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<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="DcWaGWG">K0002</eadid>
<filedesc>
<titlestmt>

<titleproper encodinganalog="Title.titleproper">Prelminary Guide to the Stephen S. Wise papers, <date>1907-1952</date></titleproper>
<author encodinganalog="Creator.author">Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University</author>
</titlestmt>
<publicationstmt>
<publisher encodinganalog="Publisher">Special Collections Research Center, The Gelman Library, The George Washington University</publisher>
<date encodinganalog="Date.publication" type="publication" normal="2007">2007</date>
<address>
<addressline> 2130 H. St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20052</addressline>
<addressline>Phone: 202-994-7549</addressline>
<addressline>Email: speccoll@gwu.edu</addressline>
</address>
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<creation encodinganalog="Description.creation">Machine-readable finding aid derived from Re:discovery database program and converted into xml; Code template by Archives and Information Associates (http://archivesandinformation.com), Alexandria, Virginia 
. <date encodinganalog="Date.available" normal="2007">2007</date>
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<langusage>Finding aid written in <language encodinganalog="language">English</language></langusage>
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</eadheader>
<frontmatter>
<titlepage>
<titleproper encodinganalog="title">Preliminary Guide to the Stephen S. Wise papers, <date>1907-1952</date></titleproper>
<num>K0002</num>
<publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections Research Center, The Gelman Library, The George Washington University</publisher>
<address>
<addressline>Washington, D.C.</addressline>
</address>
<list type="deflist">
<defitem>
<label>Processed by</label>
<item>Special Collections Staff, <date>2008</date></item>
</defitem>
<defitem>
 <label>Encoded by</label>
<item>Jennifer King, <date>2008</date></item>
 </defitem>
 </list><p>copyright 2008 The George Washington University. All rights reserved.</p>
</titlepage>
</frontmatter>
<archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="DC">
<did id="d_summary">
<head>Descriptive Summary</head>
<origination label="Creator">
<persname>Wise, Stephen Samuel</persname>
</origination>
<unittitle encodinganalog="Title" label="Title">Stephen S. Wise papers, <unitdate type="inclusive" normal="" encodinganalog="Coverage.temporal">1907-1952</unitdate></unittitle>
<unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="DcWaGWG " encodinganalog="Source.collectionnumber" label="Catalog number">K0002</unitid>
<physdesc> <extent encodinganalog="Format.extent" label="Extent">1 Linear feet</extent></physdesc>
<abstract label="Abstract">Series one consists correspondence to and from Stephen S. Wise. There are  nearly two hundred letters dating from 1907-1948, with the bulk of correspondence from 1907-27. Series two consists of dairies, notes, addresses, and invitations and programs of events related to Stephen S. Wise from 1910-1940, with the bulk of materials from 1910-1924. Included are three sets of personal dairies ranging from 1910-14 and 1921-22, notes from his trip to Palestine in 1922, and a number of undated writings on scrap paper. There is also a twenty-eight page bibliography on the works of and by Wise.</abstract>
<repository encodinganalog="Source.repository" label="Repository">
<corpname>The George Washington University, <lb />
The Gelman Library,<lb />
Special Collections Research Center</corpname>
<address>
<addressline><lb />2130 H. St. NW<lb /></addressline>
<addressline>Washington, D.C. 20052<lb /></addressline>
<addressline>Phone: 202-994-7549<lb /></addressline>
<addressline>Email: <extptr href="mailto:speccoll@gwu.edu" title="speccoll@gwu.edu"></extptr></addressline> </address>
</repository>

<langmaterial label="Language of Materials">English</langmaterial>

</did>
<descgrp encodinganalog="Description.descgrp" type="admininfo">
<head>Information for Users</head>
<prefercite encodinganalog="Description.prefercite">
<head>Preferred citation</head>
<p>Stephen S. Wise papers, Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University.</p>
</prefercite>
<accessrestrict encodinganalog="Rights.accessrestrict">
<head>Restrictions on Access</head>
<p>Some records may be restricted.</p>
</accessrestrict>
<acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
<head>Acquisition Information</head>
<p>In 1996, I. Edward Kiev's personal library was donated to the Gelman Library at the George Washington University and the papers of Stephen S. Wise were included with the original donation</p>
</acqinfo>
<userestrict encodinganalog="Rights.userestrict ">
<head>Restrictions on Use</head>
<p>Some material may be copyrighted or restricted. It is the patron's obligation to determine and satisfy copyright or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections.</p>
</userestrict>
</descgrp>
<bioghist encodinganalog="Description.bioghist">
<head>Historical or Biographical Note</head>
<p>Stephen Samuel Wise (1874-1949) was born in Budapest, Hungary, and came to the United States the following year.   In America, his father Rabbi Aaron Wise and the esteemed rabbis, Alexander Kohut and Gustav Gottheil prepared him for the rabbinate. At the age of eighteen, he graduated with honors from Columbia University and a year later, in 1893, he was ordained in Austria by the Chief Rabbi of Vienna, Adolph Jellinek.  </p>
<p>"The People's Rabbi," as Wise would later be known, developed his deep concern for the less fortunate at an early age.  When he was seven years old Wise heard of the government sponsored pogroms inflicted upon the Jews in Czarist Russia.  This incident would open his eyes to the suffering of the poor and the powerless.  Wise, who would enjoy the reputation as one of the century's finest orators, established a connection with the masses.  In true liberal spirit, Wise fought for housing projects, the abolition of child labor, the improvement of working conditions, securing rights for female workers and equal rights for African Americans, and was a co-founder of both the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People [NAACP] and the American Civil Liberties Union [ACLU]. Wise began his Zionist career during the nascence of the movement in the 1890s.   Wise, like Theodor Herzl, the father of modern Zionism, was outraged by the 1894 trial of French Captain Alfred Dreyfus who was accused of treason, falsely convicted and not exonerated until 1906, resulting in a shared conviction that the Jewish people required a homeland.  Wise helped to organize its supporters and communicate the movement's ideology.  He founded the New York Federation of Zionist Societies in 1987, which led to the nationwide Federation of American Zionists in 1898, and was a founder of the World Jewish Congress.  Later, Wise was a leader in the American Jewish Congress, president and vice president of the Zionist Organization of America and an important liaison to American Presidents, such as Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Delano Roosevelt.</p>
<p>In 1900, Wise accepted the post of rabbi at Temple Beth Israel in Portland, Oregon, the same year he married Louise Waterman.  He remained in Oregon for six years where he threw himself into "Good Government," pressing for reform in state and city politics.  He pioneered in interfaith cooperation, social service, and civic leadership, which included his non-paid position as Commissioner of Child Labor for Oregon.  In 1906, Wise first sprang into national prominence.  In his famous, "Open Letter to the Members of Temple Emanu-El of New York on the Freedom of the Jewish Pulpit," he rejected the offer to serve as rabbi of the prestigious Temple Emanu-El of New York because his demand for a "free pulpit," one that was not subject to control by a board of trustees, was refused.  A year later, he returned from Oregon to New York and founded the Free Synagogue, which had free pews to all without fixed dues and maintained an extensive program of social welfare. Most importantly, Wise established a pulpit where the rabbi had the autonomy to promote social welfare, criticize inaction, and encouraged the use of religion as the remedy to society's ills. Like his Christian colleagues Walter Rauschenbusch, Josiah Strong, and Washington Gladden, Wise was a bold and influential preacher of public concerns. </p>
<p>Among Wise's proudest achievements was his establishment of the Jewish Institute of Religion [JIR] in 1922 in New York City, a rabbinical seminary which merged with Hebrew Union College in 1950.  Wise became a mentor to a young Isaac Edward Kiev who began his studies at the seminary in 1924 and gave Kiev a job in the JIR Library to help pay for school.  The relationship between Wise and Kiev grew and Kiev became Chief Librarian in 1943, where he remained until his death in 1975. In 1996, I. Edward Kiev's personal library was donated to the Gelman Library at the George Washington University and the papers of Stephen S. Wise were included with the original donation.</p>
<p>Stephen S. Wise died in 1949 in New York City.</p>
<p>The Stephen S. Wise Papers, containing 191 boxes, are housed at the American Jewish Historical Society [AJHS], AJHA Manuscript Catalog, #P-134</p>
