Guide to the Papers of Lucien Wolf (1857-1930) and David Mowshowitch (1887-1957), (1708-1963) (bulk 1880-1930), RG 348

Processed by David Wolfson and Cecile E. Kuznitz with the assistance of a grant from the S. H. and Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation. Additional processing carried out by YIVO archivists with the assistance of a grant from the Gruss Lipper Family Foundation.

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
URL: http://www.yivo.org

© YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.

Machine-readable finding aid was created by Cecile E. Kuznitz as a WordPerfect document in November 1993. Electronic finding aid was converted to EAD 2002 by Stanislav Pejša in February 2004. Customized in Archon in 2013.  Description is in English.

Collection Overview

Title: Guide to the Papers of Lucien Wolf (1857-1930) and David Mowshowitch (1887-1957), (1708-1963) (bulk 1880-1930), RG 348

Predominant Dates:Bulk 1880-1930

ID: RG 348 FA

Creator: Wolf, Lucien (1857-1930)

Extent: 12.25 Linear Feet

Arrangement:

The collection is organized in ten (10) topical series.

Rivke Tcherikower completed the first organization of the collection after its arrival in the YIVO Archives. In 1966, the collection was arranged by Zosa Szajkowski with the help of a grant from M.E. Kalish of Philadelphia. At this time, the material was sorted into six series and the 28,433 pages numbered consecutively. Zosa Szajkowski prepared a Yiddish language catalog to the collection, which was published under the title Idishe diplomatie. katalog fun der David Mowshowitch-kolektsie in YIVO (Jewish Diplomacy. Catalogue of the David Mowshowitch Collection in YIVO) in Yidn in England: shtudyes un materyaln, 1880-1940 (Jews in England: Studies and Materials, 1880-1940). New York: YIVO, 1966. pages 283-296.

A new catalog in English was prepared in 1978 by David M. Wolfson. David M. Wolfson's catalog followed Zosa Szajkowski's arrangement, although some folders were further subdivided. It also included an additional series consisting of material received after the Yiddish catalog was published. This material was divided into folders and appended to the end of the collection. Although the supplement was described as a separate series, the folders were also identified according to where they were believed to fit in with the original series.

In 1990, the collection was microfilmed with the help of a grant from the S.H. and Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation. At this time, the collection was rearranged according to principles of provenance and original order by Cecile E. Kuznitz, who also prepared the present catalog and concordance of old and new folder numbers.

The description of the collection was revised and converted into an EAD finding aid by Stanislav Pejša in 2004. The romanization of the Russian titles follows the ALA-LC Romanization table.

Languages: English, French, German, Russian, Yiddish, Polish, Hebrew, Hungarian

Abstract

Lucien Wolf (1857-1930) was a diplomat, foreign affairs expert, journalist, and historian. As the secretary of the Joint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association (earlier the Conjoint Foreign Committee), Lucien Wolf took a leading role in the efforts of Western Jewry to aid persecuted Jews in Eastern Europe. He was also a delegate to the Paris Peace Conference (1919), where he helped to draft the minorities treaties guaranteeing the rights of Jews and other ethnic and religious minority groups. David Mowshowitch (1887-1957) was Lucien Wolf's secretary and aide at the Joint Foreign Committee for many years and continued to work for the Joint Foreign Committee until the 1950s. The collection consists of the papers of Lucien Wolf and David Mowshowitch, as well as fragmentary records of the Joint Foreign Committee. The material includes personal papers, correspondence, reports, memoranda, minutes of meetings, copies of articles, and press clippings. The documents pertain to the situation of persecuted Jews throughout the world, most notably the efforts of the Joint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association to aid the Jews of Eastern Europe, and to the Peace Conference at Paris in 1919 and the minorities treaties. There is also material on Lucien Wolf's and David Mowshowitch's other activities, most importantly Lucien Wolf's career as a journalist and as a historian of the Jewish community in Britain.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The primary strength of the collection is the light it sheds on the situation of the Jews of Eastern Europe and the efforts of Western European Jews to aid them through political action. The material on Eastern Europe is strongest for the period 1880-1930 and broadly speaking, deals with persecution, economic conditions and legal disabilities of Jews in Russia, Poland, Romania, and elsewhere. There is also important material on the Peace Conference at Paris in 1919, in particular the drafting of the minorities treaties, and later the enforcement of the treaties and the effort to secure Jewish rights at the League of Nations and the United Nations. In addition, the papers document the conditions of Jews around the world, most notably the rise of Nazi persecution in Germany and the problem of Jewish refugees in the 1930s; the contemporary situation and history of Anglo-Jewry; and Palestine and the Zionist movement.

The collection also reflects Lucien Wolf's career as a journalist and historian and contains many examples of his work in these fields, primarily his writings on international diplomacy and the history of the Jews in England. Similarly, the papers show David Mowshowitch's various interests, such as his research into Yiddish language and literature.

There are also records of the Joint Foreign Committee and materials collected by the Joint Foreign Committee in the course of its work, including reports of the Joint Foreign Committee and of other Jewish relief organizations; diplomatic and inter-office memoranda; and minutes of meetings. The correspondence in the collection consists of both Lucien Wolf's and David Mowshowitch's personal letters and official correspondence of the Joint Foreign Committee. Similarly, the press clippings relate both to Lucien Wolf's and David Mowshowitch's various activities and to the areas of concern of the Joint Foreign Committee. The papers of Lucien Wolf, including both his personal papers and some Joint of Foreign Committee records, passed after Lucien Wolf's death in 1930 to the care of his secretary, David Mowshowitch. However, it is not possible to separate correspondence between that of Lucien Wolf and that of the organizations he represented, since the correspondence had been mixed before it reached the YIVO Archives.

The sixth and seventh series consist of records of the Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee and are the longest and most significant in the collection. They reflect a wide variety of activities undertaken by that organization over many decades on behalf of Jews throughout the world. The two series contain similar types of documents and cover many of the same subjects. Because of this overlap, the researcher should consult the two series together for material on any given topic. It may be advisable to be aware of the fact that newspaper clippings removed to Series X supplement both these series.

The papers of Lucien Wolf and David Mowshowitch cover the years 1865 to 1963, with a few earlier items, particularly pertaining to Anglo-Jewish history, dating to 1708. Lucien Wolf's papers cover the period 1865-1930 and David Mowshowitch's papers span the years 1915-1963, with the majority of material on the period from the 1880s to World War II. The collection consists of diaries, correspondence, notes, manuscripts, typescripts, copies of articles, reports, memoranda, minutes of meetings, and newspaper clippings.

Historical Note

Biographical and historical note

Lucien Wolf was born in London in 1857, the son of a Bohemian political refugee and his Austrian wife. Lucien Wolf began a career in journalism at an early age, becoming a writer for The Jewish World in 1874. He held this position until 1894. Lucien Wolf soon began writing for the general as well as the Anglo-Jewish press; for example, he became an assistant editor of The Public Leader in 1877. Later he served as an editor of The Jewish World from 1905 to 1908.

As a journalist, Lucien Wolf specialized in foreign affairs and diplomacy and became a highly respected expert in these areas. From 1890 to 1909 he served as foreign editor of The Daily Graphic , where his articles on foreign affairs were published under the pseudonym "Diplomaticus." He also wrote under this name for The Fortnightly Review during the years 1895-1905. Lucien Wolf's column "The Foreign Office Bag" ran in The Daily Graphic from 1907 to 1914.

Lucien Wolf first became interested in Russian-Jewish affairs after the outbreak of pogroms in 1881. He became an advocate for Russian Jews and a critic of the Czarist regime. In particular, he drew attention to the plight of persecuted Jews at the time of events such as the Kishinev pogrom (1903), the Beilis trial (1912), and the Polish economic boycott of the Jews (1912). Because of his sympathy for his suffering coreligionists, Lucien Wolf's writing was critical of Czarist Russia and favorable to the more liberal German government. In 1912 Lucien Wolf founded Darkest Russia , which chronicled the disabilities of Jews under the Czarist government, as a supplement to The Jewish Chronicle . However, with the outbreak of World War I, Lucien Wolf's perceived anti-Russian and pro-German position undermined his standing as a foreign affairs expert and effectively ended his career in journalism. He lost his position at The Daily Graphic and halted publication of Darkest Russia out of deference to the Anglo-Russian alliance.

Lucien Wolf's concern for persecuted Jews and his knowledge of foreign affairs led to his long and fruitful involvement with the Conjoint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association (after 1917, the Joint Foreign Committee). Lucien Wolf first became a member of the Conjoint Foreign Committee in 1888 and was appointed secretary of the committee around the time of the outbreak of World War I. In this position, with the aid of his long-time secretary David Mowshowitch, he brought his diplomatic skills and his contacts at the British Foreign Office to bear on his work.

Lucien Wolf's most important contribution came with the end of World War I, when he attended the Paris Peace Conference as part of the Anglo-Jewish delegation. Lucien Wolf was instrumental in drafting the minority treaties, which guaranteed rights for the ethnic, religious, and linguistic minority populations of the defeated and newly-independent states of Eastern Europe. Lucien Wolf saw these treaties as a tool whereby the various groups of these multi-ethnic countries - notably Jews - could live in harmony and their governments be led to develop in the liberal, democratic traditions of Western Europe.

The Jewish delegations at the Peace Conference were themselves split along ideological lines. Most of the delegates from Eastern Europe supported the goals of Diaspora nationalism and sought for the Jews the status of a separate national minority. The majority of American delegates were Zionists. Lucien Wolf, however, like most West European delegates, opposed both Diaspora nationalism and Zionism. When a majority of the national Jewish delegations united to form the Comité des délégations juives , the English and French delegates, led by Lucien Wolf, refused to join. Whatever his differences with the other delegates, Lucien Wolf worked along with members of the Comité des délégations juives to secure Jewish rights through the minorities treaties. He used his diplomatic skills and personal contacts to facilitate negotiations, distributing copies of his Notes on the Diplomatic History of the Jewish Question to the delegates in order put the events of the conference in historical perspective and to disseminate his views.

Lucien Wolf worked to secure the rights set forth in the minorities treaties in the years following the Paris Peace Conference. However, despite his efforts, the treaties proved to be largely unenforceable. The League of Nations was charged with overseeing the treaty guarantees, but a member nation had to bring a treaty violation to the attention of the League of Nations before it could take action. Predictably, most countries were reluctant to antagonize a foreign government by complaining that that government was abusing its citizens.

Throughout the 1920s, Lucien Wolf continued his efforts on behalf of persecuted Jews as secretary of the Joint Foreign Committee. In 1925 he travelled to Poland to inspect the situation of Jews there, and in 1926 he visited Portugal and became involved in aiding Portuguese Marranos. With the outbreak of anti-Semitic violence in Romania in 1927, Lucien Wolf worked to alleviate the situation of Romanian Jews. Wolf also served in Geneva as an expert on minority rights at the League of Nations. He was a founder of the Advisory Committee of the High Commissioner for Refugees, and became head of that organization in 1929.

As a diplomat, Lucien Wolf's approach was always cautious. He preferred to work quietly with individuals whom he felt shared his views, rather than to put direct pressure on the Foreign Office or on foreign governments. As a loyal Englishman, he feared that any too aggressive action on behalf of foreign coreligionists might call into question his and other Jews' allegiances to their homelands and cause a backlash of anti-Semitism. Moreover, as a Western European liberal, he was confident that the governments of Eastern Europe could and would eventually be reformed into enlightened regimes where Jews enjoyed full equal rights, as they did in France and Britain.

Lucien Wolf's position on the issues of Diaspora nationalism and Zionism appeared to shift somewhat over the years. He met with Theodore Herzl at the time of the latter's visit to London in 1896, and when Israel Zangwill founded the Jewish Territorial Organization in 1905 he became an early member. However, Lucien Wolf later became a leader of the anti-Zionist camp, staunchly opposing the suggestion that Jews had a national identity other than as citizens of their country of residence. Lucien Wolf later seems to have modified his stance and become more sympathetic to the idea of Diaspora nationalism, possibly under the influence of David Mowshowitch. In an article of April 1917, Lucien Wolf wrote that over the past 35 years a new "Jewish secular nationality" had developed in Eastern Europe.

In addition to his diplomatic work, Lucien Wolf was an important Anglo-Jewish historian. He was one of the organizers of the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition of 1887, at which time he compiled a bibliography of Anglo-Jewish history. This exhibit led to the founding of the Jewish Historical Society of England in 1893, of which Lucien Wolf was the first president.

