Difference between revisions of "Samuel Moses Lipsey"

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==Timeline==
 
==Timeline==
 
*1952-3 - [[Glasgow J.P.A. Committee]] Hon. Presidents-Sir [[Maurice Bloch]], [[A. Links]], [[Fred Nettler]], J.P., [[S. M. Lipsey]] [[Hyman Woolfson]]<ref>The Zionist Year Book, 1952-53 </ref>
 
*1952-3 - [[Glasgow J.P.A. Committee]] Hon. Presidents-Sir [[Maurice Bloch]], [[A. Links]], [[Fred Nettler]], J.P., [[S. M. Lipsey]] [[Hyman Woolfson]]<ref>The Zionist Year Book, 1952-53 </ref>
 +
*1929 - Master of the [[Montefiore Lodge - No. 753]]
 
*1919 - Despite the constant Zionist activity in Glasgow and the presence of the [[Scottish Zionist Council]] as an umbrella organisation as well as the [[Jewish National Institute]] as a cultural and organisational centre there was no single powerful society to speak for Zionism within the community. The activities of the [[Bnei Zion]] had lapsed during the War and the attempts to revive it with [[Samuel Grasse]] as Chairman in January 1919 did not prove successful. Accordingly, a further meeting was held in the Jewish National Institute building in Elgin Street in November 1919.4 On this occasion the [[Glasgow Zionist Association]] was founded with [[Sam Lipsey]] as Chairman, [[Joe Sachs]] as Vice-Chairman and a committee of 30 members. Despite this weakness in the Zionist Association the functioning of the Institute as a communal centre continued to flourish.<ref>Second City Jewry: Jews of Glasgow in the Age of Expansion 1790-1919, p. 215.</ref>
 
*1919 - Despite the constant Zionist activity in Glasgow and the presence of the [[Scottish Zionist Council]] as an umbrella organisation as well as the [[Jewish National Institute]] as a cultural and organisational centre there was no single powerful society to speak for Zionism within the community. The activities of the [[Bnei Zion]] had lapsed during the War and the attempts to revive it with [[Samuel Grasse]] as Chairman in January 1919 did not prove successful. Accordingly, a further meeting was held in the Jewish National Institute building in Elgin Street in November 1919.4 On this occasion the [[Glasgow Zionist Association]] was founded with [[Sam Lipsey]] as Chairman, [[Joe Sachs]] as Vice-Chairman and a committee of 30 members. Despite this weakness in the Zionist Association the functioning of the Institute as a communal centre continued to flourish.<ref>Second City Jewry: Jews of Glasgow in the Age of Expansion 1790-1919, p. 215.</ref>
  

Revision as of 16:21, 6 November 2025

[1]

Obituary for Samuel Moses Lipsey, who fought with Jabotinsky in the Jewish Legion and became a leading Glasgow Zionist and Freemason.[2]

Affiliations

Timeline

See also

Notes

  1. LIPSEY SAMUEL MOSES 77 M 1962 644 / 11 / 25 Pollok
  2. Jewish Chronicle 12 January 1962.
  3. The Zionist Year Book, 1952-53
  4. Second City Jewry: Jews of Glasgow in the Age of Expansion 1790-1919, p. 215.