</bioghist>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="Description.scopecontent">
<head>Collection Scope and Content</head>
<p>Series one consists of 0.5 linear feet of correspondence to and from Stephen S. Wise. There are nearly two hundred letters dating from 1907-1948, with the bulk of correspondence from 1907-27.  The letters are primarily written in English with some Hebrew and German . Correspondents include many prominent Jewish rabbis, scholars, laymen, and philanthropists, primarily from the New York area.</p>
<p>Series two consists of 0.5 linear feet of dairies, notes, addresses, and invitations and programs of events related to Stephen S. Wise from 1910-1940, with the bulk of materials from 1910-1924. Included are three sets of personal dairies ranging from 1910-14 and 1921-22, notes from his trip to Palestine in 1922, and a number of undated writings on scrap paper.  There is also a twenty-eight page bibliography on the works of and by Wise.</p>
<p>This collection is only minimally processed please contact the I. Edward Kiev Judaica Collection, Special Collections, for more information.</p>
<arrangement encodinganalog="351a">
<head>Collection Organization</head>
<p>Organized into two series: Correspondence, and Writings and ephemera.</p>
</arrangement>
</scopecontent>
<controlaccess>
<head>Indexing Terms</head>
<controlaccess>
<head>Individuals</head>
<persname encodinganalog="Subject.personalnames" rules="aacr2">Wise, Stephen Samuel</persname>
</controlaccess>
<controlaccess>
<head>Corporate Entities</head>
<corpname encodinganalog="Subject.corporatenames" rules="aacr2">Jewish Institute of Religion</corpname>
</controlaccess>
<controlaccess>
<head>Topics</head>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">Judaism</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Jews, American</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Jewish religious schools</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Jewish Community of New York City</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Stephen Wise, papers</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Stephen S. Wise, papers</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Reform Judaism</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Zionism</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Palestine</subject>
<subject encodinganalog="Subject" source="lcsh">
Israel</subject>
</controlaccess>
<controlaccess>
<head>Geographic Locations</head>
<geogname encodinganalog="Coverage.spatial">United States</geogname>
<geogname encodinganalog="Coverage.spatial">
Israel</geogname>
<geogname encodinganalog="Coverage.spatial">
Palestine</geogname>
</controlaccess>
</controlaccess>
<dsc type="combined">
<head>Detailed Description of the Records</head>
<c01 level="series" id="k0002_001">
<did>
<unitid encodinganalog="Identifier.SERid">K0002 Series 1</unitid>
<unittitle encodinganalog="Title.series">Correspondence, <unitdate encodinganalog="Date.series">1907-1948</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc encodinganalog="Format.extentSER">0.5 Linear feet</physdesc>
</did>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="Description.scopecontentSER">
<p>This series consists of 0.5 linear feet of correspondence to and from Stephen S. Wise. There are nearly two hundred letters dating from 1907-1948, with the bulk of correspondence from 1907-27.  The letters are primarily written in English with some Hebrew and German . Correspondents include many prominent Jewish rabbis, scholars, laymen, and philanthropists, primarily from the New York area.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c01>
<c01 level="series" id="k0002_002">
<did>
<unitid encodinganalog="Identifier.SERid">K0002 Series 2</unitid>
<unittitle encodinganalog="Title.series">Writings and ephemera, <unitdate encodinganalog="Date.series">1910-1940</unitdate></unittitle>
<physdesc encodinganalog="Format.extentSER">0.5 Linear feet</physdesc>
</did>
<scopecontent encodinganalog="Description.scopecontentSER">
<p>This series consists of 0.5 linear feet of dairies, notes, addresses, and invitations and programs of events related to Stephen S. Wise from 1910-1940, with the bulk of materials from 1910-1924.  </p>
<p>Included are three sets of personal dairies ranging from 1910-14 and 1921-22, notes from his trip to Palestine in 1922, and a number of undated writings on scrap paper.  There is also a twenty-eight page bibliography on the works of and by Wise.</p>
</scopecontent>
</c01>
</dsc>
</archdesc>
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