(Jewish Group) DC's new Jewish museum highlights Jews who shaped the nation's capital
DCs new Jewish museum highlights Jews who shaped the nations capital, from a Confederate spy to RBG
Washington, D.C.s new Jewish museum features at least two notorious women from history.
One is Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the first Jewish woman to serve as a Supreme Court justice, who was dubbed Notorious RBG late in her life by a cluster of fans. When the Capital Jewish Museum opens next week, it will launch with Ginsburg at its center when a traveling exhibit on her life has its final stop here.
The other is the 19th-century figure Eugenia Levy Phillips, whom the museum characterizes as notorious without irony.
One of DCs most notorious Confederate sympathizers, Eugenia Levy Phillips (1891-1902) came to town in 1853 with her congressman husband, Philip Phillips (1807-1884) of Alabama, one of the exhibits says. Eugenia, a spy, delivered Union military plans and maps to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
Another description of Levy Phillips in the museum is more straightforward: SPIED for the CONFEDERACY, it says below her photo.
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