Difference between revisions of "Barnet Shenkin"

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==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
 
*[[Glasgow Commission of the JNF]] | [[Glasgow Jewish Workers' Circle]] | [[Glasgow Zionist Central Council]] | [[Glasgow B'nei Zion]] | [[Herzl Zionist Institute, Glasgow]] - president - 1909.
 
*[[Glasgow Commission of the JNF]] | [[Glasgow Jewish Workers' Circle]] | [[Glasgow Zionist Central Council]] | [[Glasgow B'nei Zion]] | [[Herzl Zionist Institute, Glasgow]] - president - 1909.
 +
*[[Glasgow Grove in the Balfour Forest]]
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 
*[[Shenkin family]]
 
*[[Shenkin family]]
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 14:12, 3 October 2025

Barnet Shenkin (b 1882, d 1950 at 68 in Govan[1]) - married Freda Shenkin (nee Monfred/Monfried)(b 1892)in 1914 in the Gorbals in Glasgow.[2][3] Shenkin was an early and leading advocate of Zionism in Glasgow.

Barnet Shenkin was born in Daugavpils, Latvia in 1882, and his wife Freda Monfried in Riga, Latvia in 1892. They moved to Glasgow, and in lived at 25 Moray Place (now 52 Marywood Square) from around 1925 to after 1949. Barnet was an importer of oriental carpets, at Wolfson & Shenkin, 58 West Regent street, and later B Shenkin & Co. The firm merged with Mercado in the 1950s, when his son Lennie and Bobby Mercado developed a partnership over a game of bridge.[4] Barnet died in 1950 in Glasgow.
Their son Louis Shenkin was born in Glasgow on 17 January 1917, and was educated at the fiercely academic Hutchesons’ Grammar School, on the south side of the city. Shenkin then went on to study dentistry before being attracted into the family business, with which he remained for more than 60 years. was a leading administrator in bridge for more than a decade as Chairman of the British Bridge League and an occasional non-playing captain of British teams, and an international bridge player in his own right. In 1949 he was a member of the first Scottish team to reach the final of the Gold Cup, Britain’s premier event, losing only narrowly.
He represented Scotland in the Home Internationals on eight occasions between 1949 and 1963, partnering his brother Lennie. His son, Barnet, represented both Britain and Scotland at bridge, and now lives in the US where he teaches and writes on bridge. In 1976 Louis Shenkin, as chairman of the BBL, presented the trophy for Britain’s leading Invitation Pairs event to the winner, his son. Louis died on 22 April 2003.[5]
His brother Lennie married Sarah Sar of Newark Drive in 1949.[6] The family were prominent members of the jewish community in Glasgow, in particular Reform Judaism. Louis’ wife, Mamie, wrote a history of the Glasgow Reform Synagogue, 1934-94. Currently based in Newton Mearns, the synagogue was first located in the house at 39 Queen Square in Strathbungo for a few years from 1936, later in Albert Road and briefly Langside Halls, and then at 306 Albert Drive.[7]

Timeline

Affiliations

See also

Notes

  1. SHENKIN BARNET 68 M 1950 644 / 17 / 412 Govan
  2. SHENKIN BARNET MONFRED FRIEDA 1914 644 / 17 / 213 Gorbals
  3. https://bygone.bungoblog.com/wp/barnet-freda-shenkin/
  4. https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/11979036.celebrating-expansion-with-a-lang-red-carpet/
  5. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1429876/Louis-Shenkin.html
  6. Forthcoming marriages. Glasgow Herald. 1949 July 8;
  7. https://bygone.bungoblog.com/wp/barnet-freda-shenkin/
  8. JC, Page 38 for 16-03-1906
  9. JC, Page 32 for 26-02-1909
  10. JC, Page 30/31 for 06-12-1912
  11. JC, Page 6 for 03-10-1913
  12. Jewish Chronicle, 30 April 1926, p. 26.
  13. Jewish Echo - Friday 27 December 1929.
  14. https://bygone.bungoblog.com/wp/52-marywood-square/
  15. https://bygone.bungoblog.com/wp/lustig/