In 1801, at the age of 20, Rebecca Gratz helped establish the Female Association for the Relief of Women and Children in Reduced Circumstances, which helped women whose families were suffering after the
American Revolutionary War. In 1815, after seeing the need for an institution for orphans in Philadelphia, she was among those instrumental in founding the Philadelphia Orphan Asylum. In 1850, she advocated in
The Occident, over the signature
A Daughter of Israel, the foundation of a Jewish foster home. Her advocacy was largely instrumental in the establishment of such a home in 1855. The claim has been disputed, but it has also been well sustained in an article entitled "The Original of Rebecca in Ivanhoe", which appeared in
The Century Magazine, 1882, pp. 679–682. Gratz never married. Among the marriage offers she received was one from a Gentile whom she loved but ultimately chose not to marