- Joseph Simon (1712-1804)
Joseph Simon (1712-1804) was the leader of the Jewish community in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania , in the eighteenth century, having arrived there around 1740. By 1747, the community had enough men to support aminyan , and religious services were held at Simon's house. Simon was a successful trader and owned enormous tracts of land in the West; among others, he was a business partner of William Henry, gunsmith, merchant, and, later, important patriot during theAmerican Revolution . In 1767, Thomas Barton, rector of St. James' Church in Lancaster, described Simon toSir William Johnson as "a worthy, honest Jew and principal merchant of this place...He is esteemed a main fair in his dealings and honest from Principle." ["B. and M. Gratz, Merchants in Philadelphia, 1754-1798" (1916), p. 81.]Simon had two sons and four daughters. His granddaughter,
Rebecca Gratz (1781-1869), was reputed to be one of the most beautiful women in America, andWalter Scott may have modeled Rebecca in "Ivanhoe " on her.By the time Simon died at 92 in 1804, the Jewish community in Lancaster was much depleted, having moved, in large part, to
Philadelphia .Notes
References
*David A. Brener, "The Jews of Lancaster, Pennsylvania: A Story with Two Beginnings" (1979)
*William Pencak, "Jews and Gentiles in Early America, 1654-1800" (2005).
*Oscar Reiss, "The Jews in Colonial America" (2004).
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