Jump to content

Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery

Coordinates: 46°04′41″N 99°22′44″W / 46.078°N 99.379°W / 46.078; -99.379
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bohemian Baltimore (talk | contribs) at 16:45, 17 May 2022 (added Category:Rural Jewish culture using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery is located in North Dakota
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery is located in the United States
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery
Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery
Location48th Ave. SE.
Ashley, North Dakota
Coordinates46°04′41″N 99°22′44″W / 46.078°N 99.379°W / 46.078; -99.379
Area1.7 acres (0.69 ha)
WebsiteAshley Jewish Cemetery Association
NRHP reference No.15000807
Added to NRHPNovember 17, 2015[1]

The Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery is an early 20th century burial site near Ashley, North Dakota. The Russian and Romanian Jews who farmed the area beginning in 1905 arrived as refugees fleeing pogroms and persecution. They had never farmed before, due to restrictions against Jews owning land in their native countries. Despite this lack of experience and the many rocks and boulders that peppered their claims, with the assistance of their German-Russian neighbors, and hard work and persistence, the great majority of them were successful enough to buy their land outright prior to the five-year waiting period contained within the Homestead Act of 1862, or to own their land at the five year mark.[2]

Over the course of the next 20 years, these Jewish farmers moved off their farms to carve out their livelihoods. Though many remained as shopkeepers in the smaller towns in the Dakotas, a significant number chose to eventually move closer to larger Jewish educational and social centers.[3]

Established in 1913, the cemetery remains as the only physical evidence of the largest Jewish agricultural settlement in North Dakota, South Dakota, or Montana. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places listings in 2015, and re-dedicated with explanatory plaques in 2017. It is the only remaining Jewish homesteader cemetery in the Dakotas that has been continually cared for by the descendants of those buried, and the Ashley residents hired by the descendants to maintain the grounds.[4]

Background

Russian and Romanian Jewish immigrants who fled to America to escape pogroms in their home country, began staking homestead claims in McIntosh County, North Dakota in 1905, arriving two decades into the county's homesteading immigration flux.[5] What they found was a stark landscape of rocky soil and severe weather conditions. They lived either in sod houses, made of earth and grass, or dug out holes in the ground and covered them with manure for protection against the elements. Nevertheless, they persevered, seeing the fruits of their labors in agriculture, livestock and dairy farming.[6]

These settlers also maintained their Jewish religion and culture despite living in this remote area. The first Jewish congregation was formed by lay leader Kiva Bender, buried in the cemetery, who also formed the first Jewish farming cooperative in the area. Two rabbis, Rabbi Julius Hess and Rabbi Ostrowsky, later served the Ashley/Wishek and other nearby North Dakota rural areas.[7]

The cemetery

The Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery is located approximately three miles north of the city limits of Ashley, North Dakota. The first burial marked with a monument was that of Lipman Bloom in 1913. The last burial was of Maxine Sally Becker in 1932, about the time the community itself disbanded. The cemetery is the only remaining physical evidence that the community existed.[8]

The site contains 22 monuments, with epitaphs inscribed in the Hebrew language and symbols meaningful in the Jewish religion, as well as unmarked graves. Infants were buried in a separate area in accordance with Jewish tradition of the time. According to the National Park Service, Ashley was the largest Jewish agricultural settlement ever in North Dakota, with the largest number of marked graves of Jewish homesteader families in either North or South Dakota.[9]

National Register of Historic Places

NRHP and other recognition

The cemetery was added to the NRHP in North Dakota on November 17, 2015.[10] North Dakota governor Doug Burgum declared May 21, 2017 "North Dakota Jewish Homesteaders Day", to honor the re-dedication ceremony held by descendants of those buried in the cemetery.[11]

References in literature

On March 19, 2019, Still, a biography/memoir about five generations of the Bender (Bendersky) family, co-written by Rebecca E. Bender and her late dad, Kenneth M. Bender, was published by North Dakota State University Press. In following the Bender family from Odessa, Russia to Ashley, North Dakota, and beyond, the book provides detail regarding the Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery, as well as the Ashley Jewish community, and the overt and subtle challenges to faith that were faced by the Jewish homesteaders and their descendants.[12]

See also

  • Sons of Jacob Cemetery, another Jewish homesteaders' cemetery in Ramsey County, North Dakota, NRHP-listed in 2017

Citations

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Bender 2015
  3. ^ Bender 2015
  4. ^ Bender 2015
  5. ^ Bender 2015
  6. ^ Bender 2015
  7. ^ Bender 2015
  8. ^ Bender 2015
  9. ^ Bender 2015
  10. ^ "Ashley Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery (overview)". National Register of Historic Places Program. National Park Service. Retrieved June 5, 2017.
  11. ^ Jerry, Klinger. "The Ashley N. D. Jewish Homesteaders Cemetery" (PDF). The Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation. Retrieved June 5, 2017.; Donovan, Lauren (May 13, 2017). "Ashley Jewish cemetery gets rededication". The Washington Times. Associated Press. Retrieved June 5, 2017.
  12. ^ Still, Rebecca E. Bender and Kenneth M. Bender (NDSU Press 2019)

References