Type | Monthly newspaper |
---|---|
Editor | Jacob Barron |
Founded | April 1914 |
Ceased publication | Unknown |
Headquarters | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada |
The Canadian Western Jewish Times, established in 1914, was the first Jewish newspaper published in English in Western Canada [1] and the earliest attempt to produce a Western Canadian regional Jewish newspaper in English. [2] Like many other efforts to publish Jewish newspapers in Canada between 1891 and the first decades of the 20th century, [3] it proved to be ephemeral. [4]
Jews first came to the Prairie Provinces of Western Canada in 1877. [5] Although there were only about 3,000 Jews in Winnipeg (Western Canada’s largest city) in 1905 out of a total population of some 80,000 people, [6] Arthur Chiel notes that “the Jews of Manitoba early desired a press of their own” [7] to such an extent that in 1914, the Canadian Israelite (founded in 1910) became the only Yiddish daily newspaper in Canada when it converted from a weekly. [8]
The Canadian Western Jewish Times was operated by Winnipeg-born Jewish brothers Jacob Bell Barron (1888–1965) [9] and Abraham Lee Barron (1889–1966). [10] The two were lawyers by training, graduates of the University of Chicago Law School who had moved to Calgary in 1911. [11] In 1915, Jacob Barron was a barrister at Tweedie & MacGillivray, [12] and in 1917 Abraham Barron was a law student working with his brother. [13] By at least 1920 they formed (with Samuel Joseph Helman, 1894–1981, [14] Jacob Barron’s Jewish brother-in-law) reputedly the first, or one of the earliest, Jewish legal partnerships in Calgary, Barron Barron & Helman. [15] Jacob Barron, who had married in Winnipeg on July 8, 1914, later became a well-known theater impresario. [16]
When the Barron brothers moved to Calgary in 1911, a construction boom was underway there. [17] Calgary’s population had increased by over 1000% in the previous 10 years, going from 4,398 in 1901 to 43,704 in 1911, [18] while the Jewish population grew from one person in 1901 to 604 in 1911, [19] a “handsome synagogue” had been built and a Talmud Torah underway. [20] But in 1913 the real estate boom collapsed and depression set in. [21]
In 1914, Abraham Barron was listed as the Business Manager in Calgary of The Canadian Western Jewish Times, with an office at 6 Thomson Block in Calgary. [22] At the time, there were 14 other newspapers and periodicals in the city. [23]
The launch of The Canadian Western Jewish Times as a monthly, published from Winnipeg but with associate editors across Western Canada, was noted in the March 1914 issue of Printer and Publisher, a trade publication. [24] The first issue of The Canadian Western Jewish Times, with Jacob Barron as Editor-in-Chief, is dated April 1914 (the equivalent Hebrew date of Nisan 5674 is cited). The cover was designed by Stafford & Kent, with the seal done by P. Waterman, both of Calgary. The claimed staff of 16 came from across Western Canada, with correspondents in British Columbia (Vancouver); Alberta (Calgary, Edmonton, and Lethbridge); Saskatchewan (Moose Jaw and Regina); and Manitoba (Winnipeg). [25]
The first issue included a half-page advertisement for kosher for Passover spirits, providing an early indication of the concern for kashrut in the Calgary area. [26]
There is only one known surviving issue (Volume I, Number 1) of The Canadian Western Jewish Times. [27] The precise date of the final issue is uncertain. [28]
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