Jews
Found in 5096 Collections and/or Records:
Hazel Oberfelder, circa 1910-1920
Studio portrait of Hazel Oberfelder as a young woman wearing a ruffled dark dress.
He, 1971-1972
Correspondence related to persons and companies starting with the letters ''He''
Heart Surgery at National Jewish Hospital, 1961
A heart surgery in progress at National Jewish Hospital. The cardiac surgery program was started in 1948 and discontinued in June of 1968. This program was one of the first in the West to perform the heart valve operations, mitral commissurotomy in the late 1940s. Even though the program had produced pioneering work in open-heart and lung surgery, it became too expensive to maintain and was no longer considered unique.
Hebrew Educational Alliance and The American Hebrew, 1967-1976
This box contains two rolls (#4-1-#4-2) of duplicate copies of microfilm of the Hebrew Educational Alliance Scrapbook and Hebrew Educational Alliance Sisterhood Scrapbook.
Hebrew Educational Alliance and The American Hebrew, 1967-1976
This box contains two rolls (#4-1-#4-2) of microfilm of the Hebrew Educational Alliance Scrapbook and Hebrew Educational Alliance Sisterhood Scrapbook.
Hebrew School Class at Yeshiva Eitz Chaim, circa 1913
Hebrew Sisters Aid Society Bed Dedication at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, after 1926
Hebrew Typewriter, between 1915-1930
Heinrich Loewenstein's Class Portrait at the Wilsnacker Strasse Jewish School in Berlin, between 1937-1939
Class photograph of a group of school boys pose around a teacher in the courtyard of the Wilsnacker Strasse Jewish School in Berlin, Germany. Heinrich Loewenstein [Henry Lowenstein] kneels third from the left in the front row. The Jewish community in Berlin established the school in an abandoned apartment building on Wilsnacker Strasse after a 1937 decree that forbid Jewish children to attend German schools. The Wilsnacker Strasse school was the last Jewish school in Berlin.
Heliotherapy at the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society (JCRS), circa 1930
Male patients receiving heliotherapy lay in beds pushed out on the verandahs of the Main Building for Men at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver.