BARONDESS, JOSEPH

BARONDESS, JOSEPH
BARONDESS, JOSEPH (1867–1928), U.S. labor and communal leader. Barondess was born in Kamenets-Podolsk, Ukraine. He immigrated to the U.S. in 1888, working in New York City as a cloakmaker. Soon after, he joined the United Hebrew Trades and became a labor organizer in the garment industry, helping to lead the first great cloakmakers' strike in 1890. Indicted in 1891 on an extortion charge brought against him by the cloak manufacturers, Barondess was sentenced to a 21-month prison term but was released in a few weeks, after widespread protests and petitions for his pardon. His career as an organizer ended when he led an unsuccessful strike in 1894, but he remained active in the Socialist Labor Party, joining its moderate wing in 1898 in the battle against daniel de leon , which led to the founding of the Socialist Party in 1901. By then, however, Barondess had retired from socialist politics and was devoting himself largely to an insurance business that he had started. In his new role as a successful businessman, Barondess accepted appointment to the National Civic Foundation in 1900 and to the New York City Board of Education in 1910. Partly as a reaction to the Russian pogroms of 1903, Barondess became active in the Zionist movement and during the last years of his life served as an honorary vice president of the Zionist Organization of America. He was also among the founders of the American Jewish Congress and a member of the American-Jewish delegation to the Versailles peace talks in 1919. His career typified that of many immigrants, whose process of integration in the U.S. was marked by initial disillusionment with American society, socialism, a higher economic status, and finally a retreat from radical political activity and a return to the Jewish fold. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: New York Times (June 20, 1928), 25; B. Weinstein, Di Yidishe Yunions in Amerike (1929), 116, 319–36.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Barondess, Joseph — (1867 1928)    American labour and communal leader. Born in the Ukraine, he emigrated to New York in 1888. He helped lead the cloakmakers strike in 1890 and was sentenced to imprisonment as a result. He was active in the Socialist Labour Party… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Joseph Barondess — ish community in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. Known as the King of the Cloakmakers , whose union he led, he carried himself like an actor, a career he had tried but failed at before he became a garment worker and union …   Wikipedia

  • SCHLOSSBERG, JOSEPH — (1875–1971), U.S. trade union leader and journalist. Born in Koidanovo (now Dzerzhinsk), Belorussia, he went to the U.S. in the 1880s and worked in the sweatshops of the needle trade in New York City. The harsh and degrading working conditions… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • NEW YORK CITY — NEW YORK CITY, foremost city of the Western Hemisphere and largest urban Jewish community in history; pop. 7,771,730 (1970), est. Jewish pop. 1,836,000 (1968); metropolitan area 11,448,480 (1970), metropolitan area Jewish (1968), 2,381,000… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Medzhybizh — Not to be confused with Meziboří (Schönbach), near Most, a different city in the Czech Republic. Not to be confused with Międzybórz (Sycowski) (Neumittelwalde), the eponymous city in Silesia, now Poland. For other uses, see Międzybórz. Medzhybizh …   Wikipedia

  • Hebrew Actors' Union — The Hebrew Actors Union (HAU), formed in 1899 as a craft union for actors in Yiddish theater in the United States (primarily in New York City), was the first actors union in the United States. Until it was decertified by the umbrella organization …   Wikipedia

  • Histoire des Juifs de Medzhybizh — Medzhybizh qui se dit en ukrainien: Меджибіж; en russe: Меджибож (translittéré en: Medzhibozh); en polonais: Międzybórz, Międzyborz ou Międzybóż, en allemand: Medschybisch; en yiddish: מעזשביזש (translittéré en Mezhbizh), est une ville… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Craig Symonds — Born December 19, 1946 Long Beach, California Craig Lee Symonds (born 31 December 1946, in Long Beach, California) is a retired professor and chairman of the history department at the United States Naval Academy. He is a distinguished historian… …   Wikipedia

  • Histoire des Juifs de Medjybij — Medjybij (en ukrainien : Меджибіж ; en russe : Меджибож, Medjiboj ; en polonais : Międzybórz, Międzyborz ou Międzybóż ; en allemand : Medschybisch ; en yiddish : מעזשביזש, Mejbij), est une commune… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”