My magnificent mother, whose lifetime in Cleveland literally spanned the 20th century, (born in 1898 at 30th and Orange , died 1989 at Mt. Sinai Hospital ), was a tough, independent and lovely woman.
Although she was a member of The Temple and often turned to Rabbi A.H. Silver, a personal friend of the family, for advice and comfort, she was more a pragmatist, and fatalist, than a religious Jew.
When her husband William Weidenthal, publisher of the Jewish Independent, died in 1931 at the depth of the Depression, she was left, in her 30’s, with twin five year olds. She courageously (or perhaps stoically) told her friends, “It was meant to be”, and plunged ahead, without complaining, doing what was necessary to maintain a stable family.
She took over the Weidenthal Co., our printing and publishing plant on Bolivar Rd. (just west of 9th St. ) and successfully ran it for a number of years. She insisted years later that she was no feminist. She left the kitchen and got into business because, “I had no choice”.
Mother was by nature a serious Republican. She Disliked FDR and the New Deal with a passion. (It should be noted that in pre-depression days, much of the Jewish political establishment in Cleveland was Republican). As a loyal son, I stood by her, and the cause.
When Alf Landon the colorless governor of Kansas was nominated to challenge FDR in Cleveland Public Hall in 1936, I was excited about it and determined to do my part for the family.
We were naively certain that our campaign efforts would swing Landon for Ohio , or at least Cuyahoga County . As it turned out, it was a landslide for FDR.
Among my young Jewish friends who by now were almost entirely New Dealers, I was a rebel with a lost cause.
Among my young Jewish friends who by now were almost entirely New Dealers, I was a rebel with a lost cause.
In 1940 it was Wendell Willke, the One World idealist from Indiana who captured my allure. I was taken by his world view, and mother, now owner of Evelyn Wayne, a children’s store in Shaker Heights , continued her dislike for FDR. (Among other things, she resisted posting an NRA sign in her store window, as dictated by Washington .) When it was announced that Willkie would be coming to Cleveland for a campaign appearance at Public Hall, there was no doubt that I would be there.
The situation got dicey when Grandma Kolinsky, an observant Jew, discovered that Willkie was coming to town on Yom Kippur. Her grandson, she declared at the dinner table, would not attend a political rally on the holiest of holy days. (It had been my habit to walk her to and from the synagogue on Superior Rd. up from Mayfield each year on the High Holy days, which complicated the problem.)
Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society
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Again a landslide for FDR. No hanging or pregnant chads. And no one even thought about asking for a recount.