{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/3/context.json","id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/iiif/445h98zs4j/manifest","type":"Manifest","label":{"en":["Jacobs, Sinclair"]},"logo":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/082/original/TheBreman_SecondaryMark_Horizontal_Blue_Black.png?1713640889","metadata":[{"label":{"en":["Date"]},"value":{"en":["1970-01-01 (creation)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Format"]},"value":{"en":["Audio"]}},{"label":{"en":["Source"]},"value":{"en":["William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum","Esther and Herbert Taylor Oral History Collection","Jewish Oral History Project of Atlanta"]}},{"label":{"en":["Description"]},"value":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eSinclair Sartorius Jacobs was interviewed in Atlanta, Georgia circa 1970.\u003c/p\u003e (general)","\u003cp\u003eSinclair Sartorius Jacobs (October 27, 1888 – July 3, 1977) was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the son of Dr. Joseph Jacobs and Claire Sartorius Jacobs. He had one brother, Wilifred Lasker Jacobs—who died at 13—and a stepmother, Elizabeth Jacobs. Sinclair was married to Muriel H. F. Jacobs, and they had one child, Tory Jacobs. Sinclair’s father opened Athens Pharmaceutical Company in 1879, in Athens, Georgia. He moved his business to downtown Atlanta in 1884 when he purchased Taylor’s Pharmacy, and Jacobs’ Pharmacy soon became one of the leading pharmacies in Atlanta. Sinclair, also a druggist, worked with his father at Jacobs’ Pharmacy after graduating from Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (the same school his father attended) in 1909. The business continued to grow, and at the time of his father’s death in 1929, had expanded to eight stores in the Greater Atlanta area. Sinclair stayed on after his father’s passing, and continued to grow the business until there were 21 stores across the South. He ultimately sold Jacobs’ Pharmacy to Revco Drugs and retired in 1942.\u003c/p\u003e (bioghist)","\u003cp\u003eSinclair describes his father’s early career with Athens Pharmaceutical Company, and as an apprentice to Dr. Crawford W. Long. He talks about the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy where both he and his father earned their degrees, and his father’s admiration for the works of Robert Burns; Dr. Joseph Jacobs was founder of The Burns Club of Atlanta, and he and Sinclair were longtime members. Sinclair shares memories of growing up in downtown Atlanta, his connections to his extended family, and the loss of his brother Wilifred, who died during an appendectomy at the age of 13. He describes details of the Jacobs’ Pharmacy business including how his father was one of the first druggists to offer discounted prices. The soda fountain at Jacobs’ Pharmacy in downtown Atlanta was also where Coca-Cola was served for the first time as a fountain drink in 1886. He describes being part of the Atlanta Jewish community, his years at The Temple, connections to places like Rich’s Department Store and the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, and memories of the historic Leo Frank trial. Throughout the interview he reflects on the many changes he has seen and lived through over his long life.\u003c/p\u003e (scope content)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Source Metadata URI"]},"value":{"en":["https://archivesspace.thebreman.org/repositories/2/archival_objects/28013"]}},{"label":{"en":["Rights Statement"]},"value":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eAll rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, recorded by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written consent of the William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum.\u003c/p\u003e"]}},{"label":{"en":["Subject"]},"value":{"en":["Athens, Georgia (geographic term)","Athens Pharmaceutical Company (corporate name)","Atlanta Historical Society (corporate name)","Jacobs' Pharmacy Company (corporate name)","The Temple (corporate name)","The Great Depression (topical term)","Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (corporate name)","University of Pennsylvania (corporate name)","Atlanta Paper Company (corporate name)","Rich's Department Store (corporate name)","Leo Frank Case (topical term)"]}}],"summary":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eSinclair Sartorius Jacobs was interviewed in Atlanta, Georgia circa 1970.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSinclair Sartorius Jacobs (October 27, 1888 – July 3, 1977) was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the son of Dr. Joseph Jacobs and Claire Sartorius Jacobs. He had one brother, Wilifred Lasker Jacobs—who died at 13—and a stepmother, Elizabeth Jacobs. Sinclair was married to Muriel H. F. Jacobs, and they had one child, Tory Jacobs. Sinclair’s father opened Athens Pharmaceutical Company in 1879, in Athens, Georgia. He moved his business to downtown Atlanta in 1884 when he purchased Taylor’s Pharmacy, and Jacobs’ Pharmacy soon became one of the leading pharmacies in Atlanta. Sinclair, also a druggist, worked with his father at Jacobs’ Pharmacy after graduating from Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (the same school his father attended) in 1909. The business continued to grow, and at the time of his father’s death in 1929, had expanded to eight stores in the Greater Atlanta area. Sinclair stayed on after his father’s passing, and continued to grow the business until there were 21 stores across the South. He ultimately sold Jacobs’ Pharmacy to Revco Drugs and retired in 1942.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSinclair describes his father’s early career with Athens Pharmaceutical Company, and as an apprentice to Dr. Crawford W. Long. He talks about the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy where both he and his father earned their degrees, and his father’s admiration for the works of Robert Burns; Dr. Joseph Jacobs was founder of The Burns Club of Atlanta, and he and Sinclair were longtime members. Sinclair shares memories of growing up in downtown Atlanta, his connections to his extended family, and the loss of his brother Wilifred, who died during an appendectomy at the age of 13. He describes details of the Jacobs’ Pharmacy business including how his father was one of the first druggists to offer discounted prices. The soda fountain at Jacobs’ Pharmacy in downtown Atlanta was also where Coca-Cola was served for the first time as a fountain drink in 1886. He describes being part of the Atlanta Jewish community, his years at The Temple, connections to places like Rich’s Department Store and the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, and memories of the historic Leo Frank trial. Throughout the interview he reflects on the many changes he has seen and lived through over his long life.\u003c/p\u003e"]},"requiredStatement":{"label":{"en":["Attribution"]},"value":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eAll rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, recorded by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written consent of the William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum.\u003c/p\u003e"]}},"provider":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/aboutus","type":"Agent","label":{"en":["William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum"]},"homepage":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/","type":"Text","label":{"en":["William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum"]},"format":"text/html"}],"logo":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/082/original/TheBreman_SecondaryMark_Horizontal_Blue_Black.png?1713640889","type":"Image"}]}],"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/097/912/small/OSF_13_013.jpeg?1619273240","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 1 of 1 - Jacobs_Sinclair.mp3"]},"duration":3612.9698,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/097/912/small/OSF_13_013.jpeg?1619273240","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/content/1/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-thebreman.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/097/912/original/Jacobs_Sinclair.mp3?1610610457","type":"Audio","format":"audio/mp3","duration":3612.9698,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["Sinclair Jacobs [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"﻿JACOBS: . . . . home in Atlanta, Georgia, on Pulliam Street about two doors\nfrom Clark, and up the street about a block and a half going west lived an\nassortment of Elsas-es; Jacob Elsas, Oscar Elsas, Ben Elsas, Eugene Elsas,\nVictor Elsas, et cetera, et cetera. Mrs. Elsas--Mrs. Jacob Elsas--was related to\nmy mother's father, being my grandfather, Wolfgang ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=0.0,30.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/2","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Sartorius. They lived then in\nFrankfurt, Germany. One of the daughters of Wolfgang Sartorius married a man by\nthe name of Stahl, and the Stahls moved to Atlanta.\n\nMr. Jacob Elsas was very nice, but he was hard-boiled when it came to business.\nHe didn't think that any son of his should have an automobile, should ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=30.0,60.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/3","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"ride out\non the streetcar. Sometimes, on the south side, they were drawn by mules, but\nthen it was streetcars. And you had to go to the center of town and transfer out\nto Decatur Street, and be at the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills at 7:30. And if you\nweren't there at 7:30, he'd pull out his watch and he'd say, \"You're late!\" It\ncould have been two minutes late.\n\nMrs. Jacob Elsas was a very sweet woman, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=60.0,90.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/4","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"domineered by her husband, naturally.\nAnd the Stahls got jobs of sorts, except one, at the Fulton Bag and Cotton\nMills. One of them was in the insurance business. Wasn't very much of an\ninsurance salesman because he would come in to his friends and say, \"Well,\nSinclair, I'm so glad to see you. You don't need any insurance today?\" And I\nsaid, \"For God's sake, don't ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=90.0,120.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/5","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"tell me what I don't need. I'm going to take a\npolicy and teach you. You tell me what I ought to have.\" And that's the way the\ndrug business is operated today. Because at that time I graduated from the\nPhiladelphia College of Pharmacy where my father graduated in 1879 and I\ngraduated in 1909.\n\nMy father was born in a village called Jefferson, Georgia, about eighteen miles\noutside of Athens, Georgia. And that was where Dr. Crawford Long ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=120.0,150.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/6","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"did not invent\nether. He used ether for one of the first times--not the first time, as we claim\nin the south--because there was a man in Boston who just about the same time\nexperimented with ether. And they both, about 1840's, came up with the idea that\nif a man could dance and fall down--dance a jig on top of a table and fall ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=150.0,180.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/7","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"down\nand not feel it--he was going to try it to operate on a carbuncle on the back of\nthe neck of one of the men in Jefferson, Georgia. And he did that successfully.\nAnd from there on out, it became a very useful thing in the medicine business\nfor doctors. The man in Boston did the same thing.