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Robert Mendelsohn 1957 - 2019

Robert Mendelsohn was born on October 28, 1957 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania United States, and died at age 61 years old on July 27, 2019 in Philadelphia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Robert Mendelsohn.
Robert Mendelsohn
October 28, 1957
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
July 27, 2019
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
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Robert Mendelsohn's History: 1957 - 2019

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  • Introduction

    News Photographer in Philadelphia. Obituaries Robert Mendelsohn, 61, a photographer known for documenting Philadelphia’s black social scene 'Rob and his camera were a fixture in and around Philadelphia’s African American community for decades' Robert Mendelsohn shot Philly's top events for decades. by Jenice Armstrong and Andrew Maykuth Updated Jul 29, 2019 Robert Mendelsohn, 61, a white photographer who was known and beloved for chronicling Philadelphia’s black social scene, has died. Mr. Mendelsohn was found dead Friday night at his Germantown rooming house after he failed to respond to messages, according to his sister Judith Mendelsohn Marcus, of Delran, Burlington County. She said the cause of death was heart disease. A time of death has not been determined. Mr. Mendelsohn attended nearly every prominent event in the African American community for more than 20 years, and worked almost exclusively for black-owned publications such as the Philadelphia Sunday Sun, the Philadelphia Tribune, and the Philadelphia New Observer. “Rob and his camera were a fixture in and around Philadelphia’s African American community for decades and his images captured the celebrations, triumphs, and tragedies of black life,” the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists said in a Facebook post announcing his death. City Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown said she was contacted by four different staffers on Saturday as news of Mr. Mendelsohn’s death spread. “Robert has been at every single event ... that my office has hosted for the last 19 years and he always traveled on public transportation,” she said. “He was devoted to the media outlets he represented. ... He always had a smile.” Robert Mendelsohn, 61, photographer Mendelsohn Family Mr. Mendelsohn grew up in Feltonville, the son of Philip and Adele Mendelsohn, a warehouse worker and a retail worker. In a 2013 interview, he said his was one of just several Jewish families in a neighborhood populated mostly by white Roman Catholics. He said that he gravitated toward African Americans after black students started to be bused to his school. After graduating from Olney High School in 1975, he worked as a warehouse stock clerk and did some telemarketing. As a hobby, he’d hang around outside The Mike Douglas Show collecting autographs and photos of celebrities as they exited the KYW-TV studios at Fifth and Market Streets. He also traveled to New York, collecting photographs of himself with stars like Natalie Wood, Muhammad Ali, and John Travolta. In 1994, he took a job as an in-store photographer at a Kmart in the Northeast, his first paid photography job. He caught a professional break when he sneaked into the 1995 National Association of Black Journalists conference in Philly to photograph Johnnie Cochran, the defense attorney from O.J. Simpson’s murder trial. A reporter for the Sun invited him to shoot pictures for the paper. “My photography career really was a fluke,” he said in a 2012 In the African American community, Mr. Mendelsohn turned his position as an outsider into “the ultimate insider” and won a “level of trust" from the people he photographed, Bobbi Booker, a Philadelphia journalist, said in the YouTube documentary. Booker posted a tribute Saturday in which she likened Mr. Mendelsohn to the disheveled television detective Columbo, and called him a “survivor who was an unlikely celebrity behind, and in front of, the camera.” Jenice Armstrong: Meet the man behind the lens of Philly’s biggest black social events Mr. Mendelsohn told Guerilus he just wanted to be remembered as "a nice guy who did the right thing and never hurt anybody and took a pretty good picture that most people seemed to like.” Mr. Mendelsohn was single. He is survived by his sister. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, July 31, at Goldsteins’ Rosenberg’s Raphael-Sacks, 6410 N. Broad St., Philadelphia. Published July 27, 2019
  • 10/28
    1957

    Birthday

    October 28, 1957
    Birthdate
    Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania United States
    Birthplace
  • 07/27
    2019

    Death

    July 27, 2019
    Death date
    Heart Disease
    Cause of death
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania United States
    Death location
  • Obituary