Lucien Wolf's biography of Sir Moses Montefiore was published in 1884. He also edited Menassah ben Israel's Mission to Oliver Cromwell (1901) and a centenary edition of Disraeli's novels in 1905. Lucien Wolf published the Life of the First Marquess of Ripon (1921) and wrote on the history of the Portuguese Marrano community in 1925. He also compiled genealogies of many prominent Anglo-Jewish families.

Lucien Wolf's historical writings also reflected his concern with the persecution of Jews. He was considered an expert on anti-Semitism, and wrote The Jewish Bogey as a refutation of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion . Lucien Wolf also contributed the article on "Anti-Semitism," as well as that on "Zionism," to the Encyclopaedia Britannica .

David Mowshowitch was born in Russia and settled in London around the time of World War I. Beginning in 1915 he was active on the Board of Deputies of British Jews and was appointed Foreign Secretary of that body. David Mowshowitch served as secretary and chief assistant to Lucien Wolf after the latter became the head of the Joint Foreign Committee. He remained in this position throughout Lucien Wolf's tenure and continued his work for the Joint Foreign Committee after Lucien Wolf's death in 1930.

As a native of Russia , David Mowshowitch functioned as a liaison between the members of the Joint Foreign Committee and the Eastern European Jews on whose behalf the Joint Foreign Committee was working. He often travelled abroad to report on conditions in areas of Jewish suffering. During the years 1915-1918 David Mowshowitch was the Joint Foreign Committee representative in Stockholm, Sweden. The reports he sent back to London during these years provided the Joint Foreign Committee with its main source of intelligence on conditions in Eastern Europe.

David Mowshowitch is also credited with fostering in Lucien Wolf a more positive attitude towards minority rights and the use of Yiddish of which he was a fluent speaker. An amateur historian, as well as a Yiddishist and amateur linguist, David Mowshowitch wrote a book on the Yiddish language and published translations of parts of the Bible in Yiddish. He was an active member of the London YIVO Committee, through which he donated his papers to the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.

Historical Note

The Joint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association was, as its name implied, a body formed by these two main organizations of British Jewry for the purpose of handling initiatives in foreign policy. The Board of Deputies of British Jews , the officially recognized representative body of British Jewry, originated in 1760 from a cooperative effort of both the Sephardic and Ashkenazic communities of Great Britain. It adopted a written constitution in 1835. The Board of Deputies of British Jews fought for political emancipation and Jewish interests in British civil law dealing with marriage and divorce.

The Anglo-Jewish Association was founded in 1871 and modelled on its French counterpart, the Alliance israélite universelle . Like the Alliance israélite universelle , the Anglo-Jewish Association was a voluntary association that concentrated on educational work among the Jews of less "enlightened" countries, as well as on the promotion of rights of persecuted Jews abroad. In addition, because the Orthodox rabbinate controlled the official state-recognized organs of the Jewish community, the Anglo-Jewish Association served as means for many prominent assimilated Jews to participate in the affairs of Anglo-Jewry.

The Conjoint Foreign Committee was founded in 1878, with equal representation of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association. The Conjoint Foreign Committee worked with the British Foreign Office in its efforts to improve the conditions of Jews in foreign lands, an area of increasing concern as the situation of Jews in Eastern Europe deteriorated in the 1880s. The role of the Conjoint Foreign Committee became more important as the Alliance israélite universelle concentrated its efforts on educational work, in effect leaving the Conjoint Foreign Committee to speak for Western European Jewry in matters of diplomacy.

In 1917, the issue of Zionism, which had long divided the Anglo-Jewish community, came to the fore. The Board of Deputies of British Jews was Zionist in its orientation, while the Anglo-Jewish Association essentially opposed the creation of a Jewish state. In May of 1917, the Conjoint Foreign Committee issued a declaration stating its opposition to Zionism. This led the Board of Deputies of British Jews to withdraw its delegates from the Conjoint Foreign Committee and terminate its relationship with the Anglo-Jewish Association. By the end of 1917 a compromise was reached, whereby a new Joint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association was formed. It was agreed that the renamed Joint Foreign Committee have a majority of members from the Board of Deputies of British Jews and that it take no position on the issue of Zionism. Lucien Wolf was appointed the first secretary of the Joint Foreign Committee, a position which he held until his death in 1930. The representation of the Anglo-Jewish Association on the Joint Foreign Committee was further reduced in 1937 as the influence of the anti-Zionists diminished, and eventually was altogether eliminated.

Subject/Index Terms

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions:

Open to researchers by appointment.

