Author Archives: JHSSC

Growing Up Jewish in Camden

The Baum family (l to r): Garry Baum, Bernie Baum, Becky Baum Lourie, Cheryl Baum, Harry Baum, and Ann Briskin Baum, Temple Beth El, Camden, SC, Rosh Hashanah 1995. Courtesy of the Baum family. Garry When I was growing up in Camden, South Carolina, in the 1960s and ’70s, the city had a population of […]

Holding On: Temple B’Nai Israel of Anderson

Irvin (l), Caroline, and Raymond Rosenblum, children of  founding member Nahum Rosenblum, in front of Temple B’Nai Israel, in Anderson, SC, 1954, six years after it was built across the street from their home. Collection of Sandra Lee Kahn Rosenblum. My earliest recollection of going to shul in Anderson was around 1947. I was about […]

Building a Memorial in Marion Square 

To Honor the Survivors and Remember the Dead: Building a Memorial in Marion Square  I am the child of Holocaust survivors. Henry Popowski and Paula Kornblum Popowski were both from Kaluszyn, a Polish town 50 miles east of Warsaw. Before World War II its population numbered approximately 10,000—80 percent of whom were Jews. My father was 11 years older than my […]

“The ‘Kingdom of Israel’ in this town”

Moise, Ward, Grierson ad In 1845 pharmacist Philip M. Cohen (1808–1879) was described as “a Jew . . . doing a large fine bus[iness who] has made [considerable] money. In[dustrious] and indefatigable.”1  This evaluation comes not from a letter or a newspaper article, but rather, from America’s earliest credit reports. In 1841 the Mercantile Agency began […]

From Pineland to Flowertown: Jewish Merchants of Summerville

Seymour Lynch, 1950s, enjoyed sitting in the sun outside his liquor store at 120 Central Avenue, Summerville, SC, while waiting for customers. He was in the habit of stacking boxes on the sidewalk to show he was open for business. Courtesy of the Lynch family.  The first settlement of Summerville, known as Pineland Village, began after the American Revolution, its development fueled […]

Albert & Sons: The Schneiders of Georgetown

The Schneider family celebrated Albert and Fannie’s 50th wedding anniversary in 1960 at Temple Beth Elohim, Georgetown, SC. Left to right, front: Fannie and Albert Schneider; middle: Anne, Jean, and Dorothy Schneider, and Cecil, Harold, and Philip Schneider. Courtesy of Deborah Schneider Smith.  My grandfather Albert Max Schneider arrived in Georgetown around 1906 at the invitation […]

The Rosen Family

Three generations of the Rosen family gathered in November 1995 for the dedication of the new bridge crossing the Sampit River, named in honor of former Georgetown mayor Sylvan Rosen,seen here standing beneath the sign, flanked by sons Larry and Benedict. Special Collections,College of Charleston. My family’s history in Georgetown begins around 1887 when my […]

The Fogels of Front Street

Abe Fogel (l) with Bernard Baruch in the lobby of the Prince George Hotel. Photo by W.H. Burney of Georgetown. Courtesy of George Fogel. The history of the Fogel family in Georgetown, South Carolina, begins with Harry Fogel, who emigrated in 1900 from the Austro-Hungarian province Galicia in what is today’s Poland. By 1904 Harry was in Georgetown […]

Fall 2017

Summerville Historical Marker Dedication

Central Avenue Summerville SC May 21 2017   Dedication of Marker – Central Avenue, across from Eclectic Chef Panel discussion – Jewish Life in Flowertown Moderator: Spencer Lynch Panelists: Sallie Wolper Boyles, Jane Barshay Burns, Marjorie Levy Lynch, Paul Lynch, Rosalyn Kramer Monat-Haller, Vivian Rose Walking tour of downtown Summerville Jewish heritage sites or driving tour […]