Calp Family, Part 1
The Calp Family - Part 1
Abraham (1905-2001) and Fena (1907-1989) Calp
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Abraham Calp |
Abraham
Calp was born in Odessa, Russia in 1905. He came to Saint John in 1926
with his wife Fena, mother Sarah, brother Jack, and sister Celia. They were
escaping from Russia after the family’s specialty men’s clothing shop was
confiscated by the Bolsheviks. They left Odessa on December 6, 1924 and crossed
the border illegally into Romania with the help of relatives. From there they
obtained an American visa, but when American borders were closed to Jewish
immigration, they were able to get a visa to enter Canada. They were assisted
by a relative in Saint John and the Jewish Immigrant Aid Society. The Calp
family arrived in Saint John on December 2, 1926.
Abe Calp worked briefly for Harry
Davis in construction, but soon turned to peddling, selling clothing he was
able to get from the People’s Clothing Store, run by Joseph Stekolsky on Main
Street. He remembered that his customers
liked him and he provided credit to some of those customers, accepting partial
payment and returning later for the rest.
He opened his first store on Charlotte
Street in 1933 and was one of the first city merchants to arrange for customers
to buy on credit. In a 1987 interview with the local newspaper, Abe Calp
recounted what life was like in those early days in business: “I found it
necessary to initiate credit. At that time most stores who gave credit did so
only to persons of means, but we were flexible. We told people to buy what they
wanted and pay as they could afford. In many instances it amounted to no more
than 25 cents a week … it was a struggle to stay ahead of the bills.”
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Calp's Department Store |
He moved to a larger space at 26-28 Charlotte Street and over time the store grew to have frontage on both Charlotte Street and Kings Square North, amounting to about 50,000 square feet. The store was destroyed by fire in 1943, but was rebuilt soon after. When Calp’s closed in 1993, it was one of the largest independent department stores in the Maritime Provinces. The store took out large advertisements in The Evening Times Globe newspaper, usually on page 5, and featured women’s and men’s clothing, shoes, a wedding department and a bargain basement. The store was well known for its quality merchandise, window displays (especially at Christmas) and annual bridal shows. In its heyday the store employed as many as 70 people. His sister, Celia, was a buyer for the store and his son-in-law took over the store’s management in the late 1980s.
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Advertisement for Calps - The Evening Times Globe, September 10, 1936 |
Abe Calp was the first Chairman of the
Saint John Merchants Association, President of the Associated Stores of Canada
and a charter member of the Retail Council of Canada. He was an active member
of the Jewish community serving as President of the Shaarei Zedek Congregation
from 1975 to 1978 and as President of the Saint John Ezra Lodge of the Zionist
Order Habonim. He was Vice-President
of the Zionist Organization of Canada and Maritimes Regional Chair for the
Jewish National Fund. He chaired many United Jewish Appeal and State of Israel
Bonds fundraising campaigns and was honoured with a Negev Dinner in 1955.
Abe Calp also gave his efforts to a
number of cultural, service and recreational organizations in the city
including the Saint John Community Concert Association, New Brunswick
Competitive Festival of Music, the Union Club, the Masonic Lodge No. 2, Rotary
Club, Westfield Golf Club and Riverside Golf and Country Club. Calp’s sponsored
an annual fundraising fashion show for the Saint John Symphony Orchestra. He
volunteered for the Canadian National Institute of the Blind, Saint John
General Hospital and St. Joseph’s Hospital. He founded and chaired Fundy Linen
Services, a non-profit laundry service for hospitals in south-western New
Brunswick. In 1992, he was presented with a Canada 125 medal in recognition of
his contributions in the community.
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Fena, Marie and Lucy Calp |
Fena Calp came to Saint John from Russia with her husband, Abraham Calp and other members of the Calp family in 1926. She married Abe Calp in 1924, just before they escaped – she was then 17 years old and Abe was 19. She was an active member of Hadassah.
Abraham
and Fena Calp moved from Spring Street in the “valley” to 78 Orange Street in
the early 1940s where they remained until the 1990s.
They
had three daughters - Marie, Lucille, and Francine.
Marie Calp Bornstein (1927-2002) moved to Toronto and owned an antique store.
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Lucille Calp |
Lucille Calp Kerr was the first young woman in the Jewish community to train and practice
as a lawyer. She received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of New
Brunswick and a law degree from Dalhousie in Halifax. She was called to the
Nova Scotia Bar in 1953 and began her career in 1954. During her career she did
legal research for Dalhousie University, made presentations on Land
Registration in the Maritime Provinces and was co-author of the 1974 edition of
the Canadian Hospital Law Book with Lorne Rozovsky (his father Hyman Rozovsky
grew up in Saint John). Lucy married Donald Kerr, another lawyer and had two
children.
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Francine Goldsmith |
Francine
Calp Goldsmith (1934-2019) received a Bachelor of Arts in English and Philosophy
from McGill University. She met her husband Lloyd Goldsmith in New York City
and they returned to Saint John. She was an avid sportswoman, playing
basketball while a student at Saint John High School, curling on a rink that
came second in the NB curling championship, golfing at Westfield and Riverside
and playing bridge, reaching the level of Life Master. She was on the boards of
the Boys and Girls Club and the St. Joseph’s Hospital Foundation and was a
member of Henrietta Szold Chapter of Hadassah, the Sisterhood of the Shaarei
Zedek Synagogue and the Saint John Jewish Historical Society. They had two
children - Mark and Renée.
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)
- Essay ‑ "Port of Entry: The Story of Jewish Immigrant Aid in Saint John, New Brunswick, 1890‑1946" by Craig Chouinard, Saint John Jewish Historical Museum
- The Evening Times Globe / The Telegraph Journal (Saint John newspapers)
See also: Calp Family Part 2
To comment on this story please send an email to sjjhm@nbnet.nb.ca
This
project is made possible with funding from the Archaeology and Heritage Branch,
Province of New Brunswick through their Exhibit Renewal Digital Component
program and the unwavering support of the Jewish families who made Saint John
their home.
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