98:. She took a great interest in converting Jews to Christianity and providing work for the Jews of Palestine. In one letter she wrote "Our poor Jewish brethren are so enfeebled by want and inaction, that for the first year, with comfortable support, they will not more than be able to get accustomed and begin to work efficiently."
55:, which included the brothers Johann Großsteinbeck, Friedrich Wilhelm Großsteinbeck (1821–1858), Maria Katharina Großsteinbeck (1826–1862) and her husband, Gustav Thiel (1825–1907) as well as two other families. She worked on a farm owned by Rabbi
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Dreamland: American
Travelers to the Holy Land in the 19th Century
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Divine
Expectations. An American Woman in 19th-Century Palestine
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Here she joined a group that included a group of
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