Saving Monticello: The Newsletter
The latest about the book, author
events, and more
Newsletter Editor - Marc Leepson
Volume XV, Number 4 April
1, 2018
“The
study of the past is a constantly evolving, never-ending journey of discovery.”
– Eric Foner
JEWS OF
C’VILLE: Virtually every
large and mid-sized city in the American South has had significant Jewish communities
since the mid-19th century. Charlottesville, Virginia—the home of
Thomas Jefferson, the University of Virginia, and Monticello (owned by the Levy
family from 1834-1923)—is no exception.
That was the point of a March 18 walking
tour of C’ville led by long-time U-Va. History Professor Phyllis Leffler.
During the tour Prof. Leffler looked at the Jewish families and businesses in
that Central Virginia city, including U.S. Navy Lt. Uriah Levy (who was born in
Philadelphia in 1792), who purchased Monticello in 1834.
Professor Leffler has had a long interest in the Jews of
Charlottesville. In the mid-1990s she and U-Va. Anthropology Prof. Jeff Hantman
were the driving forces behind an extensive exhibit at U-Va.’s Alderman Library
called “To Seek the Peace of City,” which took an in-depth look at the picture.
The title comes from Jeremiah 29.7: “And
seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried away ... for
in the peace thereof shall ye have peace.”
That exhibit lives today in an extensive on-line presence at
http://bit.ly/SeekthePeace
It tells the “story of colonial era Sephardic Jews and of nineteenth century
immigrants first from Bavaria and Wurttemberg and then from Kovno and Minsk. It
is a story of peddlers and merchants, and of involvement and leadership in
local government, the arts and education. It is a story of the commitment of a
few to the creation and maintenance of local civic and religious institutions.”
“To Seek
the Peace of the City” is an expansion of a 1993 U-Va. exhibit, “Jewish Life at
Mr. Jefferson's University,” which was presented as part of the University’s
commemoration of Thomas Jefferson’s 250th birthday.
On
the March tour, Leffler explained that there were Jews in the city “from the
earliest, pre-Revolutionary period.” But, “like many small towns there weren’t
enough to constitute a community. Before the 1870s, there weren’t enough Jews
to build anything.” She went on to point out that Charlottesville “was a tiny,
tiny town, but for merchants and itinerant travelers, it was a location that
made sense west of Richmond and on the trade route between Baltimore and
Lynchburg. It was good spot for merchants to get established.”
Most of the merchants, she said, operated along what is now
C’ville’s downtown mall, where they owned “shoe shops, department stores, and
restaurants. “They [also] served on school, city and community boards,” she
said. “They were remarkably integrated into the life of Charlottesville. As
prominent merchant families, they all really took a role in the city and making
it work.” (Here’s a like to the Charlottesville Daily Progress article on the tour in the: http://bit.ly/Cvillearticle)
Leffler included Uriah Levy’s nephew Jefferson Levy in her
tour, as he spent considerable time in Charlottesville after buying out his
uncle’s other heirs and taking control of Monticello in 1879. A committed real
estate and stock speculator, Jefferson Levy (who sold Monticello to the Thomas
Jefferson Foundation in 1923) bought and sold a good number of other properties
in C’ville.
As I noted in Saving
Monticello, his first significant purchase in the city came in 1887 when he
bought a building at the corner of Park and High Streets known as the Town
Hall, which had been built in 1852. Town Hall, a large, three-story Georgian
style brick structure, was used as a gathering place for local groups, traveling
speakers and touring theatrical companies. By the mid-1880s, though, it had
fallen into disuse.
Jefferson Levy remodeled Town Hall and in 1888 renamed it
the Levy Opera House. He enlarged the stage and put in a new orchestra pit with
dressing rooms below it, inclined the floor to improve sight lines and
installed a horseshoe-shaped gallery, new opera chairs and two boxes on the
sides of the stage.
The Levy Opera House hosted the first symphony orchestra
that played in Charlottesville, the Boston Symphony, which came to town in
1891. That year Jefferson Levy leased the Opera House to Jacob (“Jake”)
Leterman and Ernest Oberdorfer, sons of the founders of Charlottesville's
German Reform synagogue. Leterman and Oberdorfer brought in other symphony
orchestras, minstrel shows and various types of theatrical productions.
In 1907, Levy leased the building to the Jefferson School
for Boys, a small boarding and day prep school, for $400 a year. An addendum to
the lease stipulated that if any theatrical performances were given in the
Opera House, it “shall be advertised as the Levy Opera House,” and that
Jefferson Levy retained the right to his box there. The school moved out in
1912. Two years later Levy sold the building, and it was subdivided into
apartments. Today it has been remodeled into office space and is still known as
the Levy Opera House.
EVENTS: Here’s
a rundown on my ten April speaking events. It’s one of the busiest months—if
not the busiest—in my seventeen years
of doing talks for my books. Five of the talks are on Saving Monticello. For info on my new book, Ballad of the Green Beret, please go to http://bit.ly/GBBallad
·
Friday,
April 6 – Talk on Francis Scott Key and the writing of “The Star-Spangled
Banner” and book signing for the Daughters of 1812 Association of State
Presidents annual banquet in Washington, D.C.
·
Tuesday,
April 10 - Talk on Saving Monticello
and book signing at the ExxonMobil Spouses Club luncheon in Great Falls,
Virginia.
·
Tuesday,
April 10 – Talk on The Civil War Battle of Monocacy based on my book, Desperate Engagement, for the Southern
Maryland Civil War Roundtable at the College of Southern Maryland in LaPlata,
Md. For info, go to http://somdcwrt.org
·
Wednesday,
April 11 – Talk on Saving Monticello
and book signing at the monthly meeting of the Arlington House DAR Chapter,
Arlington, Virginia.
·
Thursday,
April 12 – Talk on Saving Monticello
and book signing for the National Society of Colonial Dames XVII Century
National Conference, Washington, D.C.
·
Friday,
April 13 – Talk on Saving Monticello
and book signing at the Annual Meeting of Presidential Families of America,
Washington, D.C.
·
Saturday,
April 14 – Field trip at the Monocacy National Battlefield Park for the
Southern Maryland Civil War Round Table, Frederick, Maryland.
·
Sunday,
April 15 – Talk on Flag: An American
Biography at the annual meeting of the Daughters of the Barons of Runnemede,
Washington, D.C.
·
Friday,
April 27 – 2:45 p.m. talk on Desperate
Engagement and book signing at the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields
Foundation’s 2018 National Civil War Conference, “Avenue of Invasion” (9:00 a.m.
– 4:30 p.m.) in Martinsburg, West Virginia. Open to the public. For more info
and to register, go to http://www.shenandoahatwar.org/avenue-of-invasion
If you’d like to arrange an event
for Saving Monticello—or for any of
my other books, including Ballad of the
Green Beret—please email me at marc527psc@aol.com
For details on other upcoming
events, go to http://leepsoncalendar.blogspot.com
GIFT IDEAS:
Want a personally autographed, brand-new paperback copy of Saving Monticello? Please e-mail me at marcleepson@gmail.com I also have a few as-new, unopened hardcover
copies.
Or go to marcleepson.com/signedbooks.html to order copies through my local
bookstore, Second Chapter Books in Middleburg, Virginia. We also have copies of
Desperate Engagement, Flag, Lafayette, and What So
Proudly We Hailed, and Ballad of the
Green Beret.
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