Jewish Heritage Collection: Oral history interview with Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr.

OralHistoryResource

Jewish Heritage Collection: Oral history interview with Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr.

1996

Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr., was born in 1923 in Charleston, South Carolina, the eldest of three children of Jeanette Weinstein and Louis D. Rubin, Sr. Jeanette grew up in Richmond, Virginia, and met Louis Sr. while visiting her sister in Charleston. In this interview, Louis talks about his father and his father's brothers. Uncle Harry worked with Marion Hornik at M. Hornik & Company in Charleston. Uncle Dan took a job at a Birmingham, Alabama, newspaper, and later became a Broadway playwright. He also wrote Hollywood screenplays for Paramount Studios in the 1930s. Uncle Manning, who wrote advertising for M. Marks & Sons Department Store in Charleston, worked for decades, beginning in 1914, for Charleston's Evening Post as a reporter and editor. Louis Sr. was a self-taught electrician and opened Louis Rubin Electrical Company at 333 King Street. Jeanette and Louis Sr. moved the family to Richmond in 1942 to be near her brothers; Louis Sr. had been sickly and Jeanette was struggling to take care of her family. In Richmond, Louis Sr. earned local fame for his weather predictions based on the clouds and became known as the Weather Wizard of Wythe Avenue. Louis Jr. oversaw the revision of his father's book, The Weather Wizard's Cloud Book, published in 1989 by Algonquin Books, which the younger Rubin had founded in 1983. The Rubins were members of Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim, Charleston's Reform congregation, which, the interviewee recalls, was very small when he was growing up. Boys at the temple were confirmed, but did not have bar mitzvahs. Louis Jr. had only one Jewish friend as a boy; the rest were not Jewish. "Growing up as I did, being a Jew wasn't very important. I didn't define myself as being a Jew." As an adult, Louis thinks of himself primarily as a southerner and considers himself Jewish culturally but not religiously. He compares himself to his brother, Manning, who has embraced his Jewish identity and religion. Louis mentions Charleston natives Sidney Rittenberg, Sr.; Octavus Roy Cohen, Jr., Earl Mazo, and the Mazo families. He describes the differences between what locals at one time referred to as Uptown Jews and Downtown Jews. "We were raised to be snobs." His mother was among those with the attitude that "Orthodox Jews were somehow peasants." He considers the impact of the Holocaust on American Jews, in particular, its role in breaking down the barriers between Charleston's Uptown Jews and Downtown Jews. He adds that economic and social parity played just as much a role in eliminating bias. Louis discusses the assimilation of Jews in America: where once many may have abandoned religious practices that set them apart, he now sees a return to traditional customs. Louis married Eva Redfield, an Episcopalian, in 1951, and they raised two sons, Robert and William, in a secular home. The interviewer references a few of Rubin's many published works, tracing the parallels between his fiction and real life.

Sound recording : 1 sound cassette : digital.Transcript : 33 p. ; 28 cm.

eng, Latn

Related Entities

There are 16 Entities related to this resource.

Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim (Charleston, S.C.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6912wrb (corporateBody)

Congregation Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim was organized in 1749 in Charleston, SC, following the Sephardic ritual. The current 1841 synagogue was built by enslaved African descendants owned by David Lopez Jr, a prominent slaveowner and proponent of the Confederate States of America, after the original synagogue was destroyed in a fire in 1838. ...

Rubin family.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6fc4b7f (family)

Rubin, Louis D. (Louis Decimus), 1895-1970

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Mazo family.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6fp0fgd (family)

Cohen, Octavus Roy, 1891-1959

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6903p3c (person)

Rubin, Ruth.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6dn840s (person)

Ruth Rubin was a folkorist and a noted performer of Yiddish folksong. Her performances in New York included recitals at Carnegie Hall and at Town Hall. She was born in Montreal in 1906. From the guide to the Ruth Rubin Collection of Yiddish folksong and folklore [sound recording] :, 1947-1966, (The New York Public Library. Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound.) ...

Rubin, Ruth Ensel, 1899-1963.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6nd00hk (person)

College of Charleston

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Rubin, Manning, d. 1967.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qp0632 (person)

Rubin, Louis D., Jr. (Louis Decimus), 1923-2013

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6251j4z (person)

Papers of Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr., of Chapel Hill, N.C., educator, literary critic, scholar, novelist, journalist, editor, and publisher. Rubin was professor of English at Hollins College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and founder of Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. From the description of Louis Decimus Rubin papers, 1945- (Series 1.1.1 D-H) [manuscript]. WorldCat record id: 31069813 From the description of Louis Decimus Rubin papers, 1945- WorldCat reco...

Rubin, Daniel N. (Daniel Nathan), 1892-

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Rubin, Hyman Leavy, 1864-1911.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6x969h1 (person)

Rosengarten, Dale, 1948-...

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Cohen, Esther, 1897-1988.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c8687q (person)

Rubin, Dora, 1888-1991.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qz69dc (person)

Rubin, Harry, 1889-1960.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61c5vhw (person)