Bill Gladstone Genealogy
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Obit: Solomon Schechter, foremost Jewish scholar (1915)

by Bill Gladstone • January 21, 2025

Tags:19th-century Bible obit profile religion

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Recent Posts

  • Thousands of Canadians fought in American Civil War (1914) August 28, 2025
  • Bettinger’s DNA Guide still an instructive read (2025) August 23, 2025
  • Journeys of David Toback August 22, 2025
  • Orphaned century-old photo returns to family August 18, 2025
  • Orchestrating the American Dream: Bernstein family history August 7, 2025
  • World of Our Fathers endures as a classic August 7, 2025
  • Toronto’s May Day parades of yesteryear (1955) August 7, 2025
  • The Toronto Olympic Games of 1838 July 10, 2025
  • Sad, extraordinary tale of a Jewish ‘miser’ June 23, 2025
  • A notable mansion gave Castlefield Avenue its name June 21, 2025
  • Did your Russian-Empire ancestors leave a RUSCAPA paper trail? June 20, 2025
  • Sephardic Jews in early Canada May 28, 2025
  • Toronto’s colored population in 1908 May 16, 2025
  • A Matzah Factory on Ontario Street May 15, 2025
  • Kishinev, 100 years later May 15, 2025
  • Finest hardwood in Massey mansion — ‘nothing like it in the Dominion’ May 8, 2025

In Case You Missed . . .

Orphaned century-old photo returns to family

by Bill Gladstone • August 18, 2025

‘More Than Coincidence’ My first glimpse of it was from a distance, but there was something that drew me forward by an almost magnetic process. A large family portrait, perhaps a century old, with three rows of adults and children around a pair of grandparents, all dressed finely, nobody smiling. When I got closer the…

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One of Mengele’s experimental twins tells her story

by Bill Gladstone • February 20, 2025

From the Canadian Jewish News, 1995 ◊ Note: This article is being republished this week as a reminder of the eternal evil nature of “Amalek,” as represented during the days of WW2 by the Nazis, and in today’s world by the Hamas terrorist group. It was, finally, the melody of a Hebrew song that brought…

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From the DP Camps to Canada via the Tailor Project

by Bill Gladstone • February 20, 2025

From the Canadian Jewish News, February 2015 In late 1947 and early 1948, representatives of the Canadian garment industry organized what became known as the Tailor Project, a plan to select more than 2,200 skilled tailors from the Displaced Person camps of Europe and give them jobs and housing in Canada. The Tailor Project had…

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Tehran Children: A Holocaust Refugee Odyssey

by Bill Gladstone • December 7, 2022

Book Review: Tehran Children: A Holocaust Refugee Odyssey, by Mikhal Dekel. Hardcover, 418 pages. Published by W.W. Norton & Company, 2019. In September 1939, as Nazi militias approached their town of Ostrow Mazowiecka in northeastern Poland, the author’s paternal grandparents, like many others, were faced with a momentous decision: stay or flee eastwards into Russian-occupied…

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Shanghai’s Baghdadi Jews (review)

by Bill Gladstone • November 30, 2022

Shanghai’s Baghdadi Jews: A Collection of Biographical Reflections, by Maisie J. Meyer, author and editor. Large format, 480 pages, softcover. Blacksmith Books, Hong Kong, 2015. Shanghai’s community of Ashkenazic Jews, who arrived from Poland and elsewhere in Europe in the early 20th century and in advance of the Holocaust, is already fairly well-known. What is…

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The Most Tenacious of Minorities: the Jews of Italy (review)

by Bill Gladstone • November 30, 2022

Review: The Most Tenacious of Minorities: The Jews of Italy, by Sara Reguer. Hardcover, 190 pages. Boston: published by Academic Studies Press, 2013. www. academicstudiespress.com The Jews have been booted out of so many places during their history, it seems only natural that they should have a long and colourful past in the Italian “boot.”…

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Three Minutes in Poland illuminates a lost world

by Bill Gladstone • November 10, 2022

Three Minutes in Poland: Discovering a Lost World in a 1938 Family Film, by Glenn Kurtz. Trade paperback, 420 pages. Published 2014 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. www.fsgbooks.com In the summer of 1938, the author’s American grandparents, David and Liza Kurtz, took a six-week European vacation that included a brief visit to a Polish town,…

