Emotions can run high in the archives. So many traces of human experiences and interactions are preserved in AJHS’s collections—and romance is no exception. Our holdings at AJHS yield some very heartfelt histories.
The Jacobi-Schlossberg Family Papers detail four generations of an American Jewish family, primarily through the personal records of four women. Freda Moritz, born on November 4, 1886 in Chicago, married Harold Jacobi in 1910 in New York. They were married for 28 years and had three children. Alongside other correspondence, photographs, and memos in the collection depicting Freda and Harold’s lives, their tokens of affection for each other endure.
Inside the store-bought card is a small handwritten note from Freda to Harold, adding a more personal and tender touch: “Ha Ha Ha. -Freda”. Poignantly. Freda and Harold passed away in the same month, January 1939.
Soft-hearted correspondence also make their mark in some of AJHS’s institutional records. The National Jewish Welfare Board (NJWB) Bureau of War Records holds two different examples of Valentine’s Day cards. The NJWB was founded in 1917 to support and to document the service of Jewish people in the Armed Forces. Subsequently, it evolved into a national federation of local agencies and social welfare institutions designed to address a range of needs for the American Jewish community.
Here, the Milwaukee Army and Navy Committee of the NJWB dispatches some whimsical romantic rhymes to raise the spirits—near-literally—of Jews on the front lines: