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It includes Judah P. Benjamin by Pierce Butler first published in 1906, Rollin Osterweis’ 1933 volume Judah P. Benjamin: ... Slavery, and the Old South,” in Struggles in the Promised Land: ...
The career of Judah P. Benjamin (1811-1884), the Jewish son of the South who lent his legal brilliance to the Confederacy as its secretary of state and chief adviser to its president, Jefferson ...
Judah Benjamin, seen in a photo circa 1860, served as attorney general, secretary of war and secretary of state for the Confederacy. (MPI/Getty Images) Advertisement.
For the Jewish people, the ancient tribal territories of eastern Judah, Benjamin, Ephraim, and western Menasheh—also known as “Judea & Samaria”—form the very heartland of the homeland.
Charlotte, N.C., is removing a monument to Judah Benjamin, the Jewish Confederate leader, amid protests over Confederate markers in the South.
Judah Philip Benjamin (1811-1884), a fanatical southern patriot best known for his various roles as President Jefferson Davis’s second-in-command, was at once one of the most prominent and one ...
In this 1866 lithograph of Jefferson Davis and the first Confederate Cabinet, Judah P. Benjamin, second from left, is seated closest to the Confederate president.
Benjamin, son of Jonah, was determined to see the world. In 1165, in an age when travel meant peril on road and sea, he set out from his native Tudela, Spain on an extended voyage.
In 1842, Judah P. Benjamin stood inside a New Orleans courtroom and declared that “slavery is against the law of nature.” It was part of his winning argument as to why an insurance company ...
Program speaker Quiggle said, “Judah P. Benjamin died on May 06,1884 in Paris, France at the age of 72. His wife Natalie and daughter Ninette were by his side.
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