\n\nAnd when I was in the First World War, we trained in Blois--that's in the\nchateau country--and there they had ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=180.0,210.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/8","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"a monument to one of their prominent\ncitizens of years gone by who also was experimenting. So people with a brain,\npeople who have studied, people who know something about chemistry and the\naction thereof, usually work on something that might be useful to mankind in the\nfuture. And that is very important because you just can't say, \"Oh, why do they\nrub two ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=210.0,240.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/9","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"stones together and make fire?\" We used to have a joke in my day that if\nyou rubbed two Girl Scouts together, you could light a match because they make\nso much warmth. Well, I think it'd be much better if the boys rubbed them, but\nthey always said two girls. But that's not the way anyone invents anything,\nstarts anything.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Sinc, how about talking a little about Jacobs' Pharmacy, before we\nget beyond it.\n\nJACOBS: All right. My father started--after he graduated from the Philadelphia\nCollege of Pharmacy in ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=240.0,270.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/10","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"1879--the Athens Pharmaceutical Company. Right across the\nstreet was the entrance to the University of Georgia. Students would come up and\nsee \"ceutical,\" which they called \"cutical,\" and they wanted to know what a\ncutical company was. Well, my father was very bright, a learned man. He didn't\nlike . . . now who is this for, mostly . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: American Jewish Committee.\n\nJACOBS: Oh, well, he didn't like ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=270.0,300.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/11","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"too many of the Jewish men. He didn't go with\nthem. They were only interested in their business or talk about business or\nbuying property or making money. He was a great lover of the writings of\nThackeray, until a man who lived out in DeKalb County, and a member of our Burns\nClub--we have a Bobby Burns Club in Atlanta, the exact replica of the one in\nAyrshire in Scotland--\n\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=300.0,330.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/12","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"He said--my father's name was Joseph--\"Joe,\" . . . he also was a graduate of the\nUniversity of Georgia--Mr. Bell--he could recite poetry in Greek, in Latin, in\nGerman, in French; lived in a hovel, never took off his clothes when he went to\nbed. He was a strange character. He said, \"Joe, I want you to read this.\" That\nwas up about where the Federal Reserve Bank is now. I think it was called the\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=330.0,360.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/13","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Young Men's Christian Association. That was the name of the library. My father\nsaid, \"That?\" \"Yes.\" And he read the poem of Burns, A Man's a Man for All That.\nMy father, coming from the stock of his father--from the eastern part of\nPrussia, which is about a number eight iron from Poland, then Poland--he said,\n\"Well, a man is a man for all that,\" ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=360.0,390.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/14","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"and that gave him a boost. That struck a\nchord in his heart, and he liked that. And when he died in 1929, he had 724\nvolumes of Burns. All the same poems, some printed in Philadelphia, New York,\nParis, London, all over. Burns is admired--his poetry--all over the world,\nbecause he fought for mankind. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=390.0,420.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/15","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"He was very instrumental in furthering the cause\nof the French Revolution and thereby the starting of the American Revolution.\n\nMy father didn't see any reason--after he had learned at school how to compound\ndifferent preparations--to do what they wanted to do, that is ethically fill\nprescriptions, which we did. Because there's very little difference between\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=420.0,450.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/16","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"preparation and the going to prescription. It doesn't cost much and does cost\nmuch. They're all made by good companies and have to pass the government\nrulings. But he made his own preparations. He made a female tonic, and a blood\ntonic, and rheumatism tonic, and a headache medicine, so on and so forth; which\nis frowned at now and I don't blame them.\n\nI don't believe that a wonderful organization such as Rich's has ever sold ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=450.0,480.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/17","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"their\nAmerican merchandise corporation, or tissues--Kleenex as we call them-- against\nthe Kleenex; their own preparation against some nationally known. But in the\ndrug business, we did. Whether it was Walgreens or Liggett's or the Owl Drug\nCompany out on the west coast, or Peoples around Washington, Philadelphia, etc.\nIf you came in and asked for something you wanted, the clerk was supposed to\nswitch the sale, on ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=480.0,510.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/18","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"which we made a profit. That wasn't fair, I admit that, but\nthat's how money was made in those days, and he continued it.\n\nHe started The Burns Club in Atlanta--that was 1896--and he bought about thirty\nacres. And to pay off, they sold acre by acre by acre of property ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=510.0,540.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/19","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"to people, and\nnow we have about four acres--which is enough--and we owe nothing. We have about\n100 members and we meet the first Wednesday of the month out there.\n\nJacobs' Pharmacy started to cut the price. If anything was a dollar, he sold it\nfor 97 cents--no deep cuts like today--and that was sort of a come-on, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=540.0,570.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/20","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"so if\nthey came in he could sell them something else. Started with Athens\nPharmaceutical in Athens, in 1879. And in 1884, he'd made enough money to buy\nout a store at Five Points operated by a Mr. Taylor whose brother-in-law--Mr.\nRobert Lowry-- the owner of the Lowry National Bank. There's a long history to\nthe Lowry National Bank and the Maddox Rucker Bank to the First National Bank ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=570.0,600.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/21","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"to\nthe Atlanta National Bank to the Trust Company of Georgia--one of the big\norganizations in the south. Let's see, where was I--\n\nINTERVIEWER: Your father bought the store at Five Points . . .\n\nJACOBS: . . . store of Mr. Taylor, and spread out from there in the next few\nyears to about ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=600.0,630.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/22","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"five or six stores. One at the corner of Whitehall and Alabama,\nand another in the Grand Theater, and then another out across from the Georgian\nTerrace, et cetera, up to about six. And when I got into the business in 1909,\nafter I had graduated from the College of Pharmacy--where I didn't want to go,\nbut my father had said, \"You are the only child I have and I need help in the\nbusiness.\" My brother had died when he was ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=630.0,660.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/23","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"thirteen years old, a simple\nappendectomy of which they knew naught. At that time we were living where it was\ncalled--a swank place--the Kimball House. They had to rig up an operating\ntable--Dr. Nicholson--right in our suite of rooms, and he died on the operating\ntable. Well, when I died, we had twenty, about ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=660.0,690.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/24","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"twenty-one drug stores.\n\nINTERVIEWER: When you retired?\n\nJACOBS: Retired, that's right. When I retired, not died. When I retired, that\nwas about in 1942. But before that, there were some people up in Cleveland, Ohio\nwho were dickering with it, and eventually after I retired they bought it out.\nThen they sold it to an organization in Washington, D.C. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=690.0,720.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/25","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"--it's got a funny\nname, I think Revco--and they've got them all over this section of the country.\nWe specialized in prescriptions, but also our own products, and a complete--then\ncomplete--sundries, which we call perfumes, and face powders, eau de cologne,\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=720.0,750.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/26","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"stationary, et cetera; but no pots and pans as is used today. We were one of the\nfew to cut the price in America. There was one, Hegeman in New York, Evans in\nPhiladelphia, a concern in Kansas City, just about ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=750.0,780.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/27","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"five or six of us, they hated\nus. They thought we were unfair. In fact, they sued my father, and the judge was\na very good friend of my father's and my father was fined one penny, but they\nwon the case. Everybody then cut the prices, it was getting to be the regular\nthing. Now it's a discount ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=780.0,810.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/28","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"store, all of them are practically, doing very much\nbusiness. The drug business today, the prescription department is big, but I\nwould say that eighty-two percent of all prescriptions are already made. From\nthe two-year course that my father had, 1877- 1879; this was a three-year course\nin the College of Pharmacy when I went, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=810.0,840.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/29","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"because I went from 1906 to 1909. Now,\nyou have to have two years of high school and five years of pharmacy and\neighty-two percent of all the prescriptions are already made. So can you imagine\na man having two years of high school and five years at a College of Pharmacy,\nand having to count out five pills or two ounces of ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=840.0,870.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/30","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"some liquid out of a bottle\nand saying, \"Let me see now, twelve pills, I've got one, I got two, no, I better\nstart over again. One, two, three. . .