Southwest Jewish History
Volume 1, Number 3, Spring 1993
The Goldwaters: An Arizona Story And a Jewish History As Well
Prescott, 1928. Ku Klux Klan march in downtown area with M. Goldwater store in the background
No family in territorial or state history of Arizona had more dramatic
adventures or contributed more than the Goldwaters. Of that there is no
question, but are the Goldwaters really a part of the pioneer Jewish
history of Arizona?
When Senator Barry M. Goldwater ran for the presidency in 1964 there
were nationally- syndicated columnists who wrote that the Arizona
Republican was hiding the fact that he was Jewish. In GOLDWATER, an
autobiography written in 1988, the senator wrote: "Neither my father nor
any of our family ever took any part in the Jewish community. We never
felt or talked about being half Jewish since my mother took us to the
Episcopal church. It was only on entering the power circles of Washington
that I was reminded I was a Jew. I never got used to being singled out in
that way. My answer was always the same. I'm proud of my ancestors and
heritage. I've simply never practiced the Jewish faith or seen myself or
our family primarily of the Jewish culture. In the jargon of today's
sociologist, we've been assimilated. We're American."
The Senator was raised as an Episcopalian, but his father was Bar
Mitzvah, his grandfather was a leader in California Jewish congregations
and in Arizona's territorial days before there were temples or rabbis,
grandfather Michael was a lay leader in informal Jewish services at high
holidays. Columnists could write that the Senator was half-Jewish, but by
the matrilineal line of descent in Judaism, Barry is not Jewish because
his mother was a practicing Episcopalian.
Columnists nevertheless could tease that Barry is half-jewish and
there was a joke that used to make the rounds. The Senator went to play
golf at a restricted Phoenix country club. The club pro apologized to the
Senator for not allowing him to play whereupon Barry Goldwater supposedly
replied: "Why, that's all right. I only wanted to play nine holes."
Jokes aside, the Goldwater story is an important part of the Jewish
history of Arizona and it begins in the "old country," just as it does for
so many other immigrant families coming to the "Goldene Medino," the
golden land of opportunity-America.
It was by one of these historic coincidences that three young men left
England for the United States aboard the same ship and were to be the
beginning of two Jewish families who were to write great chapters in the
history of Arizona. In the depths of the steamship in steerage class were
Michael and Joseph Goldwater and another young man, Philip Drachman, who
was to pioneer in Tucson. The adventuring Goldwater brothers were two of
twenty-two children born to Hirsch and Elizabeth Goldwasser of Konin,
Poland, the site of a Nazi force labor camp where in 1943 Jewish prisoners
burned down the huts, tried to escape and almost all were killed. Were
there relatives of Senator Goldwater in that camp?
It is possible because the Godwasser family of Konin had been so
large. In the book, This Land, These Voices, Barry Goldwater tells of
being so proud of his relatives he tried tracing out the family tree. He
started with his grandfather Michael and then, he said,: "I found his
brother Joe, who was with him in Arizona, and another who was the mayor of
Bulawayo, Rhodesia, and one in Australia and that's about as far as I
got." the Senator continued: "Well, they left Poland, I guess, for the
same reason all Polish Jews left-they wanted to be free from the
Russians."
Like other Jew, the family in Konin felt the terror of the pogroms and
the fear of being conscripted into the Russian army. Michael left Konin,
went to Paris and then to England where he met and married Sarah Gnathion
in the Great Synagogue of London on March 6, 1850. The contract of
marriage was recorded in a "ketubah," a traditional scroll written in
Hebrew-all this early evidence of the Jewishness of the Goldwaters. The
name change was made in England. Michael Goldwater was a successful tailor
in London and way busy raising a family; Caroline and Morris both were
born in London.
Joseph Goldwater
In London it was Joseph who pressed his elder brother into many
adventures, and misadventures, in America. It was Joe who convinced
Michael that the real opportunity was not in tailoring in London, but in
the New World. Sarah Gnathion Goldwater was fearful of undertaking the
trip to the New World and apparently not at all convinced by the stories
of her brother-in-law.
