Read Select Back-Issues
Southern Jewish History is pleased to make available the articles from the first three volumes of the journal.
Click on the attachments below to view these journal articles as PDFs.
Volume 1 (1998)
Why Study Southern Jewish History, Gary P. Zola, 1-22
“Ride ‘em Jewboy”: Kinky Friedman and the Texas Mystique, Bryan Edward Stone, 23-42
Synagogue and Jewish Church: A Congregational History of North Carolina, Leonard Rogoff, 43-82
Amelia Greenwald and Regina Kaplan: Jewish Nursing Pioneers, Susan Mayer, 84-108
Personality Profile, Harry Reyner: Individualism and Community in Newport News, Virginia, Gertrude L. Samet, 109-120
As Told to Memoirs, Ruth and Rosalie: Two Tales of Jewish New Orleans, Bobbie Malone, 121-134
Volume 2 (1999)
The Jews of Keystone: Life in a Multicultural Boomtown, Deborah R. Weiner. 1-24
Lives of Quiet Affirmation: The Jewish Women of Early Anniston,
Alabama, Sherry Blanton, 25-54
Jewish Merchants and Black Customers in the Age of Jim Crow, Clive Webb, 55-80
Mercy on Rude Streams: Jewish Emigrants from Alsace-Lorraine to the Lower Mississippi Region and the Concept of Fidelity, Anny Bloch, 81-110
Kosher Country: Success and Survival on Nashville’s Music Row, Stacy Harris, 111-128
“From the Recipe File of Luba Cohen”: A Study of Southern Jewish Foodways and Cultural Identity, Marcie Cohen Ferris, 129-164
Volume 3 (2000)
A Shtetl Grew in Bessemer: Temple Beth-El and Jewish Life in Small-Town Alabama, Terry Barr, 1-44
Lynchburg’s Swabian Jewish Entrepreneurs in War and Peace,
Richard A. Hawkins, 45-82
Interaction and Identity: Jews and Christians in Nineteenth Century New Orleans, Scott M. Langston, 83-124
Articles are intended for private use only. Any reproduction or distribution without the written consent of Managing Edtor Rachel Heimovics Braun is prohibited.