\" It's nonsensical. I fought it at the\ncollege, but I didn't win, at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. It doesn't\ntake five years, and especially today. Of course, we've got to know dosage and\nwe have to have enough sense to call for a doctor if we can't read their\nwriting--no one can read my writing--so ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=870.0,900.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/31","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"it's all changed. There are some very\ngood drug stores still, all over the country, in Atlanta too. The others are\nnot. The difference between good and bad is just the idea that they're not as\nproud of their profession as some of us are. Now what else along that line shall\nI go into? Jacobs' Pharmacy Company. It was Jacobs' Pharmacy and then Jacobs'\nPharmacy Company. Well, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=900.0,930.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/32","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"we were at Five Points, and then First National Bank\nneeded that space and enlarged their growing bank business. They gave us a\ncertain amount of money and put up a warehouse for us down on Auburn Avenue, put\nin all the shelves and everything to get us out. And that was right, because it\nwas too important a place to have our warehouse to feed, I don't know how many\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=930.0,960.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/33","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"stores there were then, maybe twelve or fifteen. Then, the druggists--the\nGeorgia Pharmaceutical--the people belonging to the Georgia Pharmaceutical\norganization, didn't like my father, but at the end they did. They saw that that\ntime was coming when people would cut the price, but they hated it at first. In\nfact, there was a very fine druggist right across ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=960.0,990.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/34","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"the street from our store at\nFive Points by the name of Elkin. All druggists are called doctor, but I don't\nwant anybody to call me doctor because I think that that goes to the medical\nprofession. We are druggists, licensed druggists. We have a name highly\nrespected in Europe but not over here too much, not frowned upon. And Elkin and\nmy father had a little fight right at--I remember it--I was home ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=990.0,1020.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/35","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"from college.\nMy father wore a toupee for about a month, and they had a fight right at Five\nPoints about cutting the price. My father knocked him down and he knocked my\nfather down. He knocked the toupee off of his head and he never wore the toupee\nagain. But then they made up. In those days, people got mad and fought because,\nremember that people down here, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1020.0,1050.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/36","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"most of them came over from Scotland-Ireland,\nand that's Scotch Irish. And when you're in Scotland, never say you are\n\"Scotch,\" they'll say, \"That's a liquor. I'm a Scot or a Scotsman.\" And they\ncame via Ireland where they could get the sailboat to get to America. And when\nthey once got here, some went to Cincinnati, some went to ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1050.0,1080.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/37","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Chicago, and a lot of\nthem came south to North Carolina, and North Carolina into Georgia. And these\nwere men who were escaping from a country where frowned upon their religion in\nthose days. That's the reason they left Great Britain. And they, in all of their\ngrand feeling for mankind, ran the Indians, the Cherokee Indians--and right\nwhere we are sitting ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1080.0,1110.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/38","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"now were the homes and tents of the Cherokee Indians--all\nthe way from the Atlantic Ocean across to the Pacific killing men, women, and\nchildren as they went along. And that's supposed to be religion. The slogan then\nwas, \"Kill the Nitz and the Lice,\" meaning kill men, women, and children. And\nthey did, and it was a sad page in American history.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Sinc, do you ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1110.0,1140.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/39","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"remember anything about the beginnings of The Temple .\n. .\n\nJACOBS: Yes, I was in the second class of Rabbi Marx. It was over on Garnett\nStreet, and we then lived on Pryor and Richardson, which was about a ten or\ntwelve-minute walk, since we walked then to school and we walked everywhere.\nThere weren't any automobiles. And ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1140.0,1170.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/40","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"I don't know if they paid the teachers\nanything or not. We had one excellent teacher, a Miss Bauer, B-A-U-E-R. Then we\nhad such men as Milton Hirsch, who wasn't very much of a school teacher, he was\nmore just a playboy. We didn't learn too much. Rabbi Marx was definite in his\nviews about the Reform ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1170.0,1200.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/41","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"branch of Judaism. He never believed in anything but\nconfirming people. We had no . . . what's that other word?\n\nINTERVIEWER: Bar mitzvah.\n\nJACOBS: Bar mitzvah, yes. Never had that, never believed in it, fought it all\nthe time. He was well liked by his friends. None of them I saw ever went to The\nTemple, maybe twice a year. That's the same case now. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1200.0,1230.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/42","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Not many people go, not\neven the ex-presidents and ex-members of the board, they don't go. I go because\nI'm right around the corner from there. And I think, personally, being an old\nline citizen--and that's \"puffy\" for myself, \"puffy\" means I puff myself\nup--that some old line citizens should go. And it just takes an hour, unless you\nwant to stay for afterwards for the coffee clatches. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1230.0,1260.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/43","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"But Rabbi Marx' friends\ndidn't go. We all lived on the south side. We lived about three-quarters of a\nblock from the Morris and Daniel Riches. They lived on Pryor, and down next to\nus lived Otto Schwab with his wife Ida. And down in the same block lived Mr.\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1260.0,1290.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/44","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Isaac Haas, and then over on Washington Street there were some more German Jews.\nNow there were many Catholics and German-Austrian Jews on those streets I've\nmentioned. About a block and a half going east was Capitol Avenue, and for some\nunknown reason, the Jews from Poland, Estonia or Latvia, Besarabia, et cetera,\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1290.0,1320.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/45","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"lived over there. They had their synagogues there, and we considered them the\npeople over there, throwing the thumb out. We didn't associate with them. Why, I\ndon't know. I didn't understand it, and I tried to get my mother to tell me\nabout it because, I told you, she came from Frankfurt, Germany, and she was a\nlittle more liberal than my father's side, because they came from practically in\nPoland, eastern part of ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1320.0,1350.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/46","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Prussia. Well, they said it wasn't any of my business.\nSo we lived up to it up until a time, and then we intermarried. And that's\nintermarriage between the Jews from Germany and Austria with the Jews from\nPoland and the eastern part of that section. And that's the way it should have\nbeen all the time. I don't know ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1350.0,1380.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/47","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"what in the world, with my very proud head up\nand snooty, and dear cousin Ruby - the daughter of Emanuel Rich. Ruby Rich\nStrauss, married Oscar Strauss from Austria, Carlsbad. I think that now is\nCzechoslovakia. If she'd ever ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1380.0,1410.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/48","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"realized that her grandson, Oscar Richard Strauss,\nmarried a girl whose parents were Orthodox all their life . . . Now they're\nchanged to the Reform. Things have just changed. They're seeing a different\nthing, different ideas. Same way with the Blacks. I remember that my dear\nnurse--when I was about four or five years old, my brother and I, my brother\ndied at ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1410.0,1440.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/49","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"thirteen,--we had a nurse, and she became engaged. Emma, Emma Harris.\nShe was nearly White and she was about twenty or twenty-two years old. We had\nthe whole downstairs all fixed up for the wedding. They were married in our\nhouse, but the actual ceremony was in the kitchen. Why, I don't know, I guess\nthey just felt they didn't want to besmirch ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1440.0,1470.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/50","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"the regular house. When it came to\nthe dining room, living room, they were servants. In the kitchen, they were real\npeople. All those things have changed. People have seen . . . well, people just\nfollowing the idea that \"a man is a man for all that.\" Life has changed,\npeople's feelings towards one another have changed.\n\nINTERVIEWER: How about the beginnings of Rich's. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1470.0,1500.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/51","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"What do you remember about that?\n\nJACOBS: I remember with pride when Walter Rich, my first cousin . . . his mother\nwas Berta Sartorius, and my mother was Claire Sartorius. Clara was Mrs. Jacob\nElsas was her name, and we're related in that way. And there was Clara and Berta\nand Elise. Elise married a first cousin of Jacob Elsas, and they came over\nfirst. And then ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1500.0,1530.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/52","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Mr. Morris Adler--she was Mrs. Morris Adler--had to go out on\nthe road. He broke away from Fulton Bag because he and his first cousin couldn't\nget along so well in the cotton bag business. Mr. Morris Adler started Atlanta\nPaper Company, and eventually had two salesmen on the road. He felt that he\nshould go and check with his salesmen to see what they were doing, so he had to\nsend for a sister of his ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1530.0,1560.