Documents found

  1. 1.

    Thesis submitted to Concordia University

    1981

  2. 3.

    Thesis submitted to McGill University

    1951

  3. 5.

    Article published in Urban History Review (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 18, Issue 3, 1990

    Digital publication year: 2013

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    This paper examines the participation of members of Montreal's tiny Jewish community in the city's economic development between the 1840's and the 1870's. Based largely on the R. G. Dun & Co. credit reports, this study reveals that Jews concentrated mainly in the retailing of jewellery and fancy goods, tobacco and dry goods and in clothing manufacturing. Most were petty traders; they were often transitory figures who succumbed to the vagaries of business fluctuations, or were incompetent, poorly financed or dishonest. Although his Jewishness was always taken note of, a businessman's creditworthiness was apparently assessed as objectively as that of a non-Jew: there is no evidence that antisemitism - of which there is plenty in these reports - by itself adversely affected Jewish business mobility or success to any significant extent. In this period Jewish businessmen tended to keep to trades or businesses with which they were familiar before immigrating; they often brought inventory with them, relied on family credit and kept largely to themselves. Most achieved a modest living while a few successful tobacco and clothing manufactures emerged.

  4. 6.

    Review published in Renaissance and Reformation (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 43, Issue 1, 2020

    Digital publication year: 2020

  5. 7.

    Thesis submitted to McGill University

    1947

  6. 8.

    Article published in Ontario History (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 99, Issue 2, 2007

    Digital publication year: 2019

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    Bishop Isaac Hellmuth is the undisputed father of The University of Western Ontario, and his devotion to Christianity is celebrated as part of its rich history. Hellmuth, however, was born a Jew. Both Anglican and evangelical sources have treated his Judaism and his 1841 conversion to Christianity in a variety of ways, but they are limited. This paper will revisit Hellmuth's conversion and career through a Jewish lens, profiling a Christian missionary movement in which Hellmuth was active as both a prospective apostate and long-time emissary. Hellmuth's conversion has been described as an exclusively religious experience, but amidst European anti-Semitism, it might have been partly motivated by a desire for position and wealth. Certainly, Hellmuth's conversion reaped him rewards, although in London, Ontario, he was never quite able to elude his Jewish past.

  7. 10.

    Article published in Séquences (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 216, 2001

    Digital publication year: 2010