Oral History Interview with Max Leopold, 1976 March 21

Contents List

Container Title
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   1:45
Circumstances Surrounding This Interview
Scope and Content Note: Warren Green's call to Ben Minkoff, logistical problems in interviewing Max Leopold, Leopold's age, possibility of Leopold having relatives who know Minkoff.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   2:50
Biographical Information
Scope and Content Note: Date of birth, date of arrival in America, place of birth, synagogue in Milwaukee on 30th Street, religious affiliation in San Diego.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   3:40
Life In San Diego,
Scope and Content Note: The rabbis ML knows in San Diego, activity with Jewish Center in San Diego, date of arrival in California, reasons for moving out, Wisconsin Jewish farmers living in SD, the Garber boys.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   4:50
About The Garber Boys In Wisconsin Rapids
Scope and Content Note: Frank Garber and the Lubovitcher rabbi, (1920's?) Frank Garber's generosity, his son, Vernon, and his business in Wisconsin Rapids, Alvin Garber, shechet and chazzan at the Arpin agricultural settlement in Wood County, Wisconsin, ML as Arpin's justice of the peace, 1918-1952.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   6:10
More About Tenure As Justice Of The Peace,
Scope and Content Note: Election, correspondence course in law
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   6:40
Settling In Arpin,
Scope and Content Note: Arrival in Milwaukee in 1904, purchasing land at Arpin, reasons for going into farming, previous interest in farming in the Old Country near Baku, cousin, a carpenter, and his introduction of ML to hard physical work, rarity of this among Jews at the time.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   8:40
Getting Started At Arpin
Scope and Content Note: ML's advantages in comparison with other Jewish farmers, help of the county agent, technical advances ML used, number of Jewish families, reasons (given in Yiddish) for departure of Jewish families, general lack of knowledge about farming among Jewish agricultural settlers, financial support from Jewish Agricultural Society--Baron de Hirsch Fund and A.W. Rich, Milwaukee businessman, size of the settlement, expenses.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   12:10
Problems With The Arpin Settlement,
Scope and Content Note: The problems of virgin land, lack of knowledge of agricultural techniques, proper use of tools, more on settlement chronology, working in Milwaukee in the winter, Arpin in the summer, digression on cemetery in San Diego.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   15:05
Farming Full-Time At Arpin,
Scope and Content Note: Moving to Arpin full-time after World War I, clearing land of stumps, high quality of the land, why Jews became good farmers, the significance of being first on the land, listening to the County agent, private smallholding, not communal farming.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   18:10
More On Chronology--Revised
Scope and Content Note: About ML's second wife and the death of his first wife, more about dates of residence at Arpin and in San Diego, careers and location of children.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   20:15
Correspondence Course In Law,
Scope and Content Note: Length of study, reasons for not taking bar examination, difficulties with the Latin alphabet, pronunciation, Rumanian and English pronunciation of legal terms, election as justice of the peace and surrounding circumstances, more on Arpin chronology.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   24:50
Progressive Party Politics
Scope and Content Note: Extent of ML's involvement with the Progressive Party on county-wide and state-wide basis, state conventions, acquaintance with Solomon Levitan, Jews in the Progressive Party, ML's candidacy for state senate seat and Jewish opposition to this, ML's defeat and antisemitism (1930's)--”We've got enough Jews running the country already”--ML's thick skin, the self-financed campaign, ML's anti-prohibitionism and his relatively good electoral results, the Laird family and Republican politics, anecdote on politics and free beer in a tavern.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   30:10
On Leopold's First Wife
Scope and Content Note: The city girl agrees to live on the farm, and how she came to like the farm, her background, more on ownership of farms at Arpin.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   31:10
Community Life In Arpin,
Scope and Content Note: Helping each other, the shul (synagogue), Jewish carpenters, collapse of the shul during a snowstorm, Jewish observance at the shul, Jewish charities in Milwaukee and initial financing of the shul, going to shul in Wisconsin Rapids after collapse of building in Arpin, the fate of the sefer torah, Madison Hillel, circumstances surrounding donation of sefer torah to B'nai B'rith in Madison.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   36:10
Leopold's Children
Scope and Content Note: Dates and places of birth, anecdote about lantern and chronological spacing of boy and girl children, Lawrence Weinstein and his father.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   37:15
Leopold's Jewish Education In Rumania,
Scope and Content Note: Learning aleph-beth from mother before she died, cheder, the only son, prowess in davening (chanted prayer), ancestors, more on L. Weinstein's relatives in Wisconsin.