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/53","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"wife. Elise had a sister by the name of Bertha, and\nafter she had been here about six months, Bertha married Emanuel Rich. And then\nwhen she married, Mr. Morris Adler still wanted somebody, then he sent for my\nmother. So three little girls from Frankfort, Germany, married rather important\nprosperous successful men in Atlanta, Georgia: one, to one of the founders of\nRich's would be Emanuel; the other, the founder of the ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1560.0,1590.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/54","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta Paper Company;\nand the other, my father, the founder of Jacobs' Pharmacy Company. Walter came\nto me with pride. They were still on Whitehall Street before they had moved up\nto Broad. He called me \"darling\" because he had a daughter, but never a son. I\nwas very close to Walter Rich, played golf with him twice a week. I gave him a\nstroke a hole, conceded all ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1590.0,1620.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/55","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"putts--that much, how much I did, four or five feet.\nAnd had midday lunch out there, then he took a nap, and then we took a walk. So\nmy life, more or less, was devoted partly to Jacobs' Pharmacy Company and partly\nto my dear cousin. I remember when he came to me when he was still on Whitehall,\nhe said, \"Darling, we did a million dollars last year, a million dollars, that's\nwhat we did.\" ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1620.0,1650.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/56","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Now some days, after a big sale--Thanksgiving, around Christmas\ntime--they'll do that in one day. But I'll never forget it, \"Darling, we did a\nmillion dollars last year.\" I think I started to say, whether I finished the\nsentence or not, that my father didn't cotton very much to many Jewish men. He\ndidn't think they devoted enough time to reading, and studying, and ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1650.0,1680.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/57","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"debating,\nand not talking about business, and loans, and selling property, and running\ntheir business, and worrying their children. \"Oh, my business is awful,\" and I\nthink that has a lot to do with the children I see today. They just are not\nversed in different things, and I underscore and put a capital around that,\n\"Things.\" They don't know because there's no conversation around the table. Just\nlike Margaret Mitchell, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1680.0,1710.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/58","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"at my father's table, we talked about--and he talked\nabout and we listened--the War Between the States. Because his father was in the\n116th Georgia Infantry, and he was a great lover of Thackery. I started a nice\ncollection of Dickens, but then came the Depression, and I couldn't afford that.\nIn fact, I had to borrow ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1710.0,1740.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/59","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"$700 from Walter to pay expenses for the month--which I\nhad to pay back--didn't have to pay it back, wanted to pay it back. So we lived\nin a time when young people were supposed to know different things. We were\ngiven--when we were quite young, still living on Pryor Street--I remember that\nwe went out to Madam de Vino's and studied ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1740.0,1770.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/60","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"French, and then somebody or other\ncame and gave us German lessons. My mother would--during vacation time--would\nget all the children together from two blocks: Robert Schwab, Valerie Rich, the\ndaughter of Morris Rich, and the others. And she would read to us, the life of\nEnglish kings. I remember that. I was the youngest, and I wasn't too much\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1770.0,1800.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/61","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"interested. I did a lot of playing, and my mother didn't like it. Then she would\nbeat me with a straw clothes beater, but she couldn't hit me because I'd stick\nmy feet up in the air. But we were always learning, we were garnering knowledge\ncontinuously, we never stopped. And imagine my surprise when I went to the\nPhiladelphia College of Pharmacy. They were strictly a business school. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1800.0,1830.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/62","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"It's\nright in the center of town, now it's in beautiful buildings, part of the\nUniversity of Pennsylvania. It's always been a part of the University of\nPennsylvania in that they wouldn't open the Department for Pharmacy,\nPharmaceutical Chemistry, unless we gave them permission. And we used their\ngymnasium and athletic field and so forth. But when I first got there in 1906 in\nmid-September, and saw that ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1830.0,1860.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/63","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"four or five-story building, you can imagine what\npangs I had. But I fell in love with the place and the professors. A lot of them\nwere in the Dutch part of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Dutch. And when the\nprofessor came in, we rose and ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1860.0,1890.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/64","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"bowed, and he gave his lecture and went out. And\nhe went out, and we stood up and bowed. He was our \"Herr Doctor Professor\". Now,\nthe next day, we had an instructor who we could ask any questions we wanted. But\nit's carried on the same way it was in Europe, in Germany, in France, it was a\nlecture on certain phases. They might have been quinine coming from cinchona,\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1890.0,1920.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/65","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"next day, next lecture, some other time. The boys worked their way through\ncollege. They worked in the summertime to save up enough money for the tuition.\nWe only had school from 9:00 to 1:00 on Monday, and 2:00 to 6:00 on Tuesday,\nback to 9:00 to 1:00 on Wednesday, all day on Thursday, half a day Friday, and\nhalf a day Saturday. The rest of the time the boys ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1920.0,1950.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/66","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"worked in drug stores and got\npaid for it. That's how they paid for their food. I remember well that I\npaid--living on Spruce Street in Philadelphia, about ten blocks from the then,\nface of the college--that two in a room cost $5.00 a week and two meals a day\nacross the street was something like ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1950.0,1980.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/67","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"$3.50 a week. Three dollars and a half a\nweek for two meals, even had steak or bacon and eggs for breakfast. So it wasn't\ntoo expensive.\n\nINTERVIEWER: How about the Atlanta Paper Company? You mentioned that, Sinc . . .\n\nJACOBS: Well, that was Morris Adler. I know very little about it. I know that\nMr. Morris Adler was my uncle, his wife was my ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1980.0,2010.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/68","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"aunt. They moved to New York. I\ndon't know the year, but it was, I guess, 1890's. He got up a box for stationary\nor candy that opened that way where you open the box and there was a bottom\nlayer, and there was a second layer, and there was a third layer. You had\nchocolates, creams, and something else, and the same way for stationary, large\nstationary, note paper, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2010.0,2040.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/69","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"and cards. He moved to New York to 15 West 69th Street\nwhere he bought their home--very nice section--and we used to stay with them\nwhen my mother and brother and I went up to the White Mountains, New Hampshire,\nwhen my mother had hay fever. We just stayed with them for a few days, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2040.0,2070.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/70","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"first\nfrom New York, then Boston, then up to New Hampshire.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Is that the same company that Lieberman and Trownstein . . .\n\nJACOBS: Mr. Isaac Lieberman was his main assistant, and Isaac Leiberman was a\nlovely man, a dear friend of my father's. My father liked to talk to him. I\nfound that the Jewish people from Cincinnati were better educated than many of\nthe Jews down here. There were some . . . ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2070.0,2100.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/71","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Mr. Sid Montag of the Montag Paper\nCompany, was a self-educated man because his brothers and sisters were not. But\nI remember seeing him sitting on the back of his neck, way back like that, and\nreading and studying and looking up in the book and verifying it. And the same\nway with Jacob Elsas, he read all the time. Lived with his daughter out in Druid\nHills. And there was a young man by the name ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2100.0,2130.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/72","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"of . . . Young Phillips was his\nname . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: Elsis Phillips.\n\nJACOBS: Elsis Phillips, yes, he was smart. Pampered, didn't respect his mother\nnor his grandfather. But he was the one that got up the mesh bag for groceries\nand fruits and things. Then he became a drunkard, and he was buried somewhere in\nsome pauper's place, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2130.0,2160.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/73","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"some place I don't know. We now are going through, not\nvandalism, out at Oakland Cemetery where the old line Jewish people are buried.\nAnd there, even in death, the German and Austrian Jews are on this side and the\nPolish-Russian Jews are on that side. Whether they all get to heaven or not at\nthe same time, I don't know. But it was strange that they wouldn't mix. And ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2160.0,2190.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/74","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"now,\ntheir children and grandchildren, as I told you, are intermarrying. There has\nbeen some vandalism, not only in the Jewish section, all over. They're building\na higher wall with electric lights so they can tell right away if any . . . no\none could enter it anyhow after that because there'll be some sort of a system.\nBut they broke two very beautiful Georgia--we have a vault there, maybe that\nmade ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2190.0,2220.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/75","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"us more important, I don't know--they broke two gorgeous Georgia white\nmarble urns. Both big ones, and I'll have to have those replaced.