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Elias Lieberman
The Principal Poet
Elias Leiberman was the first principal of the famed Brooklyn, New York, high
school named after President Thomas Jefferson.
He held that position at Thomas Jefferson High School from 1924 until 1940.
"Thomas Jefferson, the born aristocrat
who believed in democracy, has been our model for
gracious of manner, as well as for freedom of intellect." -- Dr. Elias
Lieberman, August 1944.
Elias Lieberman was born on October 30, 1883, in St. Petersburg, Russia. At age seven, he immigrated to the United States with his Russian Jewish family. In 1903, he graduated cum laude from the City College of New York, where he joined the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity. In 1903, Lieberman began working as an English teacher at public schools. In 1911, he earned a PhD from New York University. At NYU, he served as editor of Puck, The American Hebrew, and The Scholastic. In 1915, Juliet Stuart Poyntz became education director of the Worker's University of Local 25 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) under committee chair Lieberman. In 1918, he became head of the English department at Bushwick High School in Brooklyn through 1924. In 1924, Lieberman became principal of Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn. Students included movie star and comedian Danny Kaye and wife Sylvia Fine, scientist Martin Pope, Jack Rollins (producer), and typewriter expert Martin Tytell. Thomas Jefferson was one of seven public high schools in New York to receive a M. P. Moller pipe organ in 1926 under Lieberman. (In the 1990s, this organ was removed and discarded.) In 1940, Lieberman joined the New York City Board of Education, as an associate superintendent of schools in charge of the junior high school division. He retired in 1954. Lieberman married Rose Kiesler; they had two children who became a surgeon and a professor. In 1918, Arthur Guiterman and Joyce Kilmer nominated Lieberman to the Poetry Society of America. He later served there as director and vice president. In 1969, he became a fellow of the society. He served as president of the Associate Alumni of City College. Lieberman died at the age of eighty-five on July 13, 1969, at his home in the Richmond Hill district in Queens, New York. |
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Some biographical information from Wikipedia.
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