On an August day in 1852 Michael and Joseph boarded the ship for
America while Sarah and her two small children waved from the dock. The
American adventure for the Goldwaters had begun. The ship landed in New
York where the brothers remained for a while; Philip Drachman went on to
Philadelphia where he found family and work as a tailor. Once again it was
brother Joe who set up the next step; he was convinced that they would
literally find gold in California and so the brothers soon were back on
shipboard heading for Nicaragua. There they crossed the Isthmus of Panama
by the crude of travel means and then boarded another steamer for San
Francisco. The year was 1852 and for brother Joe the opportunity was not
in San Francisco but in the mining camp of Sonora. There were a number of
Jewish merchants and miners in Sonora when the brothers arrived in '53.
The Goldwaters sought an opportunity, but found they did not have the
resources to start a merchandising operation. The least expensive venture
would be in a saloon. When Sarah and her two children came to Sonora she
was not in the least happy with the business her husband had chosen and
was more disturbed when she learned that over the bar someone else was
running a house of prostitution.
In fact Sarah never seemed to find great pleasure in the American
West. San Francisco, compared to her London town, was crude, Sonora even
rougher. Well, it is obvious that she believed the Arizona Territory was
no place for a cultured Jewish woman and it is thought that she spurned
coming to the area where her husband was busy establishing what was to
become the Goldwater empire. It is possible that she came to Arizona
once, but that visit is not recorded in any papers yet discovered. Most
of her lifetime was spent in Los Angeles and San Francisco where her
husband visited often enough that the Goldwater family expanded to eight
children.
The Goldwater brothers did poorly in Sonora and fared no better when
they moved to Los Angeles where the brothers had a billiard parlor, bar
and a tobacco shop in the Bella Union Hotel. Michael had brought with him
from the Sonora failure more than $3,000 in debts and he filed for what
today probably would be a Chapter Eleven bankruptcy. A friendship with a
Los Angeles doctor, Wilson W. Jones, turned around the Goldwater story.
Dr. Jones had been to the Arizona mining camp at Gila City and convinced
Michael of the business possibilities there. Brother Joe advanced for
Michael to purchase a wagon, merchandise to be peddled to the miners, and
four mules to pull all of it through the hard desert ride to the Colorado
River. Gila City was some twenty miles north of what is now Yuma,
Arizona. That ubiquitous traveler-writer, J. Ross Browne, described the
mining camp at Gila City this way: "At one time a thousand hardy
adventurers were prospecting the gulches and canyons in this vicinity.
"The earth was turned inside out. Rumors of extraordinary discoveries
flew on the winds in every direction. Enterprising men hurried to the
spot with barrels of whiskey and billiard tables; Jews came with
ready-made clothing and fancy wares; traders crowded in with wagon-loads
of pork and beans; and gamblers came with cards and monte-tables. There
was everything in Gila City within a few months but a church and a jail,
Which were accounted barbarisms by the mass of the population."
Things went well for Michael Goldwater and on July 29, 1861 he became
a citizen of the United States. The glow of Michael's trade along the
Colorado River faded quickly when brother Joe slipped into financial
difficulty. Joe had gone to San Francisco where in 1862 he married Ellen
Blackman. At that time he also over-bought merchandise in San Francisco
and soon a sheriff's sale took away all of Big Mike's merchandise, his
wagon and his mules. Once again the Goldwater story seemed to be ending
in disaster, but again Michael found a friend, Bernard Cohn, who came to
the rescue. Cohn, who was a member of the Los Angeles City Council in
1878, made a proposal Michael could not turn down. He offered Mike a
clerk's job in his store in La Paz, the little trading center of the
Colorado River. Now Big Mike was established in the territory of Arizona
in 1862. It was not very long before Michael became Cohn's partner and he
also joined in side ventures with other pioneer Jews of the area, Solomon
Barth and Aaron Barnett.
In 1863 Arizona officially received territorial status and Prescott
was named its capital. Michael Goldwater saw opportunity and with his
friend Dr. Jones he began a freighting business from the river to
Prescott, the town that would become the basis for the Goldwater empire.
