Shalom,

Please excuse the cross posting, and contact the *Illinois Genealogy
Society* directly at  *[email protected] <[email protected]>* if you have any
information to help them.

The Jewish Genealogical Society of Illinois website has posted photos of
a mysterious collection of gravestone portraits believed to be from a
Chicago-area Jewish cemetery. The oval ceramic or porcelain images were
discovered late last year in Kentucky as part of the liquidation of the
estate of an unidentified Kentucky man. JGSI hopes to reunite the
portrait photos with living family members of those depicted in the
images.

To see the 39 portraits, go to https://jgsi.org/mysteryphotos.

Family members of the deceased who recognize the photos are invited to
email JGSI at [email protected] with information about them.

The portraits were discovered stashed in a bucket on a train caboose on
the property of a man who died last year in Kentucky, according to
Jessica Armstead, an employee of Hudson Estate Buyers, an estate
liquidator service based in Louisville, Kentucky.

The deceased man’s identity cannot be shared because of a
confidentiality agreement between Hudson Estate Buyers and the man’s
family, she said. The man was an avid collector of vintage collectible
items. How he obtained the gravestone photo images is not known,
Armstead said. However, she indicated that the deceased man, whom she
characterized as a “vintage hoarder,” was not from Illinois.

On Dec. 12, 2019, several of the portrait photos were posted to the
Junkin Johnny Facebook page, which is managed by John Hudson, owner of
Hudson Estate Buyers. The post, at
https://www.facebook.com/582166895137135/posts/2825447780809024,
received 34 likes and more than 20 comments, and was shared 54 times. It
was clear from the names on the backs of some of the photos that most or
all of them were likely Jewish. Several of the Facebook commenters
offered specific suggestions about the deceased people’s identities.

Many of the photos had inked stamps on the backs indicating they had
been created by the J.A. Dedouch Co., which was located on Harrison
Street in Oak Park, Illinois, from 1893 to 2004, according to the
Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest. At least one of the
portraits had a reference on the back to Soroka Bros., a monument
company that was located on Roosevelt Road in Forest Park, Illinois.

Due to the proximity of both the Oak Park-based gravestone photo
business and the Forest Park-based monument company to Waldheim Cemetery
in Forest Park, Illinois, it was considered likely that most of the
portraits came from gravestones at Waldheim. But some may have come from
other locations since the Dedouch Co. is known to have had a clientele
beyond the local area.

After being made aware of the Junkin Johnny Facebook post, Jewish
Genealogical Society of Illinois president Debbie Kroopkin contacted
Hudson about JGSI taking over the task of trying to find living
survivors of the people whose portraits were found in Kentucky.

At the Jan. 13, 2020, JGSI monthly board meeting, several board members
took cellphone photos of the fronts and backs of all 39 portrait photos
that had been carefully packed in bubble wrap and shipped to Debbie
Kroopkin by Hudson Estate Buyers.

It was truly the start of a team effort by JGSI board members. Recording
secretary Scott Meyer took on the task of learning about the company
that created the portrait photos. Membership vice president Terry Taylor
and president Debbie Kroopkin volunteered to work on getting the photos
posted on jgsi.org. Treasurer Debbie Soren agreed to explore whether the
photos should also be posted elsewhere online to get exposure beyond
JGSI. Past president Mike Karsen volunteered to begin doing genealogical
research about the few people whose names appeared on the backs of the
portraits. Publicity vice president Martin Fischer agreed to call Hudson
Estate Buyers for background information about how the photos were
discovered and to prepare a press release.

If you know the identities of any of the people shown in these
gravestone photos, please email [email protected].

Submitted by:
Martin Fischer
Vice President-Publicity
Jewish Genealogical Society of Illinois

-- 
Jackie Ben-Efraim

*"Although the books had changed, I the reader had not." **Micha Yosef
Berdichevsky 1865-1921*

Special Collections Librarian
Ostrow Library
American Jewish University
15600 Mulholland Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90077
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