b'76491 492A large, sterling silver footed & stemmed trophy cup byAN IMPORTANT PIECE OF AUSTRALIAN JEWISH HISTORY Hamiltons, Calcutta. Inscribed SHORNCLIFFE CAMP DRAGA silver kiddush cup (or chalice) by Hilliard & Thomason HUNT - FARMERS RACE - 1895 - POINT TO POINT RACES. of Birmingham embellished with images of vine leaves Height: 28.5cm Weight: 820gms. and grapes and with the engraved dedicationShorncliffe is now an outer suburb of Brisbane. Drag huntingPresented to the REV. A.B. DAVIS on completion of his is a form of equestrian sport, where mounted riders hunt the70th year by his BROTHER MINISTERS of the GREAT trail of an artificially laid scent with hounds. As it does notSYNAGOGUE - J. H. LANDAU. A.D. WOLINSKI. Ph. involve the hunting of live animals, drag hunting remained legalPHILIPPSTEIN. SYDNEY - Aug.15th 5658/1898in England after the passing of the Hunting Act of 2004. 19.5cm high.$1,0001,500Reverend Alexander Barnard Davis [1828 - 1913] received this beautiful becher on the occasion of his 70th birthday.Davis was born in London; orphaned at 12, he was educated by Rev. H. A. Henry of St Albans and then, whilst teaching himself Hebrew, at Holland House, Hammersmith, by Rev. H. M. Meyers of Ramsgate. He became a master of Westminster Jews Free School in 1848; in 1852, recommended by the chief rabbi of England, Dr Adler, he accepted the ministry of the Portsmouth Synagogue. In June 1853 he married Blanche Annie Harris (1832-1892),Harris. In 1854 he became minister at Kingston, Jamaica, where his progressive views united members of the Portuguese and German Jewish communities. He returned to England in 1861 and accepted the ministry of the York Street Synagogue, Sydney, arriving with his family on 17 August 1862. He was installed on 14 September at the reconsecration of the renovated synagogue and soon aroused the flagging congregation.Davis soon realized the inadequacy of religious education in the Sydney Jewish community. In 1863 he founded the Jewish Sabbath school and was its president until 1882. He later established the Society for the Diffusion of Religious Knowledge in unison with the London association; it was equipped with a lending library and a childrens savings bank. In 1868 he joined the committee of the Sydney Hebrew Orthodox Denominational School and in 1873 was its president; in 1882 he was president of the Sydney Jewish Board of Education. In 1869 he published Jewish Rites Explained . and Prayers for Children (Sydney, 1869); its third edition was printed in 1902. He also produced two pamphlets: Questions Upon the Principles and Duties of the Jewish Religion (Sydney, 1866) and Devotions for Children and Jewish Families, and in 1895-96 wrote many articles for the Australasian Hebrew. He was the first to admit girls to religious classes and to conduct confirmation services for girls in the synagogue. He is also said to have initiated the first mixed choir in any synagogue of the British Empire. In 1872 he founded the local branch of the Anglo-Jewish Association and was its first president. He greatly assisted in breaching the gulf between the York Street and the dissenting Macquarie Street Synagogues, and in uniting the Sydney Jewish community after the building of the Great Synagogue in Elizabeth Street. He consecrated it on 4 March 1878 and became its first minister. In 1883 while on leave in England he collected funds for a home for the aged poor, the Sir Moses Montefiore Jewish Home, which was opened in 1889 in Dowling Street, Sydney, and later transferred to Hunters Hill. In 1903 he retired and was appointed emeritus minister. He died on 16 December 1913 and was buried in the Jewish section of the Rookwood cemetery.Davis never claimed the title of Rabbi, although it was freely accorded to him. He was strong and sincere and an excellent preacher. He supported welfare appeals in support of Jews living in Palestine (under the Ottomans) but not the nascent Zionist movement in 1901. Imbued with Anglo-Jewish traditions, he misjudged the importance of Jewish migration to Australia as a means of survival, and had misgivings in the 1890s when Russian Jews, fleeing from pogroms, began to migrate to Australia. His name will always be associated with dignified services, religious education and unification of the Sydney Jewish community.[The Australian Dictionary of Biography].$2,0003,000492'