\n\nINTERVIEWER: How about Albert Steiner, did you know him?\n\nJACOBS: Not well, no. I remember the brewery over there on, well, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2220.0,2250.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/76","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"it was Ivy\nStreet, I think, wasn't it, the brewery?\n\nINTERVIEWER: I don't know.\n\nJACOBS: Where is Marist College?\n\nINTERVIEWER: That's where it was, yes.\n\nJACOBS: Yes, yes. No, not too well. My father's friends were the Rabbi, and Otto\nSchwab, and Louis Nolt and Oscar Pattenheimer. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2250.0,2280.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/77","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"And no one ever served any\nwhiskey, never, never, never. We took a little flask of cognac whiskey on the\ntrain for car sickness. But when you had the crowd over, you had cold cuts,\ncheese, and beer. I never saw whiskey served anywhere among my parents' friends.\nNow what else can I say?\n\nINTERVIEWER: How about the Frank case? Did you have any knowledge of that?\n\nJACOBS: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2280.0,2310.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/78","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Oh, yes, sure. I had graduated from college. I think it was Memorial\nDay, yes. He made the foolish mistake of being in that building alone. There was\na Black man. No one has ever had any real truth, and I wouldn't want this to go\ndown anyplace that they don't want to read. There was a Black man. I don't ever\nremember Leo Frank. Well, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2310.0,2340.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/79","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"I remember him at the old Standard Club on Ponce de\nLeon, not on Washington Street. It started on Washington Street, I think. Was\nvery quiet, a student, and of course, there was a lot of excitement because the\nlittle girl came from Marietta, around that way. I think that's Cobb County. And\nI remember we lived between ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2340.0,2370.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/80","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Sixth and Seventh on Peachtree in those days. That\nwas the end of the paving in 1900, we moved out there about 1908. This was about\n1914 or 1915. I remember the mob going out to get Governor Slaton, but he'd\nescaped and I believe had gone to New York, if I'm not mistaken. And then they\nwent out and hung Frank. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2370.0,2400.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/81","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"And the Jews on the south side were very fearful what\nthey would do. I don't think there was anyone harmed except maybe shouts.\nBecause I remember my very good friend, best friend then, Robert Schwab and then\nRichard Schwab and the parents Otto and Ida. They lived across the street from\nthe Jewish Orphans Home, and they were quite fearful what they were going to do.\nBut they didn't do anything, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2400.0,2430.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/82","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"shouting. But I think Atlanta has done a lot and\ngrown a lot. And I think the Jews have been treated marvelously, and they should\nbe. I don't find any difference between people. I think most people are\nrespected in a way.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Do you remember the early days of the Standard Club, Sinc, or the\nIngleside Club?\n\nJACOBS: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2430.0,2460.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/83","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Yes. I was in on the Ingleside Club. Let's see, I joined the Standard\nClub when I was about, I guess, fifteen years old. It was then in a beautiful\nold home on Washington Street, sort of a colonial-looking affair with columns.\nAnd it was very gala, very nice, conducted beautifully. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2460.0,2490.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/84","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Of course, there again,\nwhen a very prominent dentist--who was a good friend of my cousin Rudy Adler--he\nwas the dentist for the Georgia Tech football . . . Jewish . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: Silverman.\n\nJACOBS: Silverman, yes. They wouldn't let him in, and Rudy--my ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2490.0,2520.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/85","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"cousin--raised\nhell about it. Wouldn't let him in the Standard Club and wouldn't let him in the\nIngleside Club either, I don't know. But there was a family--and I won't mention\nthem, they were very nice people, very successful manufacturers of very good\ncandy--they let them in. I don't know the difference between their deportment\nand that of the dentist, Dr. . . . what was his name?\n\nINTERVIEWER: Silverman.\n\nJACOBS: Silverman, yes. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2520.0,2550.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/86","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"He was a very refined gentleman. They just couldn't take\nthe idea that somebody from the eastern part of Europe, Poland and so forth,\ncould enter their club. What they would do to it, I don't know. Now, all that's\nchanged too, thank God. Yes, I remember the Ingleside Club start, and I remember\nits demise, and I remember with ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2550.0,2580.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/87","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"a good friend of mine, Harold Montag, we told\neverybody: \"If you go out there, you ought to buy the food. We can't keep the\nrestaurant running unless people come out there and have their lunch there or\ndinner.\" But they didn't, and we got down during the Depression, about fifty or\nsixty members, then we had to close up. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2580.0,2610.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/88","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"I'm not a member of any club now. I gave\nthem all up. Like the war. But I think the golf club, it's the Standard, isn't it?\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes, yes.\n\nJACOBS: I think they have, I don't know, six hundred. They've got a large number\nof members, you know.\n\nINTERVIEWER: I think over a ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2610.0,2640.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/89","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"thousand.\n\nJACOBS: Yes, and beautifully operated. I was out there with Dick Schwab. Then we\nhad lovely dances at the Standard Club on Washington and on Ponce de Leon. Now,\nwhat else? I'm trying to think of anything that would . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2640.0,2670.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/90","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Sinc, all we want are matters you remember about anything, the\nbusinesses, the property ownership, the politics.\n\nJACOBS: The property I know nothing about.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Was there any Jewish participation in politics in the early days?\n\nJACOBS: Oh, yes. My father was an ardent . . . well, he was for this one and\nagainst the other one. Yes, for the judges and for people who ran, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2670.0,2700.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/91","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"alderman, I\nremember when Harry Alexander was a congressman, and I think Mr. Joe Hirsch was\n. . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: . . . I think your father was apprentice to Crawford Long . . .\n\nJACOBS: Yes, my father was apprentice of Crawford Long when they lived in\nAthens, Georgia. I don't believe he was old enough to be apprentice to him when\nthey lived in Jefferson because they moved to Athens right after his father came\nback from the Civil War, so he was ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2700.0,2730.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/92","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"in Athens. I think I mentioned that Dr. Long\nwas one of the first users of ether as an anesthetic; a man in Boston, a man in\nFrance did about the same thing. And when Dr. Crawford Long died, his two\ndaughters gave the statue--that stood in front, as a symbol of ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2730.0,2760.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/93","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"pharmacy--of his,\nDr. Long's, drug store in Jefferson and in Athens. And I have it right here. If\nmy son, who is in the advertising business in New York, doesn't want it and\ndoesn't feel that it fits in with the decor of his apartment--they have a house\ndown on East Insome, outside East Insome Street--then I'll give it to either the\nAtlanta Historical Society or the Museum in ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2760.0,2790.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/94","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jefferson, Georgia. He's going to\ndrive me up there; he's coming down for a long weekend--my son--in early March,\nand I'll ask him does he want to give it to the Museum in Jefferson. Of course,\nthere are very few people that go to Jefferson, it's just a large room, it has\nsome mementos.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Dr. Long was a pharmacist?\n\nJACOBS: No, graduate of University of Pennsylvania.\n\nINTERVIEWER: He was a surgeon, I thought.\n\nJACOBS: Yes, surgeon in the war. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2790.0,2820.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/95","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"We say \"The War\", we're talking about the Civil\nWar. Yes, he was. And I also have a picture--going down my steps from the living\nroom to the dining room--that my father and I took, or had taken--we didn't\ncarry a little Kodak along like people do now--of \"Christ the Pharmacist\". That\nwas about ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2820.0,2850.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/96","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"in either the 1200s or the 1300s, there was an itinerant painter\nwandering through that section of Germany, and he got to Nuremberg, Germany, and\nhe became friends with a chemist there, a pharmacist. And he painted a picture\nof Christ the Pharmacist, now not Christ the Physician or Christ the Healer. And\nI had a very religious man over here, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2850.0,2880.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/97","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"during the past month, and he looked at\nit. He said, \"Yes, but it's all so unnecessary, because Christians feel that all\nChrist had to do was to touch you and you got well and you didn't need any\nmedicine.\" I said, well this man became good friends of what we would call a\ndruggist in Nuremberg, Germany. And I have the painting of Christ with the\nreceptacles, with the prescription, with the scales, and in the ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2880.0,2910.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/98","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"background--to\nback up all these medicines--in those days they believed in alchemy, and he got\nsnakes and frogs and everything else. So everything's sort of mingled up in the\nman's mind. He didn't know which way to turn. But there were, as I stated, the\nprescriptions written out, the scales, the receptacles, and for alchemy's sake,\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2910.0,2940.