Newmark (Neumark), Morris A., nephew of Harris Newmark, arrives in Los Angeles, [344]; clerks for H. Newmark, later H. Newmark & Co., [354]; admitted as partner, [444]; marries Harriet, daughter of J. P. Newmark, [444]; helps organize M. A. Newmark & Co., [549]; participates in their fiftieth anniversary, and receives silver cup, [344]; [443], [514], [601]
Newmark & Co., M. A., successors to H. Newmark & Co., [549]; removal to Wholesale Street, [644]; celebrate their fiftieth anniversary, [343]; [517], [535], [559], [600], [624], [629], [644]
Newmark, Maurice H., son of Harris Newmark, sent to school in New York and Paris, [450]; partner in M. A. Newmark & Co., [549]; association with first three fiestas, [606], [607]; member of Executive Committee of Sound Money League, [613]; President of Associated Jobbers, [619], [635], [637]; Chairman of Supply Committee for Relief of San Francisco, [634]; helps incorporate Southwest Museum, [647]; member of Executive Committee, Stephen M. White Memorial Fund, [469]; one of Committee on Harbor Consolidation, [638]; Chairman, W. C. Mushet Campaign Committee, [639]; appointed Harbor Commissioner, [642]; resigns from Commission, [642]; presents silver cup to M. A. Newmark, at half-century jubilee, [344]; v, [497], [545], [642]
Newmark (Neumark), Max N., nephew of Harris Newmark, [382]; — & Edwards, [382]; — Grain Co., [382]
Newmark, Myer J., son of Joseph Newmark, journeys to California via the Horn, [121]; keeps diary of the voyage, [121]; arrives in Los Angeles, [121]; serves, later, as member of the Coleman Vigilance Committee, San Francisco, [55]; admitted to the Bar, [249]; as attorney, witnesses killing of Dorsey by Rubottom, [144]; helps organize the first public library here, [256]; partner in Howard, Butterworth & Newmark, [312]; Secretary of Los Angeles Mounted Rifles, [294]; City Attorney, [46]; represents H. Newmark & Co., in New York, [359]; member of H. Newmark & Co., [422], [444]; indirectly associated with the founding of Pasadena, [449]; marries Miss Sophie Cahen, [464]; early purchaser of land at Santa Monica, [480]; opposes anti-railroad legislation, [489]; pioneer in advertising Los Angeles in the East, [499]; retires from H. Newmark & Co. and removes to San Francisco, [514]; on Committee, Chamber of Commerce (later becoming President), [625]; instrumental in securing the Coronel Collection, [622]; in Europe, [564]; returns to Los Angeles, [642]; association with Kaspare Cohn, [642]; returns to San Francisco, [642]; death there, [642]
Newmark (Neumark), Nathan, brother of Harris Newmark, [7]
Newmark (Neumark), Philip, son of Nathan Newmark, [649]
Newmark (Neumark), Philip A., nephew of Harris Newmark, [601]; — & Co., P., [601]
Newmark, Philip H., son of Harris Newmark, [515]
Newmark (Neumark), Philipp, native of Neumark, West Prussia, and father of Harris Newmark, [1], [360]; sent, as a boy, to Napoleon Bonaparte, [1]; manufacturer of blacking and ink, [2]; travels in Sweden and Denmark, [2], [621]; voyages to New York, [2]; returns to Europe, [2]; resumes enterprises in Denmark and Scandinavia, [3]ff.; takes Harris into business, [4]; operates, with son, workshops at Copenhagen and Gothenburg, [6], [7], [649]; consents to lad's departure for California, [7]; warns Harris against strangers, [8]; death, [360]