community engagement Jobs
History Department

Encyclopedia of Southern Jewish Communities Overview >> Mississippi >> Meridian
Meridian, Mississippi

The contributions of Jews to civic, economic, and social life in Meridian, Mississippi have been significant.  Names like Marks, Rosenthal, Threefoot, Meyer, Baum, and Rosenbaum resonate throughout the city’s early history, revealing the impact of this small, but strong Jewish community on its surroundings.  According to Meridian Mayor John Robert Smith, “Meridian was born of the railroads.  But it was the great, cultured Jewish mercantile families, mostly immigrants from Germany, who raised it up and breathed life into it.”  Jews were actively involved in the creation and development of Meridian.

Recorded Jewish life in Lauderdale County begins in the town of Marion, located just six miles from the center of present-day Meridian.  County records show that David Rosenbaum purchased land in the town in 1837.  The families of Abraham Threefoot, Isaac Rosenbaum, Leopold Rosenbaum, E. Lowenstein, and Jacob Cohen reportedly lived in Marion during these early years.  After the Civil War wreaked havoc on east Mississippi, the hub of Lauderdale County became Meridian as many families relocated from Marion to the growing city which had just been named the county seat.  By 1869, ten Jewish families lived in Meridian.

In the 1870s, Meridian began to flourish with the construction of the railroad through town.  Meridian became a crossroads and a regional center of trade and industry.  The community of early Jewish immigrants embraced and enhanced their adopted city, making it their own, and bolstering its economy and civic life.  Many fine examples of architecture remain in downtown Meridian, attesting to the memory of the bustling railroad era and bearing Jewish names that commemorate the community contribution to Meridian’s grandeur.

Marks Rothenberg BuildingBy the 1880s, Jewish merchants had established themselves in Meridian with many successful stores along Front Street.  Israel A. Marks, a German-born immigrant, began his career as a peddler supplying rural families with dry goods.  In 1870 he operated a wholesale dry goods business in Meridian and in the 1880s consolidated his business with that of Lichtenstein and Company; the combined operation encompassed nearly an entire block of Front Street.  After Lichtenstein’s departure in 1887, Marks began a company with his three half-brothers: Sam, Levi, and Marks Rothenberg.  Their operation, Marks, Rothenberg & Company, became one of the largest wholesale grocery and dry goods businesses in the South.  In 1899, they opened a mammoth five-story location.  All four partners of the Marks, Rothenberg Company were leading citizens in Meridian. Levi Rothenberg was the president of Meridian’s first bank, and Israel Marks served on the board of another local bank.  Levi was also an early member of the fire brigade, and served on the water works and insurance commissions.

Israel Marks statueIsrael Marks and his brothers also played an instrumental role in establishing Highland Park, donating much of the land for it.  Marks served as president of the park commission from its formation until his death in 1914.  A statue of Marks still adorns the park.  Though remembered for many other civic contributions, the proprietors of Marks, Rothenberg and Company are perhaps best known for building the Grand Opera House next to their downtown store.  Completed in 1890, the Opera House attracted performers from all over the United States to the growing railroad and business center of Meridian, Mississippi.  After lying dormant for almost 80 years, this gift of the Marks and Rothenberg families to the city of Meridian has recently been restored to its original glory and performers once again grace its majestic stage.

Baum BlockIn the 1870s, Joseph Baum, an immigrant from Boosen, Prussia, established a large business in Meridian.  At age 25, he operated a wholesale and retail dry goods store which also bought large amounts of cotton from local farmers.  The business would eventually encompass an entire city block, which became known as the “Baum Block.”  In 1892, A.J. Lyon and Company began occupying the “Baum Block.”  Lyon, with his brothers-in-law Ike and Mike Rosenbaum, became known as east Mississippi’s number one wholesale grocer, a title which the business kept for 50 years.  I.A. Rosenbaum, son of Ike, recalled that when many businesses found themselves cash-strapped during the Great Depression, his father would let them have merchandise on credit as long as they had been fair in honest in their dealings.  J.D. Clark & Son was one such store.  When Clark heard his Presbyterian minister declare that Jews would not go to heaven, he got up and walked out saying, “if Ike Rosenbaum can’t go, I don’t want to go.”

Threefoot BuildingThe Threefoot family, who changed their original name from “Dreyfus” to better reflect their new American home, also gained a name for themselves as wholesalers and retailers of groceries, makers of leather goods, and buyers of cotton.  Abraham Threefoot began their establishment in the late 1860s, and his sons H. Marshall, Kutcher, and Lewis, continued the business.  By the first decade of the 20th century, yearly sales at A. Threefoot and Sons exceeded $100,000.  Just before the Great Depression, the Threefoots built a new 16-story building at 22nd Avenue.  This costly venture left the business on shaky financial ground and eventually led to its closure.  Yet the Threefoot Building still stands and continues to give Meridian one of the most distinctive skylines in Mississippi.

Abraham Threefoot was a well-liked and greatly respected personality in Meridian.  During his funeral, many businesses in town closed as the local newspaper reported “the largest procession ever seen in Meridian.”  The entire Threefoot family was known for their involvement in civic affairs.  Kutcher Threefoot served several terms as president of the school board, and his picture still hangs in the office building of the Meridian public school system.  When the construction of the YMCA almost halted due to a lack of funds in the late 1920s, the Threefoot family made a large contribution for the completion of the building.

Alex Loeb was another leading merchant in Meridian.  Loeb, born in Germany, married Mollie Threefoot and moved to Meridian from Columbus, Mississippi.  He opened his store in Meridian in 1887, selling fine men’s clothing.  During the heyday of the railroad, it was said that respectable railroad workers would only wear clothes from the Alex Loeb store.  The well-dressed Loeb was a colorful character known for his white mustache and ever present cigar.  He would personally welcome his customers as they entered the store.