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/99","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"all sorts of weird looking animals. It's quite a thing to have. My father had\nquite a few of them copied. He got the film, and gave them to some doctors in\nAtlanta. Of course, when my father went to Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, he\ndidn't have any money to come home for Easter or Christmas, so when you went,\nyou stayed there two years. And right behind you, there's a little piece of\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2940.0,2970.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/100","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Staffordshire that my father bought for his mother. To your right, yes, that\nlittle thing, quite a memento. Over here on this table . . . and I'll tell you\nsomething--I don't know if I'll tell it to you completely because I wouldn't\nwant it to go into print--over there is a Shabbos cup, the silver cup used on\nFriday night to drink the wine at the table. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2970.0,3000.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/101","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"And that belonged to my mother's\nfather, Wolfgang Sartorius. I have his desk here. Walter Rich had it sent over\nfrom Frankfurt, Germany, and when he died, his wife Marjorie gave it to me. A\nwonderful painting of Wolfgang Sartorius. Well, I guess, you can't tell if a\npicture painted by ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3000.0,3030.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/102","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Gainsbourg really looks like the person because everybody\nsays, \"Isn't that a wonderful picture?\" Yes, it might be, but it might be\nsomebody's maid, too, you don't know. You couldn't possibly tell. So I have\nthings all over this place that have been gathered and prized by my parents and\nby me. When I went into the home--within the past two or three or four years-- a\nman who is the president of one of the largest organizations in ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3030.0,3060.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/103","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta--oh,\nmust have been three, four hundred people wandering through. It was in the\nafternoon, a tea, drinks. And when I got out of the place I told my cousin,\nOscar Strauss--that's Junior--I said, \"You know there's not one item that I've\nseen that wasn't put there by some interior decorator. There's nothing that\nrepresents the family. Nothing of years gone by.\" And he ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3060.0,3090.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/104","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"said, \"Yes, Sinc, but\nyou must remember one thing, maybe in those days they didn't have anything.\" The\nyoung man has made his money, now he's got a decorator. But anything from years\nago, there wasn't anything in the house except maybe--been each side of New York\nor not--I don't know that. So it is a point. Everything around here has got a\nlittle history, everything.\n\nINTERVIEWER: That's very wonderful.\n\nJACOBS: And to live with it gives me a lot of ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3090.0,3120.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/105","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"pleasure.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Sinc, you understand this oral history project. It's a good idea, I\nthink. Can you suggest . . . I know they've got a considerable number of people\nthey want to interview, but can you suggest anybody that might not be on the\nlist that perhaps would have a good memory of those days?\n\nJACOBS: Helen Michael Rich, and Mrs. Percy Rich.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Mrs. Percy Rich?\n\nJACOBS: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3120.0,3150.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/106","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Yes. That's the Michaels of Athens. She's Bud Michael's daughter.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Absolutely.\n\nJACOBS: Bud and Roy are the only ones living now. Simon Michael was a brother of\nBud, or Moses Michael. They're all related. They all came from the same . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: Mrs. Percy Rich Michael is her name?\n\nJACOBS: No, her name is Helen Michael Rich. Percy Rich was the son of Daniel\nRich. William Rich, Percy Rich, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3150.0,3180.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/107","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Lester Rich and Sidney Rich. And they had two\nmaiden daughters.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Francis and Rose, is that right?\n\nJACOBS: Yes, that's right. Maybe they played bridge with you all.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Well, I knew them.\n\nJACOBS: You did?\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes, I know them.\n\nJACOBS: Now, she ought to know some things if you can unwind her. ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3180.0,3210.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/108","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Most people\nwill want to talk. And let's see, who else. Rachel Nina Parker. Wonderful mind,\nwonderful person.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Well, how about Rae Neely?\n\nJACOBS: She's not well and she doesn't hear so well.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Rachel Nina Parker is not as old as . . .\n\nJACOBS: Oh, no, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3210.0,3240.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/109","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"that's her mother.\n\nINTERVIEWER: . . . of course not.\n\nJACOBS: Yes, Mrs. Lillian Haas, Bea Haas. And don't let them start out, \"Oh,\nshucks, you know that, or I don't know that. I'm not party to it.\" Just tell\nthem to unwind and talk.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes.\n\nJACOBS: Doesn't make any difference.\n\nINTERVIEWER: That's right.\n\nJACOBS: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3240.0,3270.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/110","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Adolph Rosenberg. Does he still issue that paper?\n\nINTERVIEWER: I think he does.\n\nJACOBS: He's got a marvelous collection of tintypes, bought all over Europe and\nAmerica. Beautiful old frames, worth thousands of dollars.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Well, Sinc, that's fine. You've been extremely helpful and your\n","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3270.0,3300.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/111","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"conversation will go down in history.\n\nJACOBS: Good. Well, I like to gather a few and I have a few, but I haven't got\nthe money to get some real old ones. I've got some icons that I gathered over\nthere in Europe, and they go back. Well, they're not Russian, they're more from\nBulgaria and Romania. And ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3300.0,3330.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/112","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"they're from about fourteenth or fifteenth century.\nBut in wandering up and down the . . . well, they started at $3,500, and when\nthe man told me that, course I fainted and he had some aromatic ammonia to bring\nme to, and I got out of the ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3330.0,3360.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/113","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"store, because I haven't got any $3,500 to buy an\nold icon.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Well, the old ones are expensive.\n\nJACOBS: Oh, they are. And on 57th in New York, 57th near Fifth Avenue, they've\ngot some in the window. They're gorgeous. But there is a sister of Marcel\nLowenstein, Marcel Harris. She was the wife of Frank Lowenstein, and the sister\n. . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: Betty, Betty, no, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3360.0,3390.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/114","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"no, that wasn't a sister. Betty Lowenstein was\nnot his sister.\n\nJACOBS: No, the one who lives in Dallas. I forget her name.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Oh, I guess it's Harris, is it Harris?\n\nJACOBS: Yes, but she has a collection of paper weights, I think they call them.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes. Now, her husband was the founder of A. Harris \u0026 Company out\nthere in Dallas?\n\nJACOBS: Yes, yes, and she's got gorgeous things. I don't collect them ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3390.0,3420.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/115","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"anymore.\nThis . . . they're not sacrilegious, but I picked that up in France in a\nsouvenir shop.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Very old, too.\n\nJACOBS: Yes.\n\nINTERVIEWER: You can see it's old.\n\nJACOBS: If I can't get it older, I'll have to get some . . .\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3420.0,3450.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/116","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"there's Tory, I see.\n\nJACOBS: Yes.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Is that Tory's wife?\n\nJACOBS: Yes.\n\nINTERVIEWER: I don't think I've ever met her.\n\nJACOBS: Now that . . . I saved up my money. My mother wasn't well. We lived in\nFrankfort, Germany, for about fourteen months. Her doctor, family physician,\nprescribed going to some sort of a rest home, it wasn't a hospital. And on her\nbirthday, March the 21st--same day as ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3450.0,3480.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/117","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Dick Schwab--I had saved up enough money\nby cleaning up the yard around the apartment, and bought that little imitation\ngrandfather clock.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Incidentally, I guess Dick Schwab would be a good person to\ninterview, wouldn't he?\n\nJACOBS: Yes, because his father was a next door neighbor and a good friend of\nOtis Skinner when he lived in Hartford, Connecticut.\n\nINTERVIEWER: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3480.0,3510.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/118","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"I remember them. I remember Ida Schwab and . . . whatever his name was.\n\nJACOBS: This, somebody sent me from Israel. I wanted one made out of wood over\nthere, but I didn't get a real one. That is imitation something else.\n\nINTERVIEWER: ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3510.0,3540.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/119","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"That's very lovely.\n\nJACOBS: Isn't it? It's a very pretty, very good copy.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes.\n\nJACOBS: So all those things mean something to me as I was a bit older, and I've\ncertainly waxed.\n\nINTERVIEWER: In fact, this is a very fine thing you have up here. Is that an original?\n\nJACOBS: Oh, no. No, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3540.0,3570.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/120","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"let's see . . . now that was given to me by Helen and Robert\nSchwab. And those were painted by Helen Asher.