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Collection: Directories and Documents > Pamphlets
Western States Jewish Historical Quarterly Volume X No. 2 (PH 10-10)(January 1978) (104 pages)

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WESTERN STATES JEWISH
HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
The Western States Jewish Historical Quarterly is the sprightliest journal in the field of
American Jewish history. It contains a treasury of new material on the American Jewish
experience. It specializes in the history of the Jew and Jewish institutions in the transMississippi West. Unique pictorial materials are featured in each number. The first issue
appeared in October, 1968.
A few articles published in recent issues:
The First Jewish Governor: Moses Alexander of Idaho, by Arthur Weyne.
The Rise and Fall of the Jewish Community of Austin, Nevada.
A German Jew in Liberal Mexico: Isidoro
Epstein, 1851-1894, by Corinne Krause.
Daniel Cave: Southern California -Pioneer
Dentist, by William M. Kramer.
Abraham Levi: Father of Victoria, Texas
Jewry, by Robert W. Shook.
A ‘Murder’ to be Forgotten, by Norton B.
Stern.
Ernest Bloch at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, by Ruth Rafael.
Memories of the Jewish Farmers and
Ranchers of Colorado, by Max P. Cowan.
Memoirs of an Alaskan Merchant, by Yael
Rozenstain.
The Wine Tycoon of Anaheim, by Norton
B. Stern and William M. Kramer.
The Colmans and Others of Deadwood,
South Dakota, by Al Alschuler.
The Reaction to Hitler by the Intermountain Jewish News of Denver, by Michael
W. Rubinoff.
North Dakota Memories, by Henry and
Lea Fine.
HO Ast et Sie SOD tage ee
KLAUBER RANCH IN MENDOCINO COUNTY,
CALIFORNIA, 1890
Abraham Klauber was born in what is now Czechoslovakia, in 1831, and emigrated to America in 1849,
settling in the Midwest. In 1852 he came to California
and engaged in business at a number of places including Sacramento, Volcano in Amador County, at
Genoa and Carson City in the State of Nevada, and he
finally settled in Son Diego, California in 1869. There
he became a major business figure. The firm he founded
still exists. The house pictured above was in the center
of a stock and timber ranch purchased by Klauber in
1887, located twelve miles east of Willits and twentyfour miles north of Ukiah. Photograph is courtesy of
the Serra Museum and Library, San Diego Historical
Society. For more on Klauber, see Laurence M. Klauber, “Abraham Klauber — A Pioneer Merchant (18311911),"" WSJHQ, January 1970.