The empire building did not come easily. On the rough wagon trails across
the desert Indians often attacked freighters. On one freighting trip, the
Goldwater brothers and Dr. Jones were heading back to the river from
Prescott when they were attacked by Mohave Apaches. Doc Jones and Mike
were in the lead buggy and Joe was in another buggy just behind them. The
Indians began firing and one bullet cut through the doctor's hat, and two
shots drilled holes in Mike's hat. Joe was not as fortunate. He was hit
in the lower back and another ball lodged in his shoulder. The Indians
were driven from their ambush of the Goldwater party by ranchers who had
come on the battle scene. Dr. Jones worked on Joe, treating him until the
party arrived at a military camp where a surgeon was found. For years Joe
carried on his watch chain the ball Dr. Jones had taken from his back.
Misfortune dogged Joe in California and Arizona. While Mike moved
forward, Joe seemed to have a black cloud over his head; he resembled Al
Capp's troubled cartoon character Joe Btfsplk. Joe was to be involved
with other fights with Indians, in robberies and his wife died at a very
early age.
Brother Michael was doing well, however. He was merchandising,
freighting and even ventured into mining by an off-business event. Mike
and Bernard Cohn virtually became owners of the storied Vulture Mine in
Wickenburg, Arizona, when the owners could not pay for almost $35,000 in
supplies. The partners took temporary possession of the Vulture until
they had collected the dept in gold extracted from the mine. After ninety
days the mine was returned to the original owners. Another strange twist
led to the naming of a new town in Arizona and opening a store there. One
of the Goldwaters' friends was engineer and map-maker Herman Ehrenberg,
often described as the first Jew to come to Arizona. On one trip across
the desert with his son Morris, Mike came across the body of Ehrenberg,
apparently slain by Indians. In his honor the Goldwaters named the
Colorado river town Ehrenberg and opened a store there. For a short
while, Joe was the town's postmaster and young Morris apprenticed in the
store. Years later in research in Yuma it was discovered that the full
name of the map-maker was Herman Christian Ehrenberg and that he was a
member of the Lutheran church in Germany.
In 1872 Michael decided to open a store in Phoenix, a town that was
later that was to become one of the west's largest cities but at that time
was so unimportant that when the railroad came to Arizona it by-passed
Phoenix. The Phoenix store did not do well and there was little or no
growth at Ehrenberg so the stores were closed and Mike turned to Prescott,
the territorial capital, for his next business adventure. The store
opened there in 1876. For Michael this was a key move; for brother Joe
troubles continued. Again he was in trouble over indebtedness in
merchandising and San Francisco creditors sought to have him brought to
court. Extradition from Arizona was requested and a sheriff, a deputy
United states marshal and a railroad security policeman arrived in Yuma to
arrest Joe Goldwater. Joe was having dinner in the home of another pioneer
Jewish merchant, Isaac Lyons, when the officers arrested him. Yuma
citizens tried to stop what they considered a kidnapping. Even though the
charges against Joe Goldwater were dropped, creditors continued to press
for some $46,000 they said Joe owed them. Now the U.S. District Court in
Tucson ordered seizure of Goldwater assets in Yuma. The Yuma sheriff was
told to carry out the order. He refused and as the incident escalated a
posse was sent to Yuma with a federal deputy marshal in charge. The
marshal was to take goods in the store owned by Lyons who had purchased
the items from Joe Goldwater. When the officer tried to take the goods
from the store, Lyons resisted. Soon Yuma citizens surrounded the store,
and the crowd included guards from the Territorial Prison at Yuma.
Everything was set for a major fight when Goldwater and Lyons prevented
bloodshed by calling off their friends and submitting to arrest.
Again Joe Goldwater went to San Francisco where the judge said
California had no jurisdiction over the Arizona matter. Joe Goldwater was
cleared but his credit was ruined.
In Prescott, despite fires and robberies, the Goldwater succeeded and
soon there was expansion wherever mining ventures began throughout the
territory. In speeches Barry Goldwater often used to deliver in his home
state, he would say, "In spite of things you may hear and read, I would
contend that the thing the Goldwaters have done best for the past hundred
years in Arizona is sell pants. At different times there have been
Goldwater stores at La Paz, Ehrenberg, Prescott, Parker, Seymour, Lynx
Creek, Phoenix, Bisbee, Fairbank, Contention, Tombstone, Benson and
Critenden (not only are all the Goldwater stores gone now, but so are many
of those towns).
"In the early days our family tried to meet every need of their
communities...at first our store took pride in supplying most of the
clothing, household, food, farm and industrial needs of pioneer towns. A
customer could be completely outfitted at Goldwater-from cradle to grave.
