Metadata
WORK ID: NEFA 14601 (Master Record)
Title | Year | Date |
PAM'S FIRST BIRTHDAY | 1941-1944 | 1941-01-01 |
Details
Original Format: 16mm Colour: Black & White / Colour Sound: Silent Duration: 16 mins 40 secs Credits: Individuals: Ruth Jacobson Genre: Home Movie Subject: FAMILY LIFE SEASIDE |
Summary A series of home movie filmed by Ruth Jacobson between 1941 and 1944. The film documents her children Valarie, Pamela and Malcolm at home in Newcastle, visiting Stanhope in County Durham as well as on holiday with friends at Colwyn Bay, Wales. |
Description
A series of home movie filmed by Ruth Jacobson between 1941 and 1944. The film documents her children Valarie, Pamela and Malcolm at home in Newcastle, visiting Stanhope in County Durham as well as on holiday with friends at Colwyn Bay, Wales.
Title: Pam’s First Birthday, 1941
The film opens on children descend stairs at the Jacobson family home in Newcastle for a birthday party. A six-month-old child is fed in his high chair. Scenes of children eating at a birthday party follow.
Title:...
A series of home movie filmed by Ruth Jacobson between 1941 and 1944. The film documents her children Valarie, Pamela and Malcolm at home in Newcastle, visiting Stanhope in County Durham as well as on holiday with friends at Colwyn Bay, Wales.
Title: Pam’s First Birthday, 1941
The film opens on children descend stairs at the Jacobson family home in Newcastle for a birthday party. A six-month-old child is fed in his high chair. Scenes of children eating at a birthday party follow.
Title: Leaside Garden & Rhos-on-Sea (Colwyn Bay, Wales)
A young girl rocks a baby in a pram. The girl plays in a driveway. A woman and two children are seated on a blanket on a stony beach at Rhos-on-Sea.The children play with bucket and spades on the beach.
Title: Valerie & Pam, Toni & Jane, Rhos -on-Sea (Colwyn Bay, Wales)
A family scene on the beach at Rhos-on-Sea with a woman seated on a beach. The woman reads to the children. A fourth child plays with a spade in the sand. Four girls aged between one and six are sitting on a blanket in a garden. The youngest child crawls towards camera.
Title: Family with the Freedmans, Rhos-on-Sea (Colwyn Bay, Wales)
Two men shake hands beside a car parked next to a seawall. A woman holds a baby in the front garden of a terraced house on the seafront. A young girl walks past camera. Her mother places sunglasses on a baby. A group of six people unload a car.
Title: Valerie & Pam at Stanhope, 1942
A woman helps a baby walk in a garden. Two girls are playing croquet in the garden. In the next shot they are playing by a small stream.
Title: Valerie, Pam & Malcolm, 1944
The baby Malcolm sits up in his pram. A young girl rides a tricycle. Two girls hug the baby in the pram.
Title: The Children at Home
A baby plays with a doll in his pram. Two girls wave at the camera and siton a blanket with the baby. The baby plays with a ball on the blanket.
Context
Born Birmingham, January 19, 1919. Died Newcastle, February 8, 2009, aged 90
Regarded as the grande dame of Newcastle Jewry, Ruth Jacobson moved to Newcastle as a bride of 18 and became a leading light in the city and the region, writes Faga Speker.
The youngest of four children of Rev Dr Abraham Cohen, chief minister of the Birmingham Hebrew Congregation from 1913-49, she received early training in charity work from her mother, Bessie. Armed with a receipt book and her natural charm, she...
Born Birmingham, January 19, 1919. Died Newcastle, February 8, 2009, aged 90
Regarded as the grande dame of Newcastle Jewry, Ruth Jacobson moved to Newcastle as a bride of 18 and became a leading light in the city and the region, writes Faga Speker. The youngest of four children of Rev Dr Abraham Cohen, chief minister of the Birmingham Hebrew Congregation from 1913-49, she received early training in charity work from her mother, Bessie. Armed with a receipt book and her natural charm, she was sent to collect annual subscriptions for the Poor Children’s Boot and Shoe Fund. Marrying in Newcastle in 1937, she was a mother at 19. Another two babies soon followed. Her husband, Lionel Jacobson, had gained a degree at Oxford and trained for the bar. But he went into his father’s business, Jackson the Tailor, founded in the early 1900s, and ran it with his brother before its 1953 merger with Burtons, of which he became chairman. Despite her young family, Ruth volunteered for war work and helped with the Women’s Voluntary Service until after the war. She also started her lifelong involvement in the local Daughters of Zion and joined Wizo, soon becoming branch chairman. Keen on local and especially smaller charities, she and her husband set up a trust fund. But their main endowment was the Ruth and Lionel Jacobson chair of clinical pharmacology at Newcastle University Medical School, twinned with the school of medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For over 40 years, each medical department of the university has invited a speaker from abroad to deliver the annual Jacobson Lecture. After Lionel’s death in 1978, their youngest child, Malcolm, joined Ruth as trustee. In the 1973 community amalgamation, the Jacobsons bought the site for today’s United Hebrew Congregation of Newcastle upon Tyne. The Lionel Jacobson House, the original house on the site, provides constantly used function and drop-in rooms, synagogue offices and a small shul for the daily minyan, as well as the kosher food facility. Keen collectors of contemporary art, the couple made generous loans to Newcastle and Durham Universities. Ruth was a life-member and fundraiser of the Friends of the Laing Art Gallery. A co-founder in 1948 of the highly successful amateur dramatic society, The Jewish Players, she appeared in many of its productions and led the company to its triumphant securing of two cups at the local drama festival. Involved with youth, she was chairman of the fundraising committee of the Northumberland Association of Youth Clubs, a governor of Rutherford Comprehensive School, and a member of the development trust committee of Newcastle Church High School. As founder-chairman of the League of Jewish Women in Newcastle, which she was asked to start in the mid-1970s, she became involved with the North East School for the Blind, where she used her thespian skills by acting out each character in the stories she read to the schoolchildren. Maintaining her interest in Wizo, she sat on its national executive committee and was a vice-president of Wizo UK until retiring in 2005 after receiving a Woman of Valour award. She was also active in the Newcastle Ladies’ Cancer Committee and was the first female board director of the Metro radio station, retiring in 1989 aged 70. In 1980 she was invited to join a group visit to schools and hospitals in China, organised by a London communal figure, the late Ruth Winston-Fox, with the aim of gaining emancipation for Chinese women. Asked by the deputy lord mayor of Newcastle, Labour councillor Bennie Abrahams, to serve as his deputy lady mayoress, she continued as his lady mayoress in 1981, as Mrs Marion Abrahams was too ill for public duties. Politically unaffiliated, she became a huge asset, especially with the lord mayor’s failing eyesight. She was appointed MBE in 1989 for her contribution to charitable services in north east England. But she retired from her positions as her oldest daughter, Valerie’s, health deteriorated with multiple sclerosis. Both Valerie and Valerie’s son, Nigel, predeceased her. She is survived by her second daughter, Pamela; son, Malcom; six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Obituary: Ruth Jacobson: The Jewish Chronicle online, 26 March 2009 http://www.thejc.com/social/obituaries/obituary-ruth-jacobson |