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  1. Emil Ganz
    American politician

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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emil_GanzEmil Ganz - Wikipedia

    Emil Ganz (August 18, 1838 – August 6, 1922) was an American businessman and two-time mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. Early life [ edit ] Ganz was born on August 18, 1838, in the German town of Walldorf , Duchy of Saxe-Meiningen , to Jewish parents Meyer and Hannah Ganz.

  2. Sep 1, 2013 · Upon his death he left land to Temple Beth Israel to establish the first Jewish cemetery in the Valley. Emil Ganz, a German Jew, became a three-term mayor of Phoenix, serving in the late 1880s and again in the late 1890s. Ganz’ granddaughter Joan Ganz Cooney, who was born and raised in Phoenix, and went on to co-create the TV series Sesame ...

  3. Emil Ganz moved to Phoenix in 1879 and became proprietor for the Bank Exchange hotel. It was on the north side of Washington just a bit west of 2nd St. The h...

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    • CityofPhoenixAZ
  4. Apr 28, 2022 · Emil Ganz (August 18, 1838 – August 6, 1922) was a businessman and two-time mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. Background Ganz was born on August 18, 1838 in the German town of Walldorf, Thuringia in the then Duchy of Saxe-Meiningen, to Meyer and Hannah Ganz. [1] [2] He was educated in his home country before being apprenticed to a tailor at age 14. [3]

    • Walldorf, Thuringia
    • Walldorf, Thuringia, Germany
    • August 18, 1838
  5. May 19, 2023 · Ganz died in a San Diego, California hospital on August 6, 1922. In 2001, Mark Pry wrote a biography of Ganz - Immigrant Banker: The Life of Emil Ganz. The book was commissioned by granddaughter Joan Ganz Cooney, a television producer who co-created the PBS children's series Sesame Street. Please Subscribe to this YouTube Channel!

  6. May 20, 2012 · Emil Ganz Obituary. Emil Paul "Bus" Ganz Longtime Phoenix resident Emil Paul Ganz, 85, died April 27th 2012 at his home in Coronado, California. Bus was a caring father and brother, and an ...

  7. Apr 17, 2018 · It's 1915, and I need to go get a loan. The president of the First National Bank of Arizona, Emil Ganz, is a friend of my father's and I've been told that since I seem to be a respectable young man that I should go there, and talk to him. The First National Bank of Arizona in 1912, southeast corner of Central and Washington, Phoenix, Arizona.