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Welcome to this website
celebrating the Jewish Farming
Communities of New Jersey
You are invited to
contribute your family stories and
photos of life in these communities
For some Jews, the plight of Jews in
Russia was met with an attempt to remake
the Jewish condition by re-forging ties
to the land that had existed in Biblical
times. The Jewish social movement known
as Am Olam (Eternal People) arose in
Odessa, Russia, in 1881, contemporaneous
with the onset of the pogroms. Based on
the belief that an agricultural life or
return to the earth would allow the
members of the Jewish diaspora to
support themselves and live in community
with other Jews. Immigrants
from the Am Olam movement immigrated to
the United States and continued to
foster these principles by creating
colonies out west. Immigrants
sponsored by the Hebrew Emigrant Aid
Society (HEAS) and other aid societies
were aware of the idea, if not the
reality, of agricultural re-settlement.
Beginning
in the 1880's, pogroms in Russia caused
a large influx of refugees into
Galicia. The French Alliance
Israelite Universelle (AIU) stepped in
to help with housing, food and
transportation. Baron Maurice de
Hirsch was on the board of the AIU and
believed in the colonization of these
migrants.
The Baron de Hirsch Fund was created to
provide immigrants support
through relief, temporary aid, land
settlement, agricultural training, and trade
and general education. The Fund
provided loans on real property to Russian and
Rumanian refugees and actual agriculturalists
already in the United States. It was
believed that it was important that only
able-bodied candidates for the colonies who
were able to pay their own transportation to
the US could succeed. In addition to
training on agricultural methods, the
immigrants were taught English and the duties
of American citizenship.
Assimilation was a goal. The American Reform
movement had the progressive view that relief
should be provided to those in a form to
provide for their productiveness, proving that
the Jewish community was capable of leading
productive lives.
Early farming communities, such as
Alliance(1882) and Woodbine(1891), became a
laboratory for those that followed. The
map below shows the early Jewish farming
colonies.
Map displayed with the permission of Dr
Mark Demitroff from his lecture series,
Come Earnest Homeseekers: Ethnic
Settlements in the Pines. Published by
Foster JW, Craig RW, Ogden KN (eds.) Down
Jersey: A Guidebook for the Annual
Conference of the Vernacular Architecture
Forum Conference, Galloway, NJ, May 2014,
p. 58.
While
the Baron de Hirsch Fund was not the only
organization that assisted in creating the
agricultural communities, Settlements
that lacked the external organizational and
philanthropic support appeared doomed to
collapse. This was true of several
attempts by private investors:
- Hebron,
near Landisville in Atlantic County (1891)
- Halbertstown
(Habberton), south of Millville
(1891-1899)
- Zion,
north of Vineland
- Mizpah,
east of Vineland
- Estellville,
south of Mays Landing (1882)
- Six
Points
1895 ad in the Philadelphia Inquirer
Jewish agricultural
colonists were also pioneers in Kansas, the
Dakota territory, Iowa, Michigan, Colorado,
California, Texas, Washington, Louisiana and
Oregon. By 1925, the Jewish
Agricultural Society (JAS) reported that New
Jersey colonies are the only survivors.
The
Jewish Agricultural (and
Industrial Assistance)
Society was created by the
Fund for
the major
agricultural effort
consisted of making loans to
farmers and providing
agricultural
instruction.
Because
of the failures
of early large
scale group
settlements, the
JAIAS focused on
settling
individual
families on
abandoned farms
near
metropolitan
areas. Individual
farming seemed to prosper where
earlier efforts at group
colonization had failed.
The JAIAS provided loans to
thousands of Jewish farmers
and advised them on how to
farm by sending out experts
and published for fifty
years a magazine called the
Jewish Farmer.
In 1910 there were about
5000 Jewish farm families
dispersed in southern New
Jersey. By the early
1920’s, the number of farms
in the area had doubled as
some post World War I
immigration from Eastern
Europe had
resumed.
These farms thrived for one
or two generations, but
nearly all had died out by
the 1960s and 1970s. Big
factory farms had taken
hold, pushing out the
smaller farmers. And by
then, growing numbers of
younger Jews had found
easier and more lucrative
ways to earn livelihoods in
cities.
In New
Jersey, pioneering Jewish poultry
farmers could be found in such
areas as Vineland, Toms River,
Lakewood and Farmingdale.
Poultry farming could support a
family without requiring costly
manufacturing
subsidies. A good
deal of these
family farms
failed during
the depression
years. The ones
that remained or
got into farming
around 1940
thrived during
World War II
with the high
demand for eggs
and other
products.
Jewish farmers
accounted for
about 75 percent
of New Jersey’s
total egg
production
during the peak
years in the
1950s.
Jersey Homesteads
(Roosevelt) was created under
a depression-era United States
governmental program.
The South Jersey Jewish colonies that not only
transformed New Jersey into the Garden State
but also served as a model for the development
of Israel.
Note:
This site is not intended to be a
comprehensive study of these communities,
which has been done by several academics,
but is an overview intending to provide
some insight into life in these Jewish
farming communities.
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