Background
Emil Gustav Hirsch was born in Luxembourg, a son of the rabbi and philosopher Samuel Hirsch on May 22, 1851.
Emil Gustav Hirsch was born in Luxembourg, a son of the rabbi and philosopher Samuel Hirsch on May 22, 1851.
He studied at the University of Pennsylvania, and in 1872 went to Berlin for post-graduate work.
He was rabbi at Har Sinai Congregation in Baltimore (1877-1878), and in Louisville, Kentucky, (1878-1880). But he did his greatest work in Chicago. For forty-two years (1880-1923), Hirsch served as the rabbi of Chicago Sinai Congregation, one of the oldest synagogues in the midwest.
At this post, he became well known for an emphasis on social justice. From Chicago Sinai's pulpit, he delivered rousing sermons on the social ills of the day and many Chicagoans, Jew and gentile alike, were in attendance. Appointed professor of rabbinical literature and philosophy at the University of Chicago in 1892, Hirsch also served on the Chicago Public Library board from 1885 to 1897.
He edited Der Zeitgeist (Milwaukee) (1880-1882) and the Reform Advocate (1891-1923). He also edited the Department of the Bible of the Jewish Encyclopedia and contributed feminist articles to The American Jewess. Hirsch is the namesake of the Emil G. Hirsch Metropolitan High School of Communications, located in the Greater Grand Crossing neighborhood in Chicago.
In keeping with his interest in education, Hirsch advised a wealthy congregant, Julius Rosenwald of Sears, Roebuck & Co., to use part of his wealth to help build public schools which black students could attend in the segregated south. The school building program was one of the largest programs, but not the only, administered by the Rosenwald Fund.