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Peddlers, Merchants, and Junk Dealers
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28 July 2026

Provides a rare study of Jews in small town America
For many years, histories of Jews in the United States focused on Jewish migrants who settled in large cities. Peddlers, Merchants, and Junk Dealers offers a rare study of Jews in small town America, illuminating the experiences of Jewish families in towns where they constituted one of, at most, a few Jewish families. In particular, the volume explores the occupational niches of Jews in rural Vermont, from peddling to the ownership of junk yards and dry goods stores that were disparagingly known as “the Jew Store.”
The book also looks specifically at the experiences of Jewish women and children in families headed by men in these occupations. These families lived in communities where they were often isolated from relatives and friends, and without a Jewish congregation. Margaret K. Nelson carefully investigates various aspects of this small-town experience, including how generations of immigrants were regarded by others, how they held onto the practice of their religion, and how they were able to socially integrate into their communities.
By narrating the trajectory of Jewish immigrant experiences through men’s occupations, the volume places the experiences of Jews in Vermont alongside those of other marginalized groups, particularly the families of Chinese restaurant owners and South Asian motel managers, as they established and sustained their own distinctive economic activities in small towns.
Showcasing the largely unexplored history of Jews in very small towns, Peddlers, Merchants, and Junk Dealers provides a novel account of Jewish community and belonging as minorities in rural communities.
— Felicia Kornbluh, author of A Woman’s Life Is a Human Life
Peggy Nelson’s Peddlers, Merchants, and Junk-Dealers is an insightful and painstakingly researched study of a Jewish American story we need to know better and a Vermont story that is hardly known at all. Nelson combines genealogy, sociology, and ethnography to create a lively portrait and a compelling narrative.
— Michael Hoberman, author of Imagining Early Jews
Through its richly detailed account of specific people and local features, this vivid case study captures dynamics that played out in small towns across North America.
— David M. Freidenreich, Pulver Family Professor of Jewish Studies, Colby College
Sharply focused but broadly resonant, Peddlers, Merchants and Junk Dealers supersedes the common “pack-peddler to professional” narrative of rural Jewry, and offers the fine-grained insight of a sociologist into the complexities of this understudied sector of American Jewish life. It shows us sociology making history.
— Robert S. Schine, author of Jewish Thought Adrift: Max Wiener 1882-1950