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Discourse Delivered at the Consecration of the Synagogue of Shearith Israel in the City of New York …, Mordecai M. Noah, New York, C.S. Van Winkle: 1818
Estimate
7,000 - 9,000 USD
bidding is closed
Description
- paper,ink
48 pages (9 x 5 1/2 in.; 228 x 138 mm). Original printed wrappers, stained, chipped and mounted; loss to first leaf along entire fore-edge with paper repair; marginal losses to final leaf with paper repair. Foxing and staining throughout. Fore-edges frayed. Mylar dust jacket.
Literature
Singerman, 0290
Catalogue Note
One of the early American republic’s most influential Jews, Mordecai M. Noah was a journalist, newspaper editor (National Advocate) and publisher (New York Enquirer,) and a community activist. He held the position of United States Consul to Tunis in 1816, was the Sheriff of New York in 1821, the Surveyor of the Port from 1829-1833, and a Judge of the Court of General Sessions in 1841. He is perhaps best remembered as the originator of the ambitious, though never-realized, Ararat Project on Grand Island near Niagara Falls in 1825—a proposed utopian city of refuge for persecuted European Jews.
The present lot is an address delivered by Noah in New York at the consecration of the new synagogue building of Shearith Israel, the oldest Jewish congregation in America (see preceding lot). His address received written responses from Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and James Madison. These were published by Noah in his 1819 book, Travels in England, France, Spain, and the Barbary States (see following lot)