A LETTER TO MY READERS.
_Dear Boys and Girls_:
When your grandfather tells you a story, do you ever interrupt him to
ask: "But is it all true?" And doesn't he often answer: "I don't
know," or "I don't know when it's really true, and when it begins to
be like a story book." And so, when you read through my little
book--if you do read right through it to the very last page--you may
wonder whether all my history stories really happened.
Yes--and no! I do know that cross old Peter Stuyvesant of New
Amsterdam hated our people, but I never found any record of the Jewish
boy who wanted to play with the governor's niece, pretty Katrina. The
histories tell us how gallant young Franks became the friend of George
Washington, but none of them mention that the Jewish soldier saved a
Tory from the angry mob.
You understand now, don't you? So I'm going to turn the page right
away that you may read for yourselves of the three Jews who whispered
together on the deck of the "Santa Maria," as Columbus and his crew
crossed the Sea of Darkness in search of a New Land.
E.E.L.
NOTE: The author expresses her thanks to the editors of _The
Hebrew Standard_ and _The Jewish Child_ in which the stories,
"In the Night Watches" and "A Place of Refuge," originally
appeared.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
IN THE NIGHT WATCHES 9
_The Three who came with Columbus._
WHEN KATRINA LOST HER WAY 14
_A tale of the First Jewish Settlers of New Amsterdam._
A PLACE OF REFUGE 33
_How the Wanderer came to Rhode Island._
"DOWN WITH KING GEORGE" 39
_How Isaac Franks, of the American army, first heard the
Declaration of Independence._
THE LAST SERVICE 52
_The story of a Rabbi who lived in New York when it was
captured by the British in 1776._
THE GENEROUS GIVER 68
_The story of a Jewish money-lender of the Revolution._
ACROSS THE WATERS 88
_A story of the City of Refuge planned by Mordecai Noah._
THREE AT GRACE
|