There are pages in old company ledgers that actually relate the sale of
baby wear and hardware for coffins on the same day. We sold everything the
prospector needed from drill bits and black powder to demijohns of
whiskey. We stocked groceries and stock fee; shoes and hats; furniture
from Austria and herrings from Holland; horseshoes and horse collars; we
had lamps and rugs for the front parlor, spices and soap for the kitchen,
and anything needed for the outhouse. Golwaters was a complete store."
Goldwater's became a household word not only in merchandising but also
in state, national and international politics. There was longevity in both
areas. The Goldwater merchandising that started with the beginning of the
1960's along the Colorado River continued until 1962 when the business was
sold to Associated Dry Goods Corporation of New York. The great story of
the Goldwaters in politics not only was important in territorial days but
remains an influence more than a century after Big Mike's arrival in
Arizona territory.
The political story of the Goldwaters is well-known, especially the
career of Barry M. Goldwater, who as a United States Senator became known
as Mr. Conservative and also was painted a trigger-happy militarist by
opponents when he ran unsuccessfully as the Republican candidate of for
president in 1964. The Senator had gotten his start in Arizona politics
in 1949 when Harry Rosenzweig, son of a pioneer Phoenix jeweler, persuaded
him to run for the Phoenix City Council on a better government ticket.
Both were elected. The Senator readily admits that he learned his
politics at the knee of his Uncle Morris. Morris, Mayor of Prescott for
twenty-two years, was a Democrat, and if that is not enough of a political
twist, in his later years after retirement from the Senate Barry Goldwater
stunned conservatives and even moderate Republicans by coming out for
right of choice of abortion and even supported a Flagstaff Democrat for
national office.
In their home in Poland the Goldwater boys must have had strong
religious training. This was evident in their years in America, not only
with the first generation, but with the second as well for Baron, the
Senator's father, was Bar Mitzvah in San Francisco. The Senator's
grandfather, Michael, was very active in Jewish affairs on the western
frontier. In California he had been a member and officer in three Jewish
congregations. A story in a Prescott newspaper before the turn of the
century relates Michael Goldwater recited Hebrew prayers at the grave of a
young boy who had been run over and killed by a freight wagon. When
Michael Goldwater completed his Arizona adventures and returned to San
Francisco to be with his wife, he became a leader in Jewish affairs again.
He was chairman of the committee that founded Hills of Eternity Cemetery
at Colma, California where Marshall Wyatt Earp is buried in the Marcus
family plot [the Tombstone lawman's wife was Josephine Sarah Marcus.]
Michael also headed the first Hebrew Benevolent Society in San Francisco
and also chaired the first Zionist meeting in that city March 1, 1898.
When the great Arizona pioneer died in 1903 just a few months short of
his eighty-second birthday, Cong. Sherith Israel wrote a memorial tribute
to him that began: "It having pleased our heavenly Father in his infinite
wisdom to call from our midst our venerable and respected member and
ardent worker in the cause of Judaism."
The early Goldwaters had strong Jewish convictions, so strong that out
of respect to their mother her sons did not marry out of the faith until
after she died. It is said that Sarah kept a list of Jewish girls for her
son to date when they came to visit her in San Francisco. It may not have
helped, but when Henry was taken by a pretty non-Jewish school teacher
from Keokuk, Iowa, Julia Kellogg, he faced opposition from brother Morris.
Morris intervened, convincing them to alter there plans. Julia agreed to
undergo conversion and the couple was married in Chicago in 1893 by Rabbi
Emil Hirsch.
Morris did not follow his own advice. He married out of the faith,
but only after mother Sarah had died. Yet all was not forgotten of his
background by Morris Goldwater for when he died in Prescott an item among
his personal effects puzzled his friends. The item was sent to a rabbi in
Tucson for identification. It turned out that for all his years in
Prescott, despite intermarriage, Morris had kept in his possession a
mezzuzah-a parchment scroll with prayers that is mounted on the entry way
of Jewish homes.
After Barry Goldwater's wife Peggy died, the Senator remarried in
1992. Harry Rozenzweig, Barry's life-long personal and political friend,
remarked with a smile, "Susan Wechsler is a very nice Jewish woman."
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