For more information, contact: Chief Archivist, YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011. Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org

Use Restrictions:

Permission to publish part or parts of the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archives. For more information, contact:

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

email: archives@yivo.cjh.org

Separated Materials: Approximately one thousand books and pamphlets were removed to the YIVO Library.

Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form:Identification of item, date (if known); YIVO Archives, Lucien Wolf and David Mowshowitch Papers, RG 348, folder number.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

Series I: Lucien Wolf - Personal, 1708-1930,
Series II: Lucien Wolf - Historical writings and related materials, 1708, 1886-1933,
Series III: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Correspondence with Individuals, 1892-1930,
Series IV: Conjoint Foreign Committee and and Joint Foreign Committee with Organizations, 1885-1930,
Series V: Correspondence of Lucien Wolf and of the Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee with British Government Offices, 1895-1928,
Series VI: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Subject files arranged chronologically, 1889-1951,
Series VII: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Subject files arranged geographically, 1880-1963,
Series VIII: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Organizations Files, 1882-1957,
Series IX: Papers of David Mowshowitch, 1901, 1915-1955,
Series X: Newspaper clippings, 1879-1957,
All

Series III: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Correspondence with Individuals, 1892-1930

The third series is comprised of correspondence of Lucien Wolf and of the Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee with individuals. It includes letters written by Lucien Wolf in his capacity as Secretary of the Joint Foreign Committee and thus reflects the work of that organization. It also features Lucien Wolf's correspondence with colleagues in the fields of journalism and history. This series includes letters sent to Lucien Wolf by David Mowshowitch during the years 1915-1927. He corresponded with Lucien Wolf, when David Mowshowitch was stationed in Stockholm, Sweden during World War I, and provided the Joint Foreign Committee with its main source of information on the situation of the Jews in Eastern Europe at that time.

In few instances, correspondence may also include related material. For instance, along with Lucien Wolf's correspondence with Count Bernstorff, the German ambassador in London, there is material regarding a controversy over the publication of these letters in the British press.

Language of Material: This series in English , French , and German .
Arrangement: The series is arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent.
Folder 21a: Abrahams, A., 1914-1925
Folder 21b: Abrahams, I. [Israel ?], 1901
Folder 21c: Adler, Cyrus, 1901-1927
Folder 21d: de Alberti, L., 1924
Folder 21e: Aladin, Alexis, 1915
Folder 21f: Alexander, David Lindo, 1904-1916
Folder 21g: Aleksinsky, Grégoire, 1915
Folder 21h: Alterman, J., 1923
Folder 21i: Archer, L. W., 1907-1915
Folder 21j: Asher, Samuel J., 1917-1921
Folder 21k: Askenazy, Szymon, 1921
Folder 22a: Bacon, Gertrude, 1909
Folder 22b: Baily, Canning, 1908
Folder 22c: Barnard, ?, 1906
Folder 22d: Barnett, Lionel D., 1926
Folder 22e: Basch, Victor, 1916
Folder 22f: Beaumont, Comyns, 1908-1910
Folder 22g: Bellingham, Lelgarde, 1900
Folder 22h: Bennett, Reginald, 1910, 1913
Folder 22i: Berlin, M., 1897
Folder 22j: Cassel?, Ernest, 1910
Folder 22k: Churchill, Winston, 1910

Folder 23: Bernstorff, Johann Heinrich, Count

Publication of Johann Heinrich Bernstorff's letters to Lucien Wolf

Also includes correspondence of Barrington, Eric, Lord Northcliffe, Tyrell, William

Copies of Lucien Wolf's letters to Johann Heinrich Bernstorff

Copy of a page of Lucien Wolf's diary from April 10, 1905

Published letters of Johann Heinrich Bernstorff, 1905, 1914

Folder 24: Blank, Reuben

Copy of an article by A. Aulard (1915)

