Hart Family
The Hart Family
Solomon
Hart (1825-1901) and Alice Davis Hart
(1833-1915)
Solomon and Alice
Hart, along with some of their children, are acknowledged as the first
permanent Jewish residents of Saint John, New Brunswick.
Solomon Hart (from The Jew in Canada by Arthur Daniel Hart, Montreal, 1926)
Solomon Hart was born in London,
England. He became a cigar-maker, a trade he brought first to New York and then
to Saint John in August 1858. He came with his wife Alice Davis Hart and his
children, Abraham, Henry, Jennie, Carrie, Elizabeth, Rachel and Rebecca.
His cigar factory was located on Prince William Street, close to the wharves. In the 1875 City Directory, he was listed as a manufacturer and importer of Havana cigars. This business was destroyed in the Great Saint John Fire of June 20, 1877, but it was soon re-established on Union Street.
Hart organized the first High Holy Day
services in Saint John in 1879 by bringing a rabbi from Boston and searching
the city’s hotels for the tenth man required for the minyan (quorum of ten men
required to hold a religious service). Solomon Hart and his family were
involved in the establishment of the city’s first synagogue, the Ahavith Achim
(Brotherly Love), which was dedicated in January of 1899.
Alice Davis Hart (from The Jew in Canada by Arthur Daniel Hart, Montreal, 1926)
Alice
Davis Hart
had attended a private Jewish school in London, England where she learned
Hebrew.
In Saint John she started a religious school
in her home, a key to developing the early Jewish community. Her daughters assisted her as teachers.
Her most notable accomplishment was founding
a chapter of the Daughters of Israel in 1899 and of which she served as its
first president. The membership was
drawn from the wives of the early Jewish settlers in Saint John. Their mandate
was to help the poor and needy and to provide funds to poor families. Members of the organization made clothing for
the needy. The members promoted Jewish education and raised funds for the
construction of a Mikvah (ritual bath) which was located in the basement of the
Ahavith Achim Synagogue.
Alice was instrumental in linking this
organization to the Jewish Immigrant Aid Society in 1899 and to the Local
Council of Women in 1912. From 1899
until the 1940s, these ladies fulfilled their mandate and also reached beyond
the Jewish community to assist those in need and support women in the city. At
the time of dissolution, the remaining funds were turned over to the Sisterhood
of Congregation Shaarei Zedek.
As a social activist, Mrs. Hart became
involved in a day nursery and free kindergarten, both of which were supervised
by the Local Council of Women.
Elizabeth Hart Green (from The Jew in Canada by Arthur Daniel Hart, Montreal, 1926
Solomon
and Alice had 4 sons - Henry (died 1907), David (born 1866), Jacob (died 1873),
and Abraham Solomon (1875-1930), - and 6 daughters – Jennie (Mrs. Abraham)
Isaacs (1847-1931), Carrie (Mrs. Israel) Isaacs (1860-1933), Amelia (died 1877),
Elizabeth (Mrs. Louis) Green (1867-1947), Rebecca (Mrs. Maurice W.) Wyzanksi
(1869-1939), and Mrs. Rachel (Landau) (1873-1943).
References:
- Louis I. Michelson Archives and Research and Exhibition Files, Saint John Jewish Historical Museum
- Marcia Koven – Weaving the Past Into the Present (Saint John: 1989 and 2008)
- The Evening Times Globe / The Telegraph Journal (Saint John newspapers)
- Dictionary of Canadian Biography
See also Green Family and Isaacs Family
To comment on this story please send an email to sjjhm@nbnet.nb.ca
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