ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am exceedingly grateful to those who kindly assisted me as I pursued this hobby over the years. My colleague at Ellis Island Kevin Daley and New York Citys commissioner of records Brian G. Andersson have both helped me with a number of immigrant celebrities that passed through Ellis Island. Kevin Daley drew my attention to several possible individuals, including someone I would never have thought ofSir Charles Kingsford-Smith, the Australian aviator. Brian G. Andersson found the records for me of Bla Lugosi and Claudette Colbert. Others have also been of help to me in my longtime search for the famous. I gratefully thank Peg Zitko at the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Catherine Daly of the American Family Immigration History Center, David Diakow, Bela G. Lugosi (son of the actor), Beulah Robinson (niece of Edward G. Robinson), Charles Roman (Charles Atlass business partner), Bob Hope (whom Kevin Daley and I met and I spoke with on his last visit to Manhattan), Louis Nizer (whom I spoke to over the telephone), the office of John W. Kluge, Isabel Belarsky (daughter of Sidor Belarsky), Alfred Levitt (whom I met at Ellis Island and Greenwich Village), Eric Byon, Paul Sigrist, Diana R. Pardue, George Tselos, Jeffrey Dosik, Janet Levine, Doug Tarr, Ken Glasgow, Doug Treem, Dennis Mulligan, Loretto D. Szucs, and Virginia Haroutunian. I must also acknowledge the assistance of the late popular singer Arthur Tracy, who became a real friend and regaled me with his memories of old-time show business and fellow thespians such as Al Jolson, Irving Berlin, Max Factor, Gus Kahn, Al Dubin, Arthur Murray, and Samuel Chotzinoff. The images in this book are from the collections of the National Park Service, Library of Congress, National Archives, and author.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Corsi, Edward. In the Shadow of Liberty: The Chronicle of Ellis Island . New York: Macmillan, 1935.
Cowen, Philip. Memories of an American Jew . New York: International Press, 1932.
James, C. L. R. Mariners, Renegades and Castaways . New York: self-published, 1953.
Lowenstein, Evelyn. Picture Book of Famous Immigrants . New York: Sterling Publishing, 1962.
Monush, Barry. Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors . New York: Applause, 2003.
Moreno, Barry. Berhmte Ellis-Island-Einwanderer der ersten Generation. In Hoffnung Amerika: Europische Auswandererung in die Neue Welt , edited by Karin Schulz. Bremerhaven, Germany: 1994.
. Encyclopedia of Ellis Island . Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2004.
Novotny, Ann. Strangers at the Door: Ellis Island, Castle Garden and the Great Migration to America . Riverside, CT: Chatham, 1971.
Pejsa, Jane. Romanoff, Prince of Rogues . Minneapolis: Kenwood Publishing, 1997.
Prigozy, Ruth. The Life of Dick Haymes: No More Little White Lies . Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2006.
Stewart, Ray. Immortals of the Screen . New York: 1965.
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SPIRITUAL LEADERS AND SCHOLARS
EDWARD FLANAGAN IN STEERAGE. The future founder and director of Boys Town is the big fellow in the middle foreground of this picture taken on board the steerage deck of the RMS Celtic ; the great ship docked in New York harbor on August 27, 1904. Pictured with Edward Flanagan is his younger brother, Patrick, who also became a Roman Catholic priest. Fr. Edward Flanagan was born in Leabeg, County Roscommon, Ireland, in 1886. In his boyhood, he was a shepherd.
FATHER FLANAGANS MISSION. Edward Flanagan was educated at the seminary at the Royal Imperial University at Innsbruck, Austria, and he was ordained to the priesthood in 1912. Accepted by a Nebraska diocese, he founded his orphanage for delinquent boys in 1917. Years later he said, When the idea of a boys home grew in my mind, I never thought of anything remarkable about taking in all of the races and all of the creeds. To me, they are all Gods children. They are my brothers. They are children of God. I must protect them to the best of my ability.
MONSIGNOR FLANAGAN WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN. Flanagans work at Boys Town won him national recognition, and he truly became a hero to the American people. He was interviewed and consulted on juvenile delinquency, and his struggles were dramatized in the Academy Awardwinning film Boys Town (1938), which starred Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney. In 1937, he was raised to the rank of monsignor and, after the war, was sent by Pres. Harry S. Truman to help orphans in Japan and Germany. He died in Berlin in 1948. Currently there is a movement supporting his canonization to sainthood.
LIN YUTANG. The distinguished scholar Dr. Lin Yutang (18951976) popularized classic Chinese literature in the West. He came to America for university studies and pursued postgraduate work in Germany. On his return to the United States in 1931, he was briefly detained for Chinese inspection at Ellis Island. His intelligent and witty books, including My Country and People (1935), The Importance of Living (1939), and Between Tears and Laughter (1943), endeared him to western readers and increased interest in China. He also published a Chinese and English dictionary, invented a Chinese typewriter, and wrote novels. He died in Taiwan, and his home there is now a museum.
ALBERT SABIN. With his parents, Jacob and Tillie Saperstein, and sister, Albert Saperstein passed through Ellis Island and settled in New York. The boy grew into a man and found for himself a new name, Albert Bruce Sabin. The family left behind the difficult life in their native city of Bialystock, Russia (now Poland), and America offered previously unreachable opportunities. Albert (19061993) became a physician but was soon drawn to medical research. He joined the fight to find a cure for polio. His contribution was astonishing; it was a live virus vaccine taken orally, and it effectively eliminated polio from the United States.
KRISHNAMURTI. Theosophys former world messiah, Jiddu Krishnamurti (18951986) was briefly detained at Ellis Island to look into an accusation of moral turpitude during an American visit on August 22, 1926. But after having questioned him, Ellis Islands commissioner Benjamin M. Day passed him as innocent. Krishnamurti later settled in California and became a leading philosopher and explorer of the human condition. ( The New Book Revelations: The Inside Story of Americas Astounding Religious Cults by Charles W. Ferguson.)