| 
             
			 America, 
			immigrants and opportunity 
			Lincoln museum welcomes noted author November 7th to discuss Jewish 
			peddlers and their impact on America 
			  
			
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
			
			
            
            [October 27, 2015] 
            
            
			 SPRINGFIELD 
			– They came to American seeking freedom and opportunity. They 
			traveled as peddlers, taking new goods and new ideas across the 
			country. Their legacy includes businesses like Levis Strauss, Sears 
			Roebuck and I. Magnin. 
             | 
        
        
            | 
			 
			 Noted author Hasia Diner will tell the story of these Jewish 
			immigrant peddlers when she appears Nov. 7 at the Abraham Lincoln 
			Presidential Library and Museum. She will also sign copies of her 
			most recent book, “Roads Taken: The Great Jewish Migrations to the 
			New World and the Peddlers Who Forged the Way.” 
			 
			The free event includes access to the museum exhibits, including 
			“With Firmness in the Right: Lincoln and the Jews,” a groundbreaking 
			look at Lincoln’s relationships with the small but growing Jewish 
			population of Civil War-era America.  
			 
			The exhibit closes Nov. 15, and Diner’s appearance is the final 
			special event tied to “With Firmness in the Right.” 
			
			  Diner will sign books at 6 p.m. and speak 6:30 in the museum’s Union 
			Theater (212 North Sixth Street, Springfield). 
			 
			Please visit www.presidentlincoln.illinois.gov  and click on “special 
			event reservations.” 
			 
			The Wall Street Journal praises Diner’s new book for its “impeccable 
			scholarship.” History Today calls it “an absorbing account of how 
			Jewish peddling modernised the lives of non-Jewish customers.” 
			 
			One of those peddlers was Samuel Rosenwald. His brother-in-law knew 
			Abraham Lincoln and likely sold clothing to the future president. 
			Rosenwald’s son, Julius, was born in Springfield not far from the 
			Lincoln home. Julius went on to lead Sears, Roebuck & Co. to 
			national success. 
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  Levi Strauss, who founded the clothing company that bears his name, also started 
as a peddler, as did Isaac Magnin, founder of the I. Magnin stores. 
 
The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum holds an unparalleled 
collection of Lincoln documents, photographs, artifacts and art. It has some 12 
million items pertaining to all aspects of Illinois history, making the library 
one of the nation’s leading institutions for genealogy and history research. 
 
The museum is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. For information on all 
our events, visit 
www.TenYearsLincoln.com.   
				 
			[Shanta Thoele, Communications and 
			Public Affairs, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency] 
			  
			
			   |