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Oh, yes.\n\nJACOBS: And that was painted by Virginia Rich, Dick's wife.\n\nINTERVIEWER: Yes.\n\nJACOBS: They all died young. My mother died young. My mother was about--let's\nsee, ","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3570.0,3600.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/transcript/22044/annotation/121","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"1862--about forty-six years old. Virginia Rich was very young when she\ndied, about forty-seven. So it goes. And I live on.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3600.0,3630.0"}]},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["Sinclair Jacobs [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/122","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eJacob Elsas was an immigrant of German Jewish descent who came to Atlanta from Cincinnati, Ohio in 1868. He began work in the rag, paper, and hide business and within three years he switched to manufacturing cloth and paper bags. In 1881 he, and fellow German Jewish immigrant, Isaac May, opened Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, which would eventually become the largest employer in Atlanta at the time.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=0.0,30.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/123","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eStreetcars, running on electric street railways, were once the chief mode of public transit in hundreds of North American cities and towns. They originally operated in downtown Atlanta and into the surrounding areas from 1871 to 1949.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=60.0,90.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/124","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eDr. Joseph Jacobs was the son of Gabriel Jacobs and Ernestine “Esther” Jacobs. He was married to Claire (Sartorius) Jacobs and later, Elizabeth Jacobs. He was the father of Sinclair Sartorius Jacobs (being interviewed) and Wilifred Lasker Jacobs (who died at 13). Sinclair’s wife was Muriel H. F. Jacobs and their son was Tory Jacobs.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=120.0,150.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/125","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eCrawford Williamson Long was a Georgia physician who is credited with the discovery of anesthesia. In 1842, he became the first doctor to use ether as a general anesthetic during surgery when he removed a tumor from the neck of his patient James M. Venable. Long did not publish the results of his experiments until 1848, by which time Boston dentist William T.G. Morton had already gained fame with the first publicly demonstrated use of ether as an effective surgical anesthetic. Crawford Long Hospital in Atlanta (now Emory University Hospital Midtown) is named in honor of Dr. Long.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=120.0,150.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/126","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eWorld War I was a global war originating in Europe that lasted from 1914 to 1918. Described as “the war to end all wars”, it led to the mobilization of over 70 million military personnel, making it one of the largest wars in history. The U.S. declared war on Germany in 1917; before entering the war, the U.S. had remained neutral, though it had been an important supplier to the United Kingdom, France, and the other Allied powers.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=180.0,210.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/127","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eDr. Jacobs opened the Athens Pharmaceutical Company in 1879, but the growth of Atlanta encouraged him to move to the city. In January, 1884 he purchased Taylor Pharmacy at Five Points in downtown and stayed in the city for the remainder of his career.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=270.0,300.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/128","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eWilliam Makepeace Thackeray was a British novelist, author, and illustrator born in India. He is known for his satirical works, particularly Vanity Fair, a panoramic portrait of English society.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=300.0,330.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/129","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eOn January 25, 1896 the founders of the Burns Club of Atlanta held their inaugural meeting at the Aragon Hotel. Dr. Joseph Jacobs is acknowledged as the driving force and inspiration behind the Burns Club of Atlanta, a private social club and literary/cultural society commemorating the works and spirit of the 18th century national poet of Scotland, Robert Burns. Burns (1759 – 1796) wrote lyrics and songs in Scots and in English, and was one of the leaders of the Romanticism movement. Some of his best-known works include the poem, A Red, Red Rose and the song, Auld Lang Syne.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=300.0,330.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/130","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eA Man’s a Man for All That is a song by Robert Burns, written in Scots and English, famous for its expression of egalitarian ideas of society.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=360.0,390.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/131","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eJacobs’ Pharmacy was one of the leading pharmacies in Atlanta partly because of Dr. Jacobs’ innovative business practices. Jacobs was one of the first Atlanta retailers to discount his goods, which attracted customers but angered competitors to the point that he became the target of threats and lawsuits.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=540.0,570.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/132","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eIn 1884, Dr. Jacobs bought a drug store in Downtown Atlanta on the southwest corner of Peachtree and Marietta Streets. As was the custom at the time, Jacobs’ Pharmacy had a soda fountain; it was rented from them by Willis Venable, his brother John Venable, and his son Edward Venable. It was at this soda fountain, in 1886, that Coca-Cola was served for the first time as a fountain drink.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=570.0,600.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/133","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Loew’s Grand Theater was a movie theater at the corner of Peachtree and Forsyth Streets in downtown Atlanta. It was most famous as the site of the 1939 premiere of Gone with the Wind.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=630.0,660.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/134","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Kimball House was an historic hotel built on an entire city block at the south-southeast corner of Five Points in Atlanta. The original building, created by architect William Parkins and partners Lorenzo Wheeler and Hannibal Kimball, was built in 1870 but burned in 1883. A second was built on the same spot in 1885.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=660.0,690.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/135","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Georgia Pharmacy Association (GPhA) provides advocacy, continuing education, networking opportunities, news, and information for Georgia’s pharmacists.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=960.0,990.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/136","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe “Trail of Tears” was a series of forced relocations of approximately 60,000 Native Americans from their ancestral homelands in the Southeast, including Georgia. The Native Americans were forced, by government authorities following the passage of the Indian Removal Act in 1830, to relocate to areas west of the Mississippi River designated as “Indian Territory”. Approximately 4,000 died before reaching their destinations, or shortly after from disease; the Cherokee Nation was among those displaced.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1080.0,1110.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/137","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Temple is a Reform synagogue in Atlanta and the oldest Jewish congregation in the city. Rabbi Marx served The Temple for 51 years from 1895 – 1946.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1140.0,1170.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/138","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eReform Judaism is a liberal strand of Judaism characterized by a lesser stress on ritual and personal observance, a regard for Jewish Law as non-binding and the individual Jew as autonomous, and an openness to external influences and progressive values.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1170.0,1200.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/139","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eBar mitzvah is a Jewish coming-of-age ritual for boys, aged 13; Bat mitzvah is the corresponding ritual for girls.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1200.0,1230.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/140","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eOrthodox Judaism strictly follows the written Torah and the Oral Law concerning prayer, dress, food, sex, family relations, social behavior, the Sabbath day, holidays, and more.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1410.0,1440.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/141","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eBrothers Morris and Emanuel Rich—Jewish Hungarian immigrants who grew up in Cleveland, Ohio—founded Rich’s Department Store in 1867. The store came to symbolize the retail shopping experience in Atlanta during the twentieth century and was known for its commitment to customers and strong sense of civic responsibility. Rich’s merged with Macy’s Department stores in 2003.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1470.0,1500.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/142","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Atlanta Paper Company was a successful paper manufacturer for many years until 1957, when it was purchased by The Mead Corporation, one of the world’s largest paper manufacturers.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1530.0,1560.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/143","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eTo begin to understand or to like.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1650.0,1680.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/144","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eMargaret Mitchell (1900-1949) was born and lived in Atlanta. She was a journalist and author of the popular novel, Gone With the Wind (1936). It earned her a National Book Award, a Pulitzer Prize, and was made into a film in 1939.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1680.0,1710.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/145","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Civil War. The Civil War was fought in America from 1861 - 1865 between Union (in the north) and Confederate (in the south) forces. The war had its origin in the issue of slavery, and after four years of bloody combat, which left over 600,000 soldiers dead, and destroyed much of the South’s infrastructure, the Confederacy collapsed and ultimately, slavery was abolished.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1710.0,1740.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/146","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression in the decade preceding World War II. The time of the Great Depression varied across nations, but in most countries it started in about 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s or early 1940s. In the U.S., it began with the “Wall Street Crash of 1929,” the most devastating stock market crash in the country’s history.  \u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1710.0,1740.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/147","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Pennsylvania Dutch are a cultural group formed by early German-speaking immigrants to Pennsylvania and their descendants (Dutch refers to the German settlers, known as Deutsch or Deitsch; it does not refer to people from the Netherlands). Pennsylvania Dutch Country is primarily in the southeastern part of the state.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1860.0,1890.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/148","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Montag Brother’s Paper Company was best known for their “Blue Horse” notebook paper and other supplies for schools.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2100.0,2130.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/149","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eOakland Cemetery is the oldest cemetery in Atlanta and many notable Georgians are buried there, including Margaret Mitchell, Bobby Jones, and several former Georgia governors and Atlanta mayors. The Jacobs family is also buried there.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2160.0,2190.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/150","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eLeo Frank (1884-1915) was a Jewish factory superintendent in Atlanta, Georgia. In 1913, he was accused of raping and murdering one of his employees, a 13-year-old girl named Mary Phagan, whose body was found on the premises of the National Pencil Company. Frank was arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for her murder. The trial was the catalyst for a great outburst of antisemitism led by the populist Tom Watson and the center of powerful class and political interests. Frank was sent to Milledgeville State Penitentiary to await his execution.  Governor John M. Slaton, believing there had been a miscarriage of justice, commuted Frank’s sentence to life in prison. This enraged a group of men who styled themselves the ‘Knights of Mary Phagan.’ They drove to the prison, kidnapped Frank from his cell, and drove him to Marietta, Georgia where they lynched him. Many years later, the murderer was revealed to be Jim Conley, who had lied in the trial, pinning it on Frank instead. Frank was pardoned on March 11, 1986, although they stopped short of exonerating him.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2310.0,2340.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/151","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Standard Club is an exclusive and upscale country club founded by German Jews in 1867.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2340.0,2370.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/152","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eThe Ingleside Country Club is located in the Avondale Estates area of Atlanta.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2430.0,2460.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/153","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eShabbos (Yiddish) is the Jewish day of rest and is observed on Saturdays. Shabbos begins at sundown on Friday night and is ushered in by lighting candles, reciting a blessing, and drinking kosher wine from a Shabbos cup.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2970.0,3000.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/154","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eAdolph Rosenberg was Editor/Publisher of The Southern Israelite newspaper, now known as the Atlanta Jewish Times.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3270.0,3300.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/annotation_set/416/annotation/155","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cp\u003eOtis Skinner was an American stage actor active during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.\u003c/p\u003e","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3480.0,3510.0"}]},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["Jacobs, Sinclair [Index]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/156","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jacobs' Pharmacy and the Drug Business","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=260.0,1145.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/157","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Sinc, how about talking a little about Jacobs' Pharmacy, before we get beyond it.","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=260.0,1145.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/158","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"American Jewish Committee","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Athens Pharmaceutical Company","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta National Bank","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Bobby Burns Club","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"First National Bank","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Five Points","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jacobs' 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Georgia","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"University of Georgia","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Walgreens","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Young Men's Christian Association","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=260.0,1145.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/159","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"The Temple","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1145.0,1496.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/160","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Sinc, do you remember anything about the beginnings of The Temple?","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1145.0,1496.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/161","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Bar Mitzvah","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Confirmation","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"German-Austrian Jews","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Rabbi Marx","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Reform Judaism","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"The Temple","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1145.0,1496.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/162","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"The Beginnings of Rich's","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1496.0,1822.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/163","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"How about the beginnings of Rich's. What do you remember about that?","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1496.0,1822.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/164","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta Paper Company","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Berta Sartorius","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Civil War","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Claire Sartorius","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Clara Elsas","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Emanuel Rich","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Great Depression","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jacobs' Pharmacy Company","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Margaret Mitchell","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Morris Adler","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Walter Rich","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1496.0,1822.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/165","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Philadelphia College of Pharmacy","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1822.0,1994.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/166","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"And imagine my surprise when I went to the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. They were strictly a business school. It's\nright in the center of town, now it's in beautiful buildings, part of the University of Pennsylvania.","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1822.0,1994.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/167","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Pennsylvania Dutch","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Philadelphia College of Pharmacy","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"University of Pennsylvania","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1822.0,1994.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/168","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta Paper Company","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1994.0,2314.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/169","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"How about the Atlanta Paper Company? You mentioned that, Sinc . . .","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1994.0,2314.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/170","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Atlanta Paper Company","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Druid Hills","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Elsis Phillips","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Isaac Lieberman","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jacob Elsas","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Morris Adler","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=1994.0,2314.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/171","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Leo Frank Case","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Title"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2314.0,2456.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/172","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"How about the Frank case? Did you have any knowledge of that?","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=2314.0,2456.0"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/173","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Jewish Orphans Home","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Leo Frank","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Robert Schwab","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Standard 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I know they've got a considerable number of people they want to interview, but can you suggest anybody that might not be on the list that perhaps would have a good memory of those days?","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Partial Transcript"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3133.0,3612.91755"},{"id":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912/index/47232/annotation/182","type":"Annotation","motivation":"supplementing","body":[{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Adolph Rosenberg","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Bea Haas","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Dick Schwab","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Helen Michael Rich","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Lillian Haas","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Percy Rich","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}},{"type":"TextualBody","value":"Rachel Nina Parker","format":"text/plain","label":{"en":["Keywords"]}}],"target":"https://thebreman.aviaryplatform.com/collections/994/collection_resources/29950/file/97912#t=3133.0,3612.91755"}]}]}]}