Jewish Historical Society of North Jersey (Fairlawn, NJ 07410-1252) Joy Kurland (Project Director: May 2017 to March 2021)
PG-258550-18
Preservation Assistance Grants
Preservation and Access
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[Grant products][Media coverage]
Totals:
$5,970 (approved) $5,965 (awarded)
Grant period:
1/1/2018 – 6/30/2019
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Small Institution Grant for Preservation Jewish Historical Society of North Jersey
Contracting with a consultant from the
Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts, to conduct a preservation
assessment of a collection of library and archival material documenting the
social, cultural, economic, political, and religious history of the Jewish
communities of Passaic, Bergen, and Hudson counties, New Jersey. Included are personal
and family papers, photographs, and synagogue records dating to 1848 documenting
the foundation of Barnert Hospital, where Jewish doctors, shut out of local
hospitals, could practice. Other material
chronicles the role of Jewish immigrants in manufacturing uniforms for the Union
Army, the development of Jewish football teams in the 1920s, and domestic religious
practices throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. In
addition, the historical society maintains an oral history archive of over 150
interviews of Holocaust survivors, civil rights leaders, and pop culture icons.
The Jewish Historical Society of North Jersey would like to retain the services of Dyani Fiege, the
Director of Preservation Services at the Philadelphia-based firm, Conservation Center for Art and Historic
Artifacts to conduct a general preservation assessment of the collections and operations at the society’s
new location in Fairlawn, NJ. The mission of the Society is the collection, preservation, exhibition,
publication and popularization of material of every kind having reference to settlement, history and life of
American Jewry in Northern New Jersey. A 501 (c) 3 non-profit educational organization, a museum and
library are open year round. Collections are used by students, scholars, researchers, and general interest
visitors. After years of making the best of the situation, the society is now poised to improve conservation
policies. New standards of preservation are needed. This preservation assessment will be the foundation
of all future growth and stability for the collections.
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