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Incident in Opatow (Poland)

by Bill Gladstone • April 17, 2019

August 2018 We arrived in Opatow in early evening and I took my bags upstairs to my hotel room, which directly overlooked the city gate. The next day as we looked around, I thought of the many Torontonians whose parents and grandparents had left the town before the war, and the many more Jews from “Apt” (at least 7,000) who perished…

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My return to Konin (Poland)

by Bill Gladstone • April 17, 2019

August 2018 The moment I stepped out of the car, I realized that this was the first time a member of my family had been back in our ancestral town in more than 130 years. I was in Konin, in the Lodz district of Poland, the town where my paternal ancestors had lived for generations…

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Mary Berg and the Warsaw Ghetto

by Bill Gladstone • April 14, 2019

Four years ago, a Pennsylvanian antiques collector purchased a trove of old scrapbooks and photo albums at an estate sale in the town of Red Lion, Pa. The cache, which included hundreds of photographs including some taken in the Warsaw Ghetto between 1940 and 1943, cost only $10. Discovering that the material was related to…

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Book explores history of Jews of Salonica

by Bill Gladstone • December 18, 2017

Jewish Salonica: Between the Ottoman Empire and Modern Greece By Devin E. Naar. Stanford University Press 2016. by Bill Gladstone Jews first arrived in the city of Salonica, formerly known as Thessaloniki, soon after their dispersal following the Roman conquest of ancient Israel. Salonica again became a prime destination for Sephardic Jews after Spain expelled…

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Nate Leipciger’s ‘The Weight of Freedom’

by Bill Gladstone • April 2, 2016

From the Canadian Jewish News, February 2016 The powerful Holocaust movie Son of Saul, which is up for the “best foreign film” prize at the Academy Awards on February 28, presents a gut-wrenching view of Auschwitz-Birkenau from the point of view of a sondercommando: part of a group that herds prisoners into the gas chamber, processes…

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Genealogy

Bettinger’s DNA Guide still an instructive read (2025)

by Bill Gladstone • August 23, 2025

◊ Note: The keynote speaker at the IAJGS conference on Jewish Genealogy in Fort Wayne, Indiana earlier this month was DNA forensic genealogist Ce Ce Moore, one of the world’s most talented investigators who uses DNA samples to solve serial murders and other crimes, some of which had been considered cold cases for decades. Conference…

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Orphaned century-old photo returns to family

by Bill Gladstone • August 18, 2025

‘More Than Coincidence’ My first glimpse of it was from a distance, but there was something that drew me forward by an almost magnetic process. A large family portrait, perhaps a century old, with three rows of adults and children around a pair of grandparents, all dressed finely, nobody smiling. When I got closer the…

Read more →

Orchestrating the American Dream: Bernstein family history

by Bill Gladstone • August 7, 2025

Sam Bernstein, a New England industrialist who acquired the franchise to the Frederics hair-styling machine in the mid-1920s, became a remarkable overnight success after America was seized by a permanent-wave craze at the height of the flapper era. “One day in 1927, I didn’t have a nickel to my name,” he used to say. “The…

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Sephardic Jews in early Canada

by Bill Gladstone • May 28, 2025

One of the most interesting and unusual items pertaining to the Jewish history of confederate and pre-confederate Canada is a two-centuries-old diary in the custody of the National Archives of Canada. The diary belonged to Samuel Jacobs, a European merchant whose ship, the Betsy, was known to have plied the St. Lawrence carrying trade goods…

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Are Your Immigrant Ancestors on an Order in Council List?

by Bill Gladstone • March 28, 2025

A new online source of genealogical information about immigrants to Canada from the 1930s to the 1950s From Remembering Our Yesterdays, a blog at Inside Toronto While working at Libraries and Archives Canada several years ago, Joanna Crandell discovered that hundreds of mysterious “order-in-council” lists related to immigrants appeared in the index under the subject…

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Thousands of Canadians fought in American Civil War (1914)

Bettinger’s DNA Guide still an instructive read (2025)

Journeys of David Toback

Orphaned century-old photo returns to family

Orchestrating the American Dream: Bernstein family history

World of Our Fathers endures as a classic

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