    Robert Mendelsohn, Who Photographed the Black Community, Dies at 61 By Rachel Winicov -July 30, 20194 Rep. Dwight Evans. WDAS radio host Patty Jackson. Even Mayor Jim Kenney took to Twitter this week to honor the passing of photographer Robert Mendelsohn. Robert Mendelsohn with a camera around his neck The last photograph taken of Robert Mendelsohn on July 11 (Photo by Hugh E. Dillon) Mendelsohn, who lived in a Germantown rooming house, was found dead at home on July 26. The cause of death was heart disease. He was 61. Mendelsohn was a longtime stalwart on the event photography scene, best known for chronicling Philadelphia’s African American community in his photographs, often for the Philadelphia Tribune and the Philadelphia Sunday Sun. “The white Jewish photographer who showcased Philly’s black society has died,” read a headline in Billy Penn. “If there’s a black gathering in heaven,” the Inquirer’s Jenice Armstrong wrote in a tribute, “photographer Robert Mendelsohn is there.” Philadelphia publications remembered Mendelsohn and his commitment to the black community. KYW and the Tribune honored Mendelsohn; the Sun is planning a memorial page. Hugh E. Dillon, a fellow Philadelphia society photographer, remembered his colleague’s ability to befriend everyone. “He cared about people, events and charities in every community,” Dillon said. “He made a difference. He would cover events even if he didn’t have an assignment. He would write about them on his FB page, and those events would be seen.” Dillon said Mendelsohn had a personal impact on him as well. “He was a great mentor to me especially when I first began my career,” Dillon explained. “Often he would set up a photo, take it and then call me over to take the same photo, telling me, ‘You should take this. It’s important.’” Mendelsohn’s upbringing likely contributed to his idiosyncratic 30-year career, said his sister Judy Marcus. One of the few Jews growing up in mostly Catholic Feltonville, Mendelsohn befriended the first African American students bused to his school, his sister said. “He gravitated towards the black community. He felt accepted and welcomed. He felt a kinship with them.” Then again, she added, “He liked everybody and tried to make people feel good.” Marcus said her brother started taking society photos sometime in the 1990s. “It became his love, to watch people come and get their picture,” Marcus said. His work became so important to the black community that the Inquirer featured him as the first face of its 2013 Black History Month series. Mendelsohn did not always envision a career in photography, his sister said. After graduating from Olney High School in 1975, Mendelsohn worked in a warehouse at his parents’ insistence. “My parents were both working-class people,” she said. “They had a good work ethic that they instilled in us. They pushed us to have a steady job. They said it’s an honorable thing that you need to do. For me, it worked. I’m at the same place I’ve been for going on 50 years.” But Mendelsohn was different. “For my brother, the warehouse job was so against his grain. He knew that my parents insisted he not sit around. He had to have some responsibility. So he did it for maybe 10 years. Then the company moved out of Center City to Swedesboro. He quit and got a job as a photographer at Kmart.” As a hobbyist, Mendelsohn had already been photographing celebrities visiting the Mike Douglas Show. The Kmart job offered the chance to combine a recreational passion with a steady income. Mendelsohn had a natural gift for taking pictures, which led to paid work for local papers and eventually to a successful career. Spending time with family was also important to Mendelsohn, who made a point to visit his sister. She recalled laughing over his food photography this past Passover. “I wanted to have a home-cooked meal and I wanted to have my brother over. So I made a traditional meal with the brisket, matzah ball soup. And he loved it. He took pictures of everything, and it was funny because plates were piling up. He enjoyed the food.” She said her brother occasionally attended services at Congregation Temple Beth’El, the African American synagogue in West Oak Lane. In a 2012 video tribute to Mendelsohn, entitled “King of the World,” filmmaker Joann Guerilus asked him how he would like to be remembered. His sister wept as she recalled his words. “I want my legacy to be a nice guy who did the right thing and never hurt anybody,” he said matter-of-factly. After a short pause, he added, “and took a pretty good picture that most people seemed to like.”
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4 Memories, Stories & Photos about Robert

Robert Mendelsohn
Robert Mendelsohn
Philadelphia Photographer.
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Robert Mendelsohn.
Robert Mendelsohn.
Close-up.
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Robert Mendelsohn and Cloris Leachman.
Robert Mendelsohn and Cloris Leachman.
Robert as a young man.
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Robert Mendelsohn - Photographer
Robert Mendelsohn - Photographer
Robert Mendelsohn. Philadelphia photographer.
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