Browse Items (253 total)
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Interview with Enid German-Beck and photographs, 1930s-1950s, 2010-2011
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with Enid German-Beck (1930-) in November 2010. The summary is accompanied by photographs of Enid, her homes, and her family and friends, dating from the 1930s-1950s, 2011. The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky. -
Interview with Daisy Goldstein and photograph, 2010, 2013
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with Daisy Goldstein (1933-) on December 10, 2010. The summary is accompanied by a photograph of Goldstein taken by Margaret Mazanec at a party on June 23, 2013. The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky. -
Interview with Irvin Goldstein and photographs, 1980s-1990s, 2010-2018
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with Irvin Goldstein (1929-) on 2010 and, 2018. The summary is accompanied by a circa 1980s-1990s portrait of Goldstein, photograph of Goldstein taken by Margaret Mazanec on June 23, 2013, biography, and resume. The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky. -
Interview with M. Jay Goldstein and photograph, circa 2000s-2010s
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with M. Jay Goldstein (1932-2014) in circa 2000s-2010s The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky. -
Interview with Ella Goodman, 2018
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with Ella Goodman (1925-) in October 2018. The summary is accompanied by a photograph of Goodman. The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky. -
Photo of Gunter Painting
Photo of Paul Gunter painting at an easel outside -
Photo of African American Man and Cabin
Photo of African American man in the doorway of a small wooden cabin -
Photo of Hogan's Fountain
Photo of Hogan's Fountain in Cherokee Park, Louisville, KY -
Pauline Pearson photograph, ca. 1963
Pauline Pearson being honored for JCC and Community work, ca. 1963, Norbert Friedman, Alex Berman, Lewis Cole, Pauline Pearson, Samuel Steinfeld, Joseph Kaplan, Morris Kling. -
Blue Boar Cafeteria interior photograph, ca. 1937 or 1947
Restaurant interior, with tables, Blue Boar, 644 S. Fourth St. -
Blue Boar Cafeteria exterior photograph, ca. 1937 or 1947
Exterior photograph of Blue Boar Cafeteria at 644 S. Fourth St. -
Catherine Doolan's Property photograph, 1917
“Photograph was taken during the first week of October 1917 shows a very fine growth of the second crop of potatoes grown on this same land this year.” -
4211 Poplar Level Road, 1917
Purchased by the US Government from Katherine Dahl, this home housed Camp Commander Major General Harry Hale. Today it is for sale. -
3001 Greenup Road, 1917
Dr. James C. Mitchell leased and then sold his home and property for the Camp, but its distinctive frame remains in the neighborhood behind George Rogers Clark Park. -
3760 Illinois Avenue, 1917
Supposedly the home of early Jefferson County settler Elizabeth Prather, the Ben Boerste house is across Illinois Avenue from the Louisville Nature Center’s parking lot. -
940 French Avenue, 1917
W. S. Bodley sold this home and property for the Camp; in 1921, some of the property was repurchased by Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston and given to the city of Louisville as George Rogers Clark Park. This house remained in the residential area. -
Interview with Arthur H. Isaacs and photographs, 2014
Summary of an oral history interview conducted with Arthur H. Isaacs (1924-2017) in December 2014. The summary is accompanied by photographs of Isaacs in November 2014 and with loved ones at his 90th birthday dinner in September 2014, and an obituary. The interview was part of the Louisville Jewish Family and Career Services's project to document the lives of Jewish seniors in Louisville, Kentucky.