Strauss & Lerner
Strauss & Lerner interior

Meridian grew into one of the largest Jewish communities in the state.  In 1927, 575 Jews lived in Meridian.  Jewish businesses dominated the city’s downtown.  These included Levy & Tannebaum Confectionary; Lowenstein & Brothers Grocery; Eagle Cotton Oil Company; Strauss & Lerner Jewelry Store; Metzger & Kahn wholesale and retail grocers; and many others.  Louis Davidson founded the St. Louis Junk Company, which grew into the Southern Pipe and Supply Company, which remains a successful family-run business today.  Meridian Jews sometimes went into business with non-Jews, showing how integrated Jews were in the city.  Harold Meyer and Hunter Webb founded the Meywebb Hosiery Mills in 1930.  Meyer later built the Lamar Hotel, which now serves as a county office building.

The great economic success of Meridian Jews and the influx of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe during the late 19th century allowed for two synagogues in the city.  Meridian Jews formed Beth Israel in 1868.  By 1874, they had joined the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and embraced Reform Judaism.  When Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe began to arrive, they preferred a more traditional style of worship.  Rather than joining Beth Israel, they formed their own Orthodox congregation, Ohel Jacob.  Members of the Orthodox congregation worked hard to balance their traditional practice and the demands of their new home, and had to make many compromises.  In the early 20th century, Ohel Jacob would hold Saturday morning services from 6 am to 8 am so its members could open their stores by 9.  Merchants in Meridian could not refrain from working on Saturday, the busiest day of the week for most stores.

The Jewish community was closely integrated into Meridian society as they took an active part in civic life.  Rabbi Judah Wechsler, who became Beth Israel’s spiritual leader in 1887, became heavily involved in the issue of African American education.  He led the movement to provide public school facilities for blacks during a time of racial segregation.  In 1888, he campaigned for a bond issue to construct the first brick public school building for African Americans.  When the bond issue passed, Meridian’s black community asked that the new school be named in the rabbi’s honor.  The Wechsler School still stands today, and is being restored as community arts center.

Paula AckermanAnother rabbi who left a significant mark on Meridian was Paula Ackerman.  When her husband, Rabbi William Ackerman, died suddenly in 1950, Meridian’s Beth Israel congregation asked Paula to serve as their “spiritual leader” until they could find a replacement.  For three years, the unordained Paula Ackerman acted as Beth Israel’s full-time rabbi, leading services and even performing weddings.  Paula’s pioneering tenure was twenty years before the first woman was officially ordained in the United States.

While Jews had long enjoyed social acceptance in Meridian and rarely faced prejudice, the turmoil of Civil Rights unleashed the anti-Semitism within some segments of the larger community.  A group of Ku Klux Klan members from Jackson, who had bombed the temple and rabbi’s house there, bombed the new education building of Meridian’s Congregation Beth Israel in 1968.  When they returned later to bomb the home of Meyer Davidson, an outspoken leader of the Jewish community, they were captured by police after a shootout.  Leaders of the Meridian and Jackson Jewish communities had raised money to pay a Klan informant, who tipped off the FBI about the attack on Davidson.

 

Like other southern Jews, Meridian’s Jewish community was often ambivalent towards the Civil Rights Movement.  When Michael and Rita Schwerner, two Jews from New York, came to Meridian in 1964 to organize a voting rights campaign, they received a cool reception from the Meridian Jewish community, who feared being associated with these “outside agitators.”  Several Jews, including Rabbi Milton Schlager, found time to meet with the Schwerners, and expressed their sympathy for the goals of the movement but questioned the young activists’ tactics.  Fears of anti-Semitism were not unfounded as evidence suggests that Klan members specifically targeted Michael Schwerner at least partly because he was Jewish.  When Schwerner was abducted and murdered along with fellow civil rights workers James Chaney and Andrew Goodman, moderate Jews in Meridian were further scared into silence.

Despite these fears, many Meridian Jews worked to change the city’s system of racial discrimination.  Several local Jews joined an interfaith group called the Committee of Concern that pushed for the prosecution of people who burned black churches.  When Meridian agreed to integrate its schools, Lucille Rosenbaum, a member of the school board received death threats.  The Klan also targeted other prominent Meridian Jews who called for integration.  Yet over the span of Meridian’s history, these attacks stand out as the exception rather than the rule, I.A. Rosenbaumas Jews have faced little anti-Semitism in Meridian.  I.A. Rosenbaum served eight years as mayor in the 1970s and 80s and his Jewishness never became a public issue.  Jews have always been an integral part of Meridian’s leadership, and their presence helped to ensure a more moderate response of Meridian to the Civil Rights Movement.  Indeed, Klan members waited for Cheney, Goodman, and Schwerner to travel to a different county before they abducted them because they knew Meridian’s city leadership would not tolerate such violence.

It’s impossible to separate the story of Meridian’s Jews from the story of the city itself.  Jews have been closely involved in Meridian’s development since its founding.  The Jewish role in Meridian’s history is etched in the city’s downtown buildings where the names Marks-Rothenberg, Rosenbaum, Davidson, Loeb, Threefoot, Meyer, and others testify to the great Jewish leaders who helped build the city.  But that legacy is fading as the Jewish community has declined in recent years.  Today, fewer than forty Jews remain in Meridian, most of whom are elderly.  Ohel Jacob closed in the early 1990s, and Beth Israel no longer has a full-time rabbi.  The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience is now planning to open a branch in Meridian that will document this important legacy of the city’s Jewish community.