Report of Reuben Blank's meeting with British Foreign Office officials

Copies of letters to: Montefiore, Claude Joseph Goldsmid?, ?, Alexander

Copy of a letter from S. Efran, 1915-1927

Folder 25a: Bleackley, ?, 1915
Folder 25b: Bloch, Joshua, 1930
Folder 25c: Boutwood, Arthur, 1918-1920
Folder 25d: Brailsford, Henry Noel, 1913.
Folder 25e: Brandon, Roy H., 1915.
Folder 25f: Brando, Alexander [Braudo, Aleksandr Isaevich ?], 1908
Folder 25g: Bryce, Lord James, 1906-1916
Folder 25h: Bullock, J. M.?, 1909
Folder 25i: Burgess, R.W., 1913
Folder 25j: Bute, Lord, 1895-1900
Folder 26a: Campbell-Bannerman, Henry, 1906
Folder 26b: Carr, Edward Hallett, 1919
Folder 26c: Chirol, Valentine, 1907
Folder 26d: Clifton, A.W., n.d.
Folder 26e: Cohen, Alfred L., 1901
Folder 26f: Cohen, Arthur, 1906, 1913, 1929
Folder 26g: Cohen, Donald H., 1922
Folder 26h: Cohen, Leonard, 1920-1921
Folder 26i: Colquhoun, ?, 1914
Folder 26j: Coolen, Georges, 1928-1929
Folder 26k: Coumbe, ?,, 1915
Folder 26l: Cox, Harold, 1901-1914
Folder 26m: Crewe, Lord, 1906
Folder 27a: Davis, P.R., 1909
Folder 27b: Dicey, Albert Venn, 1912
Folder 27c: Djevad, Bey, 1912
Folder 27d: Dubnow, Simon, 1922
Folder 27e: Dywien, Zalaman W., 1916
Folder 27f: Elkan, Gerald, 1920
Folder 27g: Elzas, Barnett A., 1903
Folder 27h: Ehrenpreis, Marcus, 1913
Folder 27i: Epstein, M., 1916
Folder 28a: Feinberg, D., 1911-1912
Folder 28b: Filderman, Wilhelm, 1924
Folder 28c: Finn, Joseph, 1916
Folder 28d: Frank, Helena, 1906
Folder 28e: Freudenthal, Max, 1907
Folder 29a: Garvin, James Louis, 1914-1922
Folder 29b: Gaster, Moses, 1923
Folder 29c: Gayer, Dr., 1914
Folder 29d: Gennadios, Iōannōes, 1913
Folder 29e: Garfalk, A., 1908
Folder 29f: Goldsmid, Osmond Elim [ D'Avigdor-Goldsmid], 1921-1926
Folder 29g: Gollancz, Hermann, 1917
Folder 29h: Goodman, Paul, 1915
Folder 29i: Gottheil, Richard J. H., 1916-1921
Folder 29j: Gravenitz, ?, 1904
Folder 29k: Greed, E.S., 1918
Folder 29l: Greenberg, L.J., 1907-1921
Folder 29m: Grey-Wilson, Sir William, 1915
Folder 29n: Gribble, [Francis Henry ?], 1913
Folder 29o: Griffin, Lady, 1913

Folder 29p: de Guenzburg, Baron A[lexandre]

Also includes letters to Leopold Rothschild; to Lord Swaythling

"Some Remarks on Baron Guenzburg's Letter on the Jewish Affairs in Russia", 1915-1917, 1919

