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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emma B. Mandl (December 16, 1842 – July 31, 1928) was a Bohemian-born American social reformer, clubwoman, and community leader based in Chicago, Illinois.

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Early life and education

Emma Adler was born in Plzeň, Bohemia, the daughter of Jonas Adler and Charlotte Goldscheider Adler. The Adler family immigrated to the United States in 1858.[1]

Career

Emma B. Mandl organized many charities focused on Jewish women and children in Chicago.[2] She was a founder and president of the Baron Hirsch Woman's Club (North Side Ladies' Aid Society) for fourteen years. From that position, she founded or helped to found the Home for Jewish Friendless and Working Girls,[3] the Chicago-Winfield Tuberculosis Sanitarium, the Ruth Club for Working Girls, the Grandmothers Music and Reading Circle, the Home for Convalescent Men and Boys, and the Jewish Home Finding Society for Children, all in Chicago. She was an officer of the Home for Jewish Orphans and the Illinois First District Federation of Women's Clubs. She was a member of the Chicago Association of Jewish Women, and of the Sarah Greenbaum Lodge, Deborah Verein.[4][5]

Beyond charitable activities, she was a probation officer for the Juvenile Court of Chicago, and a director of the Bureau of Personal Service.[4]

Personal life

Emma Adler married Bernhard Mandl in 1865 in Chicago. They had two children, Sydney and Etta.[6] She died in 1928, age 85. At her funeral, Jane Addams, Henry Horner, and Julius Rosenwald were named among her honorary pallbearers.[7]

Many of the organizations begun with Mandl's efforts became part of United Hebrew Charities, and eventually came under the oversight of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago.[4]

References

  1. ^ John William Leonard, ed., Woman's Who's Who of America (American Commonwealth Publishing Company 1914): 536.
  2. ^ "Emma B. Mandl, Charity Worker, Dead" New York Times (August 1, 1928): 21.
  3. ^ "Founders' Day Celebrated at Charity Institution" Chicago Daily Tribune (December 18, 1905): 10. via Newspapers.comopen access
  4. ^ a b c Sandra K. Bornstein, "Emma B. Mandl" Jewish Women's Archive (2009).
  5. ^ Isaac Landman, ed., The Universal Jewish Encyclopedia (1942): 320-321.
  6. ^ "Klein-Mandl" Chicago Daily Tribune (February 16, 1887): 8. via Newspapers.comopen access
  7. ^ "Emma Mandl, Welfare Worker, Dies in Chicago" Jewish Telegraphic Agency (August 2, 1928).
This page was last edited on 2 December 2023, at 04:51
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