THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Fr iday, Febru ary 16, 1962 -- 18 Bicentenary of First Jew in Detroit By IRVING I. KATZ Executive Secretary, Temple Beth El; President, Jewish Historical Society of Michigan. This spring marks the 200th Anniversary of the coming of the first Jew to Detroit. He was Chapman Abraham, a tough, hardy pioneer who battled the wilderness, the treacherous wa- ter routes and the Indians, with all the stamina of Daniel. Boone, and all in search of the beaver pelt. The British conquest of Can- ada in 1759-1760 included the forts along the Western Great Lakes and on November 29, 1760, Major Robert Rogers and a British garrison occupied De- troit and within a few months Fort Detroit (the name Pont- chartrain was dropped) was rec- ognized as the center of the Indian trade in the Northwest. Early in the spring of 1761, En- glish traders began to arrive; and a year later, the name of Chapman Abraham, a Jewish trader, appears in the Detroit records, doing business with James Sterling, a well-known early merchant of Detroit, and in subsequent years with the other early merchants of De- troit. Chapman Abraham was born in Germany about 1723 and moved with his family to En- gland. He came to Canada with the British troops, probably in 1759 or 1760. Originally he and his four business associates (Gershon Levi, Benjamin Lyon, Ezekiel Solomon and Levi Solo- mons) were army supply men, and we may assume that the firm had contracts to provision the troops during the French and Indian • war' (17544763). After the war, the partners re- mained in the country and turn- ed to the fur trade. Between 1762 and 1783, the scene of Abraham's activities was the outpost of Detroit. Abraham went through the horrors of the . general Indian Uprising of 1763, known as Pon- tia('s Conspiracy, and 'shared the common experience of an Indian captivity with its immi- nent threat of death by torture. In May, 1763, Chapman Abra- ham sought to bring up five boats of merchandise from Ni- agara, apparently totally unaware of the Indian uprising. Accord- ing to the trader, John Porte- ous, in his narrative of the siege of Detroit, Abraham was cap- tured with his cargo on the De- troit River on May 12 and made a prisoner of the Indians. After a harrowing experience of two months, he was exchanged by the • Indians for a Potawatomi Chief. Abraham's capture by the In- dians appears in his own affi- _davit of Aug. 9, 1763, taken be- fore a Military Court of Inquiry held by Major Henry Gladwin in Detroit. The Rev. John Hec- kewelder of Bethlehem, Pa., the missionary of the United Breth- ren, preserved for us the fol- lowing account of Abraham's capture (Heckewelder refers to Chapman Abraham as "Chap- man" and "Mr. Chapman" but it has been . established beyond doubt that it is the same per- son). "About the commencement of the Indian War in 1763, a trading Jew, named Chapman, who was going up the Detroit River with a batteau-load of goods'which he had brought from Albany, was taken by some Indians of the Chippewa nation, and destined to be put to death. A Frenchman impelled by motives of friendship and humanity, found means to steal the prisoner, and kept him so con- cealed for some time, that although the most diligent search was made, the place of his confinement could not be discovered. At last, however, the unfortunate man was betrayed by some false friend, and again fell into the power of the Indians who took him across the river to be burn- ed and tortured. Tied to the stake and the fire burning by his side, his thirst from the great heat became intolerable, and he begged that some drink might be given to him. It is a custom with the Indians, previous to a prisoner being put to death, to give him what they call his last meal; a bowl of pottage or broth was therefore brought to him for that purpose. Eager to quench his thirst, he put the bowl. immediately to his lips, and the liquor being very hot, he was dreadfully scalded. Being a man of very quick temper, the moment he felt his mouth burned, he threw the bowl with its contents full in the face of the man who handed it to him. "He is mad! He is mad!" resounded from all quar- ters. The bystanders considered his conduct as an act of insanity and immediately untied the cords with which he was bound, and let him go where he pleased. This fact was well known to all the inhabitants of Detroit from whom I first heard it, and it was afterwards confirmed to me by Mr. Chapman himself, who was established as a merchant at that place." Stephen Vincent Benet, the well-known American poet and novelist,' used this incident in "Tales Before Midnight", in a story of a Jewish fur • trader, "Jacob and the Indians." Abraham's capture in 1763 may have been his second cap- tivity by the Indians. In Novem- ber, 1759, General Jeffery Am- herst, Commander - in - Chief of the English forces in North America, sent a scouting party from Crown Point, New York, into Canada to establish com- munications with General James Wolfe, then closing in on Que- bec. It was expected that brib- ery would allay the enmity of encountered Indians who would lead them to Wolfe. Indians did appear, but their hostility made them immune to persuasion, and the entire party was taken pris- THE JEWISH NEWS DET ROIT { ~ j---fij MICHIGAN