1media/goldhar-ms0020-pt2-042-011 copy_thumb.jpg2022-09-19T15:07:37-07:00Dawn Schmitz058a3a82673b345aeb84d7969cae24e0a5c62dd1413248Naturalization certificate for Leib Goldhirsch (father of Harry Golden) who immigrated to the U.S. from Austria.Square certificate, white text on a black background.plain2024-10-02T11:11:24-07:00Harry Golden Papers MS0020, J. Murrey Atkins Library, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte1916textThis Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). If you have additional information about any of the materials in this collection, or if you believe that you own the copyright, please contact us and include a specific description of the material in question.Dawn Schmitz058a3a82673b345aeb84d7969cae24e0a5c62dd1
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12022-09-19T15:17:11-07:00Lower East Side creates a writer14gallery2024-09-20T10:38:31-07:00Golden’s identity and career were forged by the sights, smells, and sounds of the Lower East Side in the early 20th century. His nostalgic, often-humorous narrative became so widely embraced that some historians have complained that it became accepted as the definitive Jewish immigration experience.
New country, new names
Harry Golden was the very young Chaim Goldhirsch when he emerged from the lower decks of the SS Graf Waldersee in New York on March 31, 1907. Along with his mother and two sisters, he came from what was then Austria-Hungary, by way of Hamburg, to join his father and older brother. By middle age, his names had evolved from Chaim to Hyman to Herschel to Harry; Goldhirsch to Goldhurst to Golden.
Felony on Wall Street
Harry’s oldest sister Clara was one of modern Wall Street’s first female brokers, and she hired her clever brother to write promotional materials. Harry soon had his own busy brokerage company where he energetically sold investments – and illegally pocketed the money. After a stint in federal prison, he emerged in 1933 and changed his name to Golden to hide his felonious past. The secret came out when Golden’s 1958 best-selling book Only in America made him famous overnight -- and an anonymous letter to his publisher and leading newspapers caused a national scandal. The notoriety only served to heighten his fame and sell more books.