8. Levy, Arthur Joseph / Zangwill, Israel.
              Archive / Collection of more than 350 items, letters, documents, ephemera, pamphlets, manuscript notes, receipts , manuscript letters from the private library of Providence (Rhode Island) lawyer, Arthur (Art) Joseph Levy. The collection includes an important, controversial typescript-essay (8 pages) on Israel Zangwill’s address before the American Jewish Congress at Carnegie Hall on October 14th, 1923 (″Watchmen, what of the Night ?”); with manuscript annotations and remarks on Israel Zangwill’s position “the hopes of Jewry for the establishment of a Jewish State in Palestine are doomed to disappointment”. The collection includes a plethora of interesting letterheads of jewish organizations and also important documentation of Levy’s contribution to and support for the “Palestine Foundation Fund”, (receipt from Boston, Mass. June 1923). Levy, who was a graduate  of  Brown  and  Boston  University  Law  School, practiced law in Providence, Rhode Island and led an active life as a member and leader of several Jewish civic organizations,  such  as  the  Jewish  Family  and  Children’s  Service,  which  he  established  and  led  for  twenty  years,  Rhode Island Jewish Historical Society, the Temple Beth-El  Brotherhood,  the  Miriam  Hospital,  the  Touro  Fraternal  Association and the Jewish Home for the Aged of Rhode Island. He was also a prominent member of the American Bar Association, the Brown University Alumni Association and the Brown Club of Rhode Island. Highly regarded as a jurist, he was a member of the Commission to Consolidate State Laws, a member of the Advisory Committee of the Federal Tax Institute of New England and an editor of the Rhode  Island  Bar  Journal.  Included  in  this  archive  are  a  group of letters written during World War I discussing his role in the Jewish Welfare Board of the United States Army and  Navy,  an  invitation  to  a  fund-raising  dinner  for  the  Jewish Orphanage of Rhode Island, a group of documents and  letters  discussing  the  establishment  of  a  Jewish  country  club  in  Providence,  several  documents  from  the  early  1920s  concerning  the  mostly  Jewish  fraternity  Phi  Epsilon  Pi  and several  items  relating  to  Levy’s  personal  life,  such  as  personal  letters, bills from clothiers and invitations to social events. (Main source of the description of this archive is the research of our colleague Greg Talbot from The Lawbook Exchange).
              Providence (Rhode Island), Cambridge (Massachusetts), New York, 1917 – 1931. Octavo and A4. Two heavy folders with original documents. Very good condition with only minor signs of external wear.