A Weekly Review of Jewish Events Reaches the Buying Market in Detroit and Suburbs. More Results at lower Cost in Michigan's ONLY English-Jewish Newspaper. Don't Delay - Write TODAY for Rate Card 17100 West Seven Mile Road Detroit 35, Michigan oner. Among the captives was a man named Abraham, who may possibly have been Chap- man Abraham. Abraham was a professing Jew and a member of the Span- ish - Portuguese Congregation Shearith Israel of Montreal, Canada's first synagogue estab- lished in 1768. The reference to Abraham as a baptized Jew in a 1763 letter of the trader James Sterling of Detroit need not be taken literally. In this letter Abraham was addressed facetiously as "damned Jew" and told to start acting like a Christian, now that he was bap- tized. Frontier wit was anything but delicate. One suspects that the reference was to some carousal, and that the baptism was a secular one of immersion in liquor, rather than a priestly ceremony in water. Until 1769, Montreal and Que- bec merchants were particularly hard-pressed. Abraham and his partners were no exceptions, and in 1768 they confessed they were unable to meet their finan- cial obligations. They offered to make a settlement, surrender- ing all their property, and most of the creditors were willing even though the assets would not have yielded more than seven shillings in the pound. However, when other creditors would entertain no thought of such an arrengement, the debt: ors, on the advice of Attorney General Francis Maseres, pre- sented a joint petition to Gov- ernor Guy Carleton asking for some sort of financial arrange- ment, or the appointment of a commission of bankruptcy which would be authorized to divide the remaining assets equally_ among the creditors. Evidently their petition was not without effect; there is no record that they were confined for debt. On the contrary, we meet them again as active, if not successful merchants. Clarence M. Burton, the noted historian of Detroit, lists Chap- man Abraham among the early merchants of Detroit and states that following his release by the Indians in 1763, Abraham carried on a successful business in the village. Of Abraham's residence and activities in Detroit we find many evidences. In 1765, he was selling rum in partnership with a man by the name of Lyons (possibly Benjamin Lyon). Iii 1767, he owned a lot and house within the fort of Detroit and purchased a piece of additional land adjoining his property. In the same year he did business under the firm name of Chapman Abraham and Company, and in 1768, when Detroit had 678 white inhabi- tants, exclusive of the garrison, he purchased an additional "tract of land with house and appurtenances." In 1769, he was granted a license by Governor Guy Carleton at Montreal to trade at "Michilimackinac and beyond," and his one canoe of merchandise consisted of "rum and brandy, wine, gunpowder, ball and shot, and fusils." In 1776, he sold a tract of land in Detroit, and the following year he purchased a 'parcel with a house and appurtenances within the fort of Detroit. In 1778, 1780, and 1781, Abra- ham was granted licenses to trade at Detroit. In 1779, he was a witness at a sale of land in Detroit. His name is listed on a petition dated Jan. 5, 1780, of the merchants of Detroit to Governor Haldimand, which re- fers to "the heavy losses which they have sustained since the commencement of the present disturbances, in the transporta- tion of merchandize, liquors, and peltries, on the communica- tion and over the Lakes." He is also listed among the merchants of Detroit who shipped rum on Dec. 25, 1780. In 1781, Abraham was still Cleveland Pitcher Barry Latman Gives Credit to Ty Cobb for Success BY HAROLD U. RIBALOW (Copyright, 1962, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) A recent issue of Sport maga- zine included a feature which' has helped to shatter an image of the immortal Ty Cobb which too many people have held for too many years, The story has been that Cobb was a hater, a passionate hater. But a young Jewish baseball player, trying hard to make the big leagUe grade, found Cobb a friendly, thoughtful man. The pitcher is Barry Latman and here is the story. Latman is a left-handed pit- cher with the Cleveland Indians and he had his best year in 1961. As a . high school hurler, Barry was a brilliant success and he also managed to develop a swell head. Barry's father, who had closely followed his son's career, arranged for a meeting with Cobb, who was then 66 years of age. Although the Jewish boy and the Georgia Peach had never met before, Cobb talked for hours, offering advice and drawing on his own vast experi- ence and genius at the game. Latman says, 'When I left, Ty and I agreed to write to each other from time to time. He told me to feel free to ask him for any advice and I took him up. For more than five years we wrote to each other and the help he gave me was infinately valuable in what small success I've had in the major le a g u e s. His letters helped me meet in three cate- gories: 1. Conditioning; 2. Con- centration; 3. Overall mental attitude." The letters themselves, which are reprinted in the magazine, are detailed, full of technical advice and information and, now and again, a personal word of encouragement. And in spite of the fact that Cobb was known