Folder 30a: Haan, Jacob Israël de, 1914
Folder 30b: Haffkine, [Waldemar Mordecai ?], 1916
Folder 30c: Hall, Hammond, 1900-1909
Folder 30d: Hammerton, John Alexander, 1915
Folder 30e: Hardy, Thomas, 1921
Folder 30f: Harcourt, Sir Cecil, 1921
Folder 30g: Harmsworth, Alfred [Northcliffe, Lord], 1899-1909
Folder 30h: Hatzfeldt, Hermann von, 1907
Folder 30i: Hayashi, Tadasu, 1904
Folder 30j: Hertz, Joseph Herman, 1892-1923
Folder 30k: Herzl, Hans, 1925-1927
Folder 30l: Herzl, Theodore, 1896
Folder 30m: Higginbottom, ?, 1909
Folder 30n: Holland, Sidney, 1900
Folder 31a: Ilke, Charles, 1902
Folder 31b: Itel'son, G. B., n.d.
Folder 31c: Jacobs, Joseph, 1897, 1906-1914
Folder 31d: Janowsky, Oscar I., 1930
Folder 31e: Jochelmann, [Lev?], 1906
Folder 31f: Joseph, Nathan Solomon, 1905-07
Folder 31g: Kinloch Cooke, Clement, 1904
Folder 32a: Karminski, Rita, 1923
Folder 32b: Kissmann, Josef, 1923
Folder 32c: Koike, ?, 1907
Folder 32d: Kruk, Josef, 1915-1916
Folder 32e: Kühlmann, Richard von, 1909-1913
Folder 33a: Labouchere, H. [Henry Du Pré ?], 1906
Folder 33b: Landman, Isaac, 1920
Folder 33c: Landman, S. [Samuel?], 1913
Folder 33d: Laski, Neville, 1921
Folder 33e: Laughton, John Knox, 1906
Folder 33f: Lawson, H.L.W., 1907
Folder 33g: Lessar, P. [Pavel Mikhailovich ?], 1898-1901
Folder 33h: Levy, Solomon, 1907-1908
Folder 33i: Leygues, Georges, 1916
Folder 33j: Lindsay, Lady [Caroline Blanche Elizabeth ?], 1907
Folder 33k: Lipton, S., 1922
Folder 33l: Loewe, Herbert, 1920
Folder 33m: Low, Sidney, Sir, 1893-1927
Folder 34a: MacDonald, Ramsay, 1912-1927
Folder 34b: Magnus, Laurie, 1925, 1926
Folder 34c: Maxse, Leopold James, 1907-1914
Folder 34d: Mayse, Alice J., 1911-1928
Folder 34e: McIlvaine, ?, 1906
Folder 34f: Melchior, Clara, 1913-1929
Folder 34g: Mendelssohn, L., 1923
Folder 34h: Meredith, George, 1906-1907
Folder 34i: Meyerson, Emile, 1911-1916
Folder 34j: Montefiore, ?, n.d.
Folder 34k: Myers, Jack, 1907
Folder 35: Montefiore, Claude G., 1899-1922
Folder 36: Mowshowitch, David, 1915-1918
Folder 37: Mowshowitch, David, 1918
Folder 38: Mowshowitch, David, 1919-1927
Folder 39a: Montefiore, Cecil Sebag, 1906
Folder 39b: Montefiore, Edmund Sebag, 1916
Folder 39c: Morgenthau, Henry, 1914-1919
Folder 39d: Morel, E. D., 1907
Folder 39e: Moutet, Marius, 1916
Folder 39f: Müller, Moses, 1923
Folder 39g: Myer, Morris, 1922
Folder 39h: Nabokov, Vladimir, 1916
Folder 39i: Nadel, ?, 1905
Folder 40: Nathan, Paul, 1905-1927, 1958
Folder 41a: Nawshinson, Alex, 1925.
Folder 41b: Nordau, Max, 1900
Folder 41c: Northcliffe, Lord, 1909-1922.
Folder 41d: Novikova, Ol'ga Alekseevna, 1895-1925
Folder 41e: O'Farrell, ? (Miss), 1906
Folder 41f: Oppenheim, Henry, 1905
Folder 41g: O'Reilly, ? (Miss), 1915
Folder 41h: Pappenheim, Count ?, 1914
Folder 41i: Phillips, Ruth, 1908
Folder 41j: Poulin, Alfred, 1923
Folder 41k: Prag, Joseph, 1917-1929
Folder 41l: Primrose, Henry [Henry William, Helen, and Reginald ?], 1903-1922
Folder 41m: Prior, W.R., 1907
Folder 42a: Reading, Lord, 1930
Folder 42b: Redesdale, Lord, 1911-1912
Folder 42c: Richards, Grant, 1907
Folder 42d: Riddell, George, 1915
Folder 42e: Ripon, Lord, 1906
Folder 42f: Robinson, Jacob, 1927
Folder 42g: Rotbart, S., 1924
Folder 43a: Rothschild, Anthony de, 1920-1924
Folder 43b: Rothschild, Leopold de, 1895-1927
Folder 44a: Sachs, ?,, 1924
Folder 44b: Salinger, M.S., 1910
Folder 44c: Salomons, Bernard J., 1897, 1916
Folder 44d: Samuel, Herbert, 1916-1920
Folder 44e: Samuel, Stuart [Montagu], 1907, 1920
Folder 44f: Samuel, Wilfred Sampson, 1923-1930
Folder 44g: Sassoon, Edward Albert, 1907-1911
Folder 44h: Schein, David, 1905
Folder 44i: Schiff, Jacob H., 1910
Folder 44j: Schiff, Otto, 1922-1923
Folder 44k: Seligmann, ?, 1907

