Ways of life

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Ways of life

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Ways of life

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Ways of life

20 Archival description results for Ways of life

Robert A. Wenner

Oral history interview with Robert A. Wenner, born in 1923 in Alberta. He speaks of his Great-Grandfather, Grandfather on his father's side as well as his mother's side of the family who were from Russia and moved to France. Bob's own father served as an artillerymen and sharpshooter during the First World War. Bob planned to go into Medicine but there were no medical programs on the West Coast and so took Optometry in California.

Office of H.A. Roberts Ltd. Real Estate, Insurance, Burrard St. view

Photograph depicts Burrard Street in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Streetscape is taken from Pender Street, south to West Georgia Street. On the east side, signs for H.A. Roberts Ltd. Real Estate Insurance, Wolverton Co. Ltd. Stocks Bonds, Riley's Blueprints, and a coffee shop hang above the side walk; men and women walk along the sidewalk; cars line the curb next to parking meters; cars, a bus and a truck drive in the traffic lanes. On the west side, the Bowel McLean Buick Cadillac showroom, sign and pumps of a B/A (British American Oil Company) gas station, and a Standard Station are seen; south of West Georgia, a skyscraper stands in front of an adjacent six-story apartment building or hotel.

Joseph Segal

Oral history interview with businessman and philanthropist Joseph Segal who was born in Alberta, 1925. During the Second World War he spent two years in the infantry and a year as part of the postwar occupational army in Germany. He made his wealth buying and selling companies: Zellers, Hudson's Bay Company, Gamble Canada and dozens more. He was named Entrepreneur of the Year in 1989. He joined Simon Fraser University's Board in 1981, spearheading the SFU Downtown Campus and has been its Chancellor.

Interview with Ann Krieger

  • CA JMABC A.1998.010, A.2008.007, A.1968.001, A.1971.002, A.2007.017, A.2007.009, A.2011.007, A.2010.055-OH.19.70-05
  • Item
  • 1970
  • Part of Cyril E. Leonoff fonds

Ann Krieger speaks on the Jewish community in Vancouver around the early turn of the century. She speaks of O’Bryan Hall and the two Jewish groups - orthodox and reform - that had no meeting place for High Holy Days, and rented O’Bryan Hall and held services together. They hired a rabbi (from Seattle).

Originally, David Oppenheimer and Ann's brother-in-law [Milton], were in business together, managing the Oppenheimer Brothers Ltd.. David's grandfather started the business, then David's father (Simon) and mother died, left two children -- mother's maiden name Leiser, an old Victoria family. Milton Oppenheimer was Simon's brother, he married his sister-in-law's sister, and adopted the two children, David and Ruth, and subsequently had Edith, who was Ann's sister-in-law.
Milton brought the business over to Vancouver, which became head office, with Victoria still in operation.

Ann remembers Milton as a very fine man, and felt sure he must have been active in the community. His wife Amy was Jewish (she was a Leiser), but anti-Semitic, and had no Jewish friends at all. David married a non-Jew, and Milton objected to the marriage. Edith had a few Jewish friends, but knew the Wassermans and the Evans family; she was sent to Berkeley to meet Jewish people.

Ann tells of a collection of Oppenheimer memorabilia that Edith had and suggests that Cyril contact her about seeing the material and copying some of it.

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