Notes for
Reminiscences of
Jacob Greenebaum
Compiled by John H. Rubel
The Rubels came from Hochspeyer, close to Kaiserslautern. They had moved to the latter
town in the early 1830s, and emigrated in 1848, arriving in Chicago in 1848, the same year
that Elias and Henry Greenebaum arrived, and two years after their elder brothers, Michael
and Jacob, had come (Meites, 47). Both Elias and Henry Greenebaum attended school in
Kaiserslautern (Elias in 1837 [p. 11]) when the Rubel family was living there, and since
there were only 32 Jewish families and 175 Jews (of which at least a dozen or so were the
Rubel family) in town in 1837 (Gerlach, p. 275), the Rubels and Greenebaums, so often
associated in Chicago in later years, probably knew each other several years before
leaving for America.
About two inches on the map – fifteen miles or so – nearly due north of Nahbollenbach are
the towns of Gemunden and Laufersweiler. My maternal great grandfather, Alexander
Billstein, emigrated from the former around 1850 and my maternal grandfather, Herman Baum,
from the latter a generation later in about 1875. Near the end of the century they, my
grandparents, one born in Neenah, Wisconsin, the other the Laufersweiler immigrant
established in Chicago, met and married.
Bibliography:
Encylopedia Brittanica, Eleventh Edition, 1910-1911
Encylopedia Brittanica, 15th Edition, 1990
Encyclopedia Judaica, Deter Publishing House, Ltd., 1971
Gerlach, Bernhard H., Die Lage der jüdischen Bevölkerung im Raum
Kaiserlaustern zwischen 1816 und 1840, Quelle: Jahrbuch zur Geschichte von Stadt und Landkreis,
Kaiserslautern, Bd. 18/19, 1980/81. (Translation by Walter Reed; transcription and editing
by J. H. Rubel in work, Jan., 1998)
Hertzberg, Arthur, The Jews in America, Simon & Schuster, New York 1989
Meites, H. L., ed., 1924, History of the Jews of Chicago, Chicago Jewish Historical
Society and Wellington Publishing, Inc., Chicago, Illinois; ISBN 0-922984-02). It is a
rich source of information about many individuals, families and circumstances of great
interest bearing on the Jewish experience in America, especially the German Jews who
immigrated to Chicago in the mid-19th century. The Jew in the
Modern World, ed. by Paul R. Mendes-Flohr and Jehuda Reinharz, (Oxford
University Press, 1980). A documentary history, it contains excerpts from original
documents marking signal events in modern Jewish history.
542 pages.
Sachar, Abraham Leon, A History of the Jew, (Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1967)
Notes:
In the early days of the French Revolution several European powers, often urged on by
aristocratic émigrés, many of whom settled in Prussia, attacked France in an abortive
attempt to overturn the Revolution and restore the monarchy. French resistance, fortified
by attacks on the country and energized by revolutionary fervor, drove the invaders out
and occupied considerable territory along the left bank of the Rhine that had formerly
belonged to Prussia or other German principalities.
Indeed, Louis X, landgrave (9.e.: the count with hegemony over a particular territory
ensemble of territories) of Hesse-Darmstadt, the region which included Eppelsheim, had
joined the alliance of powers arrayed against France in 1792, but he and the others lost.
In 1799 he was compelled to sign a treaty of neutrality and in 1803 to formally surrender
the left-bank territories that had, de facto, been French for a dozen years. (Encycl.
Britt. 11th Ed. v. 13, p.412)
He got some territories in exchange at the expense of his neighbors, and in 1806 he
joined the Confederacy of the Rhine, an association of German rulers, nominally designed
to further German (Prussian) interests, but, in reality, created under Napoleonic
influence. From 1805 until 1813, the year after Napoleon's retreat from Russia,
Hesse-Darmstadt furnished troops for Napoleon's forces. (Encycl. Britt. op.cit.)
The period from about 1792 to the final fall of Napoleon in 1814-1815 was marked by
succession of treaties and episodes of war between France and, later, Napoleonic forces on
the one side and the forces of Austria and its two chief, albeit not always
reliable, allies, Prussia and Russia, on the other. As early as the spring of 1795 the
Treat6y (or the "Peace") of Basel adjudicated matters between France and
Prussia, Spain, Holland and the Grand Duke of Tuscany. It had the effect of consolidating
most of the left bank of the Rhine in French hands, which paved the way for further
conquests in subsequent years. In 1799 Austria tried again to defeat French arms, but
lost, whereupon France took over all of the left bank. In 1805 Austria took up arms again,
but now Bavaria, Wurttemburg and Baden opposed Austria, and another defeat ensued. In 1806
Frederick William III, Emperor of Prussia, lost to Napoleon at the Battle of Jena. Less
than a year later, in June, 1807, Napoleon triumphed at Friedland, whereupon the Czar
(Prussia's ally) mad a deal (the Treaty of Tilsit) which (July, 1807) coast Prussia half
it's subjects and its best dominions. In 1809 Austria is again defeated, this time at
Wagram. (Encycl. Britt. 11th Edition v.10, p. 858; v.11, pp. 862-863)
The French under Napoleon dispensed with the greater part of the conventional supply
trains that encumbered large armies. Instead, they often lived off the lands through which
they passed, a policy that left destruction and destitution in the wake of those armies,
but which required them to keep moving in order to remain supplied. So hardship swept
across many territories at intervals for years. For some, of course, it was also a time of
great opportunity. The ROTHSCHILDS rose to unparalleled wealth and subsequent influence
through the Napoleonic wars, and many others profited, albeit on a much smaller scale. For
the Jews, emancipation, the sweeping away of ancient barriers to residence and occupation,
the ideas of republicanism, of equality, enticing on the one hand and threatening the very
foundations of Jewish communal existence on the other came on the same flood, and
were often swept out on the receding tide after Waterloo.
But to return: where was Jacob GREENEBAUM's father when the two Austrian Redcoats shot
at him several years before he died? Most likely somewhere around his little village of
Reipolskirchen, perhaps a dozen years before his death in 1804, when the allied powers,
including Austria, were driving toward or fleeing from the direction of France in the
years before Napoleon's rise to power.
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