Subasta 99 Auction of Fine Judaica
Por Kestenbaum & Company
12.9.22
The Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77, 141 Flushing Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205, Estados Unidos

הודעה חשובה: הקטלוג המוצג בעברית איננו תרגום מדויק של הקטלוג באנגלית, אלא ׳ראשי פרקים׳, ועלול לחסר מידע על הפריטים, במיוחד על מצבם. לא ניתן להחזיר פריט לאחר הרכישה עקב תיאור עברי שחיסר מידע שמוצע באנגלית - על כל מציע לעיין בקטלוג באנגלית לפני ההצעה. 
La subasta ha concluído

LOTE 22:

(AMERICAN-JUDAICA). ...


Precio inicial:
$ 600
Precio estimado :
$1 200 - $1 800
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
IVA: 8.875% IVA sobre el precio total del lote y la comisión
etiquetas:

(AMERICAN-JUDAICA).

(Newspaper). Niles’ Weekly Register. New Series No. 14 Vol. IV.

Baltimore, 29th May, 1819. 


Contains: “Sketches of Speech of Henry M. Brackenridge in the House of Delegates of the State of Maryland, introducing the bill to extend to the Jews the same privileges that are enjoyed by Christians, commonly called the “Jew Bill” (pp. 226-33).


Small tear along lower margin of first page. Unbound. 8vo.


Cf. Rosenbach 203 and Singerman 0301 (independent Sketch of Proceedings in the Legislature of Maryland [Baltimore, 1819]).


The first separate printing of Henry Brackenridge’s defense of the Jew Bill in Maryland - the final hurdle for Jewish civil liberties in America.


    While the Federal Constitution and Bill of Rights guaranteed full equality to American Jews, its provisions were not binding on State governments prior to the passage of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868. Consequently, every State (with the exception of New York) proceeded to adopt a Constitution that deprived the Jews of political equality.


    In Maryland there was a protracted struggle to invest the Jews with political equality. Maryland’s first Constitution, passed in 1776, retained a colonial statute requiring all public servants to invoke a Christian oath. Not only were governmental officials and members of the legislature considered public servants, but so were lawyers, militia officers and jurors. Thus, a Jew was deprived of a possible professional livelihood and opportunity to demonstrate loyalty to his country. Maryland Jews protested their inferior status as early as 1797, but it was not until 1826, when the Jew Bill was confirmed by the legislature, that Jews were fully relieved of social prejudices. The staunchest advocates of the Jewish cause during this struggle were Thomas Kennedy of Washington County, Judge Henry M. Brackenridge of Baltimore, Ebener S. Thomas and Colonel William G.D. Worthington. Militating for passage of the Bill were the Jews of Baltimore, a sizable community of some 150 souls, led by Solomon Etting (1764-1847). The Jew Bill was initially defeated in 1819 but finally passed in 1826.


    Despite the fact that it was a State issue, the impact of the Jew Bill extended well beyond Maryland, it caught the young nation’s attention and reverberated overseas. In Britain, where the Jewish Question was an even more contentious issue, members of Parliament received copies of pro-Jew Bill speeches: “Speeches on the Jew Bill in the House of Delegates in Maryland “ (Phila., 1829)

- See Kestenbaum Auction XXX, Lot 27.

  For further, see S.F. Chyet, “The Political Rights of the Jews in the United States, ” American Jewish Archives 10.1 (Apr. 1958): 14-75; Edward Eitches, “Maryland’s Jew Bill, ” American Jewish Historical Quarterly 60.3 (Mar. 1971): 258-279; A.J. Karp, Beginnings: Early American Judaica (1975), pp. 31-36.