Floyd S. Fierman papers
Collection area: Arizona and Southwest
Collection dates: circa 1850-1997 bulk 1870-1970
The material in this collection is organized into geographic location of the Jewish individuals, families, or institutions researched. Folders within each grouping are organized alphabetically according to the name of the relevant individual, institution, or the subject matter of the file. Note that materials within this collection include photocopies or other surrogates of originals. For this reason, date ranges on folders tends to reflect original materials rather than surrogates. Some materials remain undated.
This collection is part of the Southwest Jewish Archives. The Bloom Southwest Jewish Archives were founded by David A. and Leona G. Bloom, longstanding members of Tucson’s business, religious, and social service communities. The Archive serves to highlight Jewish contributions to Tucson and surrounding southwest areas. This collection was previously SJA 003. The materials were transferred to Special Collections in 1998.
This collection was compiled between 1949-1989 by Rabbi Floyd Fierman, Ph.D. (1917-1989), who served Temple Mount Sinai of El Paso, Texas from 1949 to 1979. His leadership in the community extended far beyond the temple. He was actively engaged in combating racism and fighting for civil rights in El Paso. He was also dedicated to interfaith education and communication and to tracking the history of Jews in the binational southwest.
This collection is the result of his interest in the careers and accomplishments of Jewish pioneers who moved west with their families seeking opportunities of various sorts. As these pioneers settled, they built synagogues, business interests, and communities. By 1860 there was a strong Jewish presence in America's western-most reaches.
Although Fierman was not trained as a professional historian, his contributions to the field included several books and monographs on Jews of the southwest, including
In his search for historically-significant materials, Fierman photocopied documents from many regional repositories, such as the New Mexico State Records Center and Archives. He also maintained close contact with archivists and librarians from all over the country in his quest for materials and documents. He developed a particularly close relationship with the late Rabbi Jacob Marcus, archivist and historian at the American Jewish Archives.
A sizable portion of the material collected is a product of Rabbi Fierman's notes as taken down on whatever material was available to him at the moment, including hotel and airplane stationery. He often recopied these notes several times and compiled elaborate appendixes to the files which are often longer and more complex than the original record.
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