Rice University to rename Houston Jewish History Archive

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In appreciation of the Alexander family of Houston’s longtime support of Jewish Studies in the School of Humanities and the Woodson Research Center in Fondren Library, Rice will name the Houston Jewish History Archive the Joan and Stanford Alexander South Texas Jewish Archives effective Jan. 1.

Aiming to dramatically expand its reach and mission, the archive will now seek to cover the entire South Texas region and to ramp up its online presence with interactive digital exhibits and an increased focus on record digitization. A further goal is to expand student and professional opportunities to work with the archive both on campus and in the field across South Texas.

New logo for Joan and Stanford Alexander South Texas Jewish Archives
The name change and regional expansion comes as Rice is set to host the 47th annual conference of the Southern Jewish Historical Society, the leading professional organization dedicated to the study of Jewish life in the Southern United States, Oct. 20-22, 2023. The event will bring over 100 scholars and researchers to the university for a series of lectures, panels and tours — many of which will be open to the public — including a reception that will spotlight the archive’s current collection and its road map for the future.

“None of what we’ve been able to achieve would be possible without the Alexanders’ generous and steadfast support,” said Joshua Furman, the archive’s curator and associate director of the Program in Jewish Studies. He first came to Rice in 2015 for a postdoctoral fellowship made possible by the Alexanders’ patronage.

Matthias Henze, director of the Program in Jewish Studies and the Isla Carroll and Percy E. Turner Professor of Biblical Studies, echoed Furman’s deep appreciation for the family’s visionary philanthropy. “The Alexanders’ longtime involvement with Rice, to Jewish studies in general and with the archive in particular, means that we simply wouldn’t be where we are without them” Henze said.

Henze explained that Rice’s Jewish history archive is a perfect encapsulation of how the School of Humanities and its Program in Jewish Studies are heavily invested in making the fruits of their scholarly pursuits accessible to the benefit of those outside the world of academia in Houston, South Texas and beyond.

“We’re very much a part of the School of Humanities that is outward-looking, being academic first of all, but not exclusively,” Henze said. “The archive is not just the crown jewel of our program — it embodies this collaboration between Rice and the community.”

The archive’s genesis dates back to the days after Hurricane Harvey hit Houston in August 2017. Furman along with Rice historians and archivists quickly scoured predominantly Jewish neighborhoods, among the hardest hit by Harvey, in search of historical documents at risk of being destroyed by the storm’s floodwaters. Since then, the archive has amassed over 200 individual collections of materials, including such notable collections as the historical records of Houston’s Congregation Beth Yeshurun — the largest Conservative synagogue in the United States — and an extensive set of oral history interviews of prominent Jewish Texans spanning four decades.

Four years after the Houston Jewish History Archive’s official opening in 2018, the archive now offers paid internships to provide hands-on training to students and in recent years has embarked on an oral history program, giving Jewish Texans yet another way to immortalize their family stories.

Kathleen Canning, dean of the School of Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of History, lauded the Houston Jewish History Archive’s staff and supporters for their unceasing efforts to fulfill the archive’s core mission while giving students unmatched opportunities to gain firsthand experience with the crucial work of historical preservation.

“As a historian and the dean of humanities, the Houston Jewish History Archive, established and supported by the enormous generosity of the Alexanders and many others in the Houston Jewish community, is a treasure for Rice University,” said Canning. “It not only preserves and curates the community’s precious artifacts, but it provides meaningful opportunities for Rice students to engage in research with fascinating materials that would otherwise be inaccessible to them and to discover a vibrant part of Houston’s history as a living local context for Jewish history.”