Folder 45a: Séménoff, E

Also includes his publications "The Russian Government and the Massacres" translated and with an introduction by Lucien Wolf - Typescript (1907)

"Some New Features in the Anglo-Russian Alliance", 1906-1920

Folder 45b: Simm, Oswald John, 1896
Folder 45c: Simmons, Percy C. [Coleman ?], 1910
Folder 45d: Simmons, Vivian George, 1916
Folder 45e: Simonsen, David, 1916-1930
Folder 45f: Singer, Charles, 1926
Folder 45g: Sliosberg, Henri, 1921-28
Folder 46a: Smith, Gordon, 1907
Folder 46b: Sobernheim, Moritz Sebastian, 1922
Folder 46c: Sokolow, Nahum, 1917-1927
Folder 46d: Solomons, Israel, 1918
Folder 46e: Sonneborn, Ferdinand, 1915
Folder 46f: Spender, John A., 1906-1927
Folder 46g: Spero, Blanche, 1928-1930

Folder 47a: Spielmann, Meyer A.

Also includes correspondence about the possible sale of The Jewish World represented by Israel Davis to The Jewish Chronicle

"Negotiations with the Jewish Chronicle" - Typescript, 1906

Folder 47b: Spielmann, Isidore, 1907-1924
Folder 48a: Spring Rice, Cecil, 1907
Folder 48b: Stanton, ?, 1909-1910
Folder 48c: Stead, W. T., 1898-1900
Folder 48d: Steffens, Lincoln, 1866-1936, 1919-1924
Folder 48e: Stern, Adolphe, 1914, 1916
Folder 48f: Stolberg, Frederick, 1907
Folder 48g: Straus, Oscar S., 1899-1913
Folder 48h: Straight, Douglas, 1906
Folder 48i: Streng, ?, 1911?, 1912
Folder 48j: Strunsky, Rose, 1915
Folder 48k: Stuart, ?, Sir, 1919
Folder 48l: Sulzberger, Mayer, 1901
Folder 48m: Sutherland, ?, 1909
Folder 48n: Swaythling, Louis Samuel Montagu, 1920-1922
Folder 49a: Tallerman, ?, 1906
Folder 49b: Tarl?, A., 1922
Folder 49c: Teitel, Jacob, 1914-1929
Folder 49d: Tennant, Gertrude, 1901
Folder 49e: Carmichael, Thomas, 1909-1913
Folder 49f: Titulescu, Nicolae, 1929
Folder 49g: Unwin, T. Fisher, 1915
Folder 49h: Vallentin, Hugo, 1913
Folder 49i: Vinaver, Maksim, 1917
Folder 49j: Vizetelly, Ernest Alfred, 1897
Folder 49k: Wahl, Saul, 1907
Folder 50a: Waley Cohen, Robert, 1920
Folder 50b: Warburg, Max M., n.d.
Folder 50c: Watt, H., 1909, 1915
Folder 50d: Weizmann, Chaim, 1916
Folder 50e: Wesselitsky, Gabriel de, 1915, 1922
Folder 50f: White, Montagu, 1899
Folder 50g: Wiener, S., 1901
Folder 50h: Wilenkin, Gregory, 1896
Folder 50i: Wirth, ? (Mrs.), 1907
Folder 50j: Wischnitzer, Mark, 1926-1928
Folder 50k: Zangwill, Israel, 1907-1917, 1925
Folder 50l: Zola, [Gabrielle Alexandrine ?], 1906

Browse by Series:

Series I: Lucien Wolf - Personal, 1708-1930,
Series II: Lucien Wolf - Historical writings and related materials, 1708, 1886-1933,
Series III: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Correspondence with Individuals, 1892-1930,
Series IV: Conjoint Foreign Committee and and Joint Foreign Committee with Organizations, 1885-1930,
Series V: Correspondence of Lucien Wolf and of the Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee with British Government Offices, 1895-1928,
Series VI: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Subject files arranged chronologically, 1889-1951,
Series VII: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Subject files arranged geographically, 1880-1963,
Series VIII: Conjoint Foreign Committee and Joint Foreign Committee - Organizations Files, 1882-1957,
Series IX: Papers of David Mowshowitch, 1901, 1915-1955,
Series X: Newspaper clippings, 1879-1957,
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