to be a tough, arrogant player, he was soft and modest so far as Latman was con- cerned. In 1959, Cobb watched Barry pitch and Ty found a flaw in doing business as a member of the firm of Chapman Abraham and Company. He is mentioned in the manuscripts of John Askin. On March 28, 1781, he appears on a list of merchants of Detroit who petitioned Major Arent Schuyler De' Peyster, then the commanding officer of De- troit, to grant relief from mer- chants who are able but are un- willing to pay their lawful debts. In the same year, he pur- chased a "tenement" (dwelling) on St. Louis Street from Wil- liam Edgar, the well-known trader. Under a contract dated Oct. 23, 1781, Abraham sold to Paw- ling & Burrell all his goods, which included "snuff tobacco, mustard and silver works," and rented them his "house, shop, eellar and room" for a period of six months. In 1782, when the number of inhabitants in the entire Detroit settlement was 2,191, Abraham sold a "tene- ment" and lot to James May. In 1782 and 1783, he did busi- ness with Thomas Williams. Abraham died in 1783 and was buried in the cemetery of Congregation Shearith Israel in Montreal. His last Will and Testament throws light on his religion and social loyalties, as well as on his relation to his family in Plymouth, England. It states in part: "First and principally, I commit and recommend my soul to God, and my body to the earth, to be decently interred in the burial ground of the Jewish congregation near to the city of Montreal; and I request of my executors hereinafter to be named, that they would invite the brethren of the Free Mason Lodge of which I am a member, to accompany my body to the grave." "Whereas my wife is now enceint (`pregnant') by me, I do will, give and bequeath all the residue of my Barry's work. "It affects your control," he wrote, "and also takes away from the breaks or effectiveness of your football." Then Cobb added these nice lines, "Do not bring my name into this. Just say a friend of yours, an ex-ballplayer, saw you work and mentioned it to you." This ex-ballplayer was per- haps the greatest in history! And he did help Latman who, in 1961, lost only five games and won 13. He gave up only 54 bases on balls and fanned 109. Latman may now be on the road to the top in baseball, thanks to Ty Cobb. Charming Doubleday Children's Stories Parents who are . constantly in search of good reading material .for their very young children will be especially de- lighted with "A Nonsense Al- phabet" by Edward Lear, with illustrations by Richard Scarry. Offered as "a sense and non- sense" book, this alphabet rhymes collection will be found amusing and instructive for the little one who either can al- ready read or to whom the story is to be read. The book was published as one of the new series of Double- day children's stories. Also by Edward Lear is another Doubleday children's book, "The Owl and the Pussy- Cat," with illustrations by Wil- liam Pene DuBois. It is another charming booklet with a good plot for youngsters. Canadian Counterpart of U.S. BIT Organized Toronto - Creation of the Canadian Council of YM- WHA and Jewish Community Centers was announced here at a meeting of volunteer and pro- fessional leaders of eight 'Cen- ters and YM-YWHA in Canada. Samuel. Granatstein, of To- ronto, was elected president of the new Council, whose head- quarters will be maintained in the Toronto YM & YWHA. estate so above described unto Rich- ard Macniel and Samuel Judah, of Montreal, merchants, in trust, to be by them employed for the best use and behoof of the child whereof my said wife is now enceint, if it should be born with life; and my will is that the interest of the said residue should be added to the principal and be paid to the said child on the day it shall attain the age of twenty one years; and in the event that the said child shall not be born with life, or shall not attain the age of twenty one years, then I give the said resi- due and interest thereof to my said trustees, to be by them possessed on this farther trust; that is to say, to pay the same in equal portions to my dear brothers, Solomon Abraham and Hart Abraham, of Plimouth, in Great Britain, their executors, ad- ministrators, or assigns. "(Signed in Hebrew script) "Kaufman Abram." Elizabeth Judah, the wife of Chapman Abraham, was born in 1763. She was a member of the well-known Judah clan, early pioneers of the Jewish commu- nity of Montreal, and was re- lated to Aaron Hart, the fore- most Jewish settler in Canada at the time of the English occu- pation. Elizabeth married Chapman Abraham when she was a young girl, Abraham being 40 years her senior. When Abraham died in 1783, she was only 20 years of age, and for the next few years she . is referred to in the records as a "wealthy widow." In 1787, she married, in New York,. the well-known merchant- shipper, Moses Myers. Shortly after their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Myers moved to Norfolk, Va.; where Myers became one of the most prominent citizens in that community. In 1791, My- ers built a mansion in Norfolk which is still standing and is now a city museum. The portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Moses Myers, done by the famous artist, Gil- bert Stuart, are still hanging in this mansion. Mrs. Myers died in 1823.