Irish Americans and east European Jews dates b...
New York\u27s Irish population in the later nineteenth century has received little scholarly attenti...
Most of the limited historiography on black-Jewish relations in the United States has assumed that t...
The dissertation focuses on Irish and Italian Catholics and Jews in New York City and examines the i...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
More than two million Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe to the USA between 1880 and 1910. Most of t...
This article explores the experience of Scotland's largest Jewish community in Glasgow, as part of a...
This article explores the experience of Scotland's largest Jewish community in Glasgow, as part of a...
More than two million Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe to the USA between 1880 and 1910. Most of t...
This dissertation examines how German- and Irish-Americans, the two main ethnic groups in New York C...
Nestled along Erie Canal in upstate New York, Rochester hosted the second largest Jewish population ...
This study examines New York's Jewish families, neighborhoods, and communal institutions during the ...
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was America's first great city, but it fell on especially hard times afte...
I received the invitation to speak at this year-long celebration of Irish Jewish connections while o...
The Jews for Urban Justice is an organization of radical individuals living in the Washington, D.C. ...