Friday Notes
Mark Davis,"Preserving," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 15 August, recognizes the urgency of preserving the documents of small Jewish communities scattered over the remote Southern countryside. They are thriving in the urban South, but rapidly disappearing from its towns and villages. A 1905 photograph in the print edition of the article shows the children of Benjamin Boorstin, a Russian immigrant, with the family cow in Covington, Georgia, and says that the elder Boorstin walked the cow to Atlanta, when he moved his family here. Ten years after the photograph, his son, Samuel, joined Leo Frank's legal defense team before Frank was lynched. Samuel Boorstin's son, Daniel, was born in Atlanta, during the turmoil over the Leo Frank case. After the lynching, however, Samuel Boorstin moved his family to Oklahoma, where the noted American historian grew up.
David Robinson,"Surviving Himmler," Scotsman, 13 August, reviews Katrin Himmler's The Himmler Brothers.
Suzanna Andrews,"Arthur Miller's Missing Act," Vanity Fair, September, tells the remarkable story of the playwright's son, Daniel. Hat tip.
Finally, farewell to Max Roach. Here, he's featured with the Max Roach Quartet; and here, he appears with the legendary Abbey Lincoln: Part I and Part II.