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   41:10
More About The Early Days In The United States,
Scope and Content Note: Date of arrival, reasons for initially settling in Milwaukee, dates of residence (again).
Tape/Side   1/1
Time   42:35
ML's Work As Director Of Arpin Farm Co-Op,
Scope and Content Note: Management of four feed warehouses, duration of job, circumstances surrounding ML's first election as co-op manager, lack of prejudice against Jews in the co-ops, lack of practical alternatives to the co-ops.
Note: The last approximately thirty seconds of this side of the tape are virtually inaudible.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   0:40
Question on the co-ops (unanswered)
Note: Tape identification is noted on tape erroneously as Tape 2, Side 1.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   0:50
Rauschenbusch Family, Leopold, and unemployment compensation,
Scope and Content Note: Text of letter from Elizabeth Brandeis Rauschenbusch commemorating ML's contribution to the realization of a program of workmen's compensation in the state, the nation, role of Harold Groves.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   3:10
More on Co-op
Scope and Content Note: ML's duties, area covered by the co-op, on buying feed and proceeds from the co-op.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   4:40
To What Extent Was The Arpin Experiment Specifically Jewish?,
Scope and Content Note: Number of Jewish farmers, name of settlement, Arpin farmers and the Arpin Jewish Farmers, Jewish farmers as co-op members, Jews as founders of the co-ops, mistake in seeing Arpin as exclusively Jewish settlement, lack of Jewish girls and the breaking up of the Arpin settlement.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   7:05
Discussion Of Picture Concerning Leopold's Work On Wisconsin's Unemployment Compensation Law,
Scope and Content Note: Prominent politicians and academicians in Wisconsin Progressive politics on committee for drafting pioneer unemployment compensation law of 1932, references to press reports from 1930's, the Rauschenbusch family, the first unemployment compensation payment, ML's role as farm representative on unemployment compensation committee.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   12:25
Perception Of Jewish Identity Among The Settlers At Arpin,
Scope and Content Note: Subsidiary role of Jewishness in the settlement.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   12:50
More On Unemployment Compensation As Regards Farmers
Scope and Content Note: Connection between falling employment and falling farm prices and farm welfare, salutary effect of urban unemployment compensation on farm life, difficulties in convincing the legislature that it should take a risk, how benefits are distributed between social groups, Robert La Follette, general lack of political activity among Jewish farmers at Arpin.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   16:45
Reasons For Other Jewish Families Settling In Arpin,
Scope and Content Note: Unemployment, World War I and rising farm prices, lack of Jewish boys for Jewish girls in Arpin.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   18:15
Why Leopold Did Not Leave Arpin Until 1952
Scope and Content Note: Leopold's sons and daughters and marriage to non-Jews, ML's reaction, number of children married to non-Jews, local boys, the right to do whatever one wants, the daughter who married a Jewish boy, marrying a good man, being tied down to the land, German non-Jews killed by Hitler and good relations with non-Jews, lack of Jewish education in later years, the rigors of being a lone Jew in Wisconsin.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   26:20
Zionism
Scope and Content Note: Lack of interest in the early Arpin community, ML's personal interest.(Interlude with Mrs. Leopold). Kibbutzim, Arpin agriculture, and visit to Israel, “a good farmer is a good farmer all over the world,” co-ops in Israel, guided tours through Israel, the old part of Jerusalem, date of visit to Israel.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   32:10
Retirement In San Diego,
Scope and Content Note: Cemetery director's position, former Arpin neighbors in San Diego and ML's relations with them, his last visit to Arpin, contacts with Wisconsin, minimal contact with descendants of Arpin's Jewish farmers.
Tape/Side   1/2
Time   35:40
The Farm Bureau,
Scope and Content Note: Length of ML's involvement, overlapping memberships of co-ops and Wisconsin Farm Bureau, relative success of Illinois Farm Bureau compared with Wisconsin's, reasons for Wisconsin Farm Bureau's weakening by the Progressive movement, reactionaries in the Farm Bureau and a Jewish farmer, inconsistencies being in both Progressive Party and Wisconsin Farm Bureau, difference in character between National Farm Bureau Federation and Wisconsin Farm Bureau.