Sunday, March 12, 2017

Levin Family

Levin Family of Trenton
Samuel Levin and his wife, Mary Lidsky, brought up four sons...Louis, Josh, Max and Henry.  

Dr. Louis Levin married Marion Anderson and had two sons, Jonas A. Levin and Robert B. Levin.  
Graduating from Jefferson University Medical School 1919 (when Jews were restricted entry) and pursued further studies at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Graduate School
A Leading cardiologist, Louis served an internship at Western PA Hospital (Pittsburgh) He treated at St. Francis Hospital. He also served NJ Trenton State Prison

He was honored as a Fellow of the American Medical Heart Assn.

He authored “Living Along with Heart Disease (1935) and contributed numerous articles in professional journals.

Jonas ("Jo") A. Levin, World War H, and D-Day Omaha Beach veteran, was Trenton-born (December 21,1921) H he graduated Trenton High School ('39) and Lafayette College ('43). He then attended US Naval Reserve Midshipman School at Columbia
In 1843, the Navy commissioned him as an Ensign (later promoted to Lt. (JG) in 1945). He trained as commanding officer of LCT (Landing Craft Tank) at Solomon Island, MD and Little Creek, VA. He served as a commanding officer on a LCT on D-Day, making five land­ings at Omaha Beach.
He also served in the Pacific theater, cruising dozens of island and atolls from the Solomon to Okinawa in prepara­tion for the invasion of Japan as com­mander of a LST (Landing Ship Tank).
the local Coast Guard Auxil­iary re­cruited him as public education officer. During his years with Flotilla 609 he was finance officer, supply offi­cer, electronic officer, recruiting officer, vice commander (5 years) and com­mander (5) years
Following his years of military ser­vice, he was owned and managed Edwards' Apparel, Inc., a family clothing store, in Kendall Park, for 17 years. After closing the store, he went into real estate; 10 years in residential followed by 14 years in commercial with Weidel Commercial in Pennington.). Josh was also manager of Cafe Society in NYC.

Robert Levin
(Bob) had two children and one granddaughter. Born in 1925 in Trenton, he was the son of the late Dr. and Mrs. Louis Levin also of Trenton, New Jersey. He married Joyce (Greenberg) in 1954.
He attended Lehigh University before entering the US Seabees in 1943 during World War II. While at Lehigh he was a member of Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. His war service took him for 21 months to the Pacific Theatre from New Hebrides to Okinawa. On Manus Island in the Admiralty Islands he received the Bronze Star. Upon his discharge in 1946 he continued his college education at Upsala College, graduating in 1949 with a BA degree in Business and Psychology.
In 1949, he began work at Henry Clay and Bock, manufacturers of cigars in Trenton, N.J., (long a subsidiary of The American Tobacco Co. The company changed to Cuban Cigar Co., American Cigar and finally American Tobacco. Currently the corporation is now a part of the British Tobacco Co, Brown Williams, Co. He rose to Plata Superintendent and was responsible for its total operation; upon its closing worked out of American Tobacco's headquarters located in New York
Robert Levin Family

Eventually became plant manager. He was responsible for manufacturing plants in   Charleston, South Carolina, Owensboro, Kentucky and Mountaintop, Pennsylvania.
Max Levin, Age 21


Max Levin owned Eton Men’s Wear. Married Katherine Klempner (sister of Lester Klempner). He married into the K
lempner family: three brothers: Paul, Lester and Harry. Dr. Paul Klempner, named for a wing of a TB hospital, tragically was murdered along with the wife, Estelle Abramson.
Max Levin, Age 21
Katherine and Max Levin

   

Max’s son, Dan also became active in the theater.

Son Daniel Levin a.k.a. Peter – Actor, Director, Producer. Played in Diary of Anne Frank. Graduating Trenton High in 1950, he interned at the Westport Theater (Bucks County Playhouse); to tells La Jolla, CA.
Dan Levin 1990

Dan Levin



Peter's professional career began as an actor. He was trained at Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon) and in London on a Fulbright Scholarship. After a stint in the US Army, he made his Broadway debut in 1955 in the original production of "The Diary of Anne Frank". He later appeared in regional theater, summer stock and Shakespearean Repertory in plays by Chekhov, Shaw, Ibsen, Odets, Pinter, O'Neill, Osborne and of course, Shakespeare.
He began directing at Hardware Poets Playhouse, (he partnered ownership), one of the earliest off-off-Broadway loft theaters (1962-1966), producing more than 40 new plays by poets including Bloedow, Susan Sherman, Ruth Kraus, Robert Nichols, Ted Enslin and Joel Oppenheimer. He partnered Audrey Davis Levin (wife, who was an actress and later a writer of TV movies) and Jerry Bloedow, a poet.
He also directed works by Shakespeare, Shaw, Miller, Stoppard, Chekhov, George Kelly, and Dennis Potter.
Levin has directed dozens of episodes of television series including "Lou Grant", "Call to Glory", "Law & Order", "Chicago Hope", "Midnight Caller", and "Judging Amy". He also directed three dozen movies for television including "Homeless to Harvard", "Overkill", "Little Girl Fly Away", "The Marva Collins Story", "Sworn to Silence", "And Never Let Her Go", "Popeye Doyle", "Houston: The Legend of Texas" and "In the Name of The People".
As Broadway actor, Dan appeared in Broadway actor. Appeared in Diary of Anne Frank and played the part of Peter in Peter Pan, East of Eden (2012)
He taught seminars at NYU, USC, Carnegie Mellon, Smith College and AFI. He taught acting and directing for a semester at The Guildhall School in London. (http://danmurano.com/poetry/peter-dan-levin#1)

Henry Levin



Henry Levin - Hollywood Director


Scout's Honor (1980 TV movie)
That Man Bolt (1973)
The Ambushers (1967)
Genghis Khan (1965)
April Love (1957)
Bernardine (1957)
Two of a Kind (1951)
Convicted (1950)
The Unknown (1946)
Night Editor (1946)
Sergeant Mike (1944)

Josh Levin had three children and one granddaughter.  






Malcolm Casway

Malcolm Casway

Boynton Beach, Florida



Malcolm Casway's parents owned William J. Ferschke, Inc., a beauty and barber supply business. Located at 155 South Board Street, he lived atop the Frascella family, Aunt Jean and Uncle Jimmy, manager of Rheingold Beer (remember this brand?).  Aunt Jean raised me, while both my parents were working.

They introduced to music. I started on the trumpet, to the consternation of my neighbors but eventually made al living on Steel Pier with Govi brothers. (The Govi brothers appeared on Paul Whiteman Show).

On the Chief Halftime Show (do you remember this from out of the past), I won a $100 savings bond and an English bike.

Malcolm went to Garfield School; then Junior 5; then THS.
He played basketball under John Gaugh; baseball under Mr. Bozzo. I also played in the P.A.L. league under the tutelage of Puggy Malone. ( I later coached a team in the P.A.L. League.) [I played against him. He was very good.]

After  9th grade he moved near the end of Stuyvesant Avenue as far as the Trenton boundary. The house hosted more than its fair share of parties. I graduated THS in 1955.

At Trenton High, my teachers worked with me after school, to catch up with the academics.  Tom Murphy sticks out as a great teacher and character.

I worshipped Kelly Palumbo (First row, far left) the Dean of baseball coaches in Trenton.

My parents also were founders of Adath Israel. Rabbi S. Joshua Kohn was a family friend. I even sang in the choir at Kol Nidre.


In 2005, I attended our 50th reunion at Washington Crossing where I reacquainted with many friends.