The Way to a Man’s Heart ("The Settlement" Cook Book)
Lizzie Black Kander
1901
Related Guide
The Rise of Popular Culture: From Folk Traditions to Mass Media
Jewish popular culture evolved from following folk traditions to creating new forms of mass media, strengthening ethnic identity while depleting cultural heterogeneity.
Creator Bio
Lizzie Black Kander
The American social activist Lizzie Black Kander graduated valedictorian from Milwaukee East Side High School in 1878. In her commencement address, titled “When I Become President,” she satirized American politicians and considered what she would do were she elected president. After completing her formal education, she was involved with immigrant aid organizations primarily serving Russian Jews arriving in Milwaukee. She married local politician Simon Kander in 1881 and in 1900 helped form the Milwaukee Jewish Mission, known as the Settlement, the first of a network of social welfare agencies that developed in her city at the turn of the century. Kander’s Settlement cookbook, which raised millions of dollars for charities, has been revised more than forty times.
You may also like
Civilians (Poster)
Subscription Notice
Calendar for the Year 5665, an Intercalated Year
A Dictionary of Political Terms
Sadie Salome, Go Home!
The Essence of Baseball Explained for Non-Sportsmen
This illustration of a baseball diamond appeared in a short primer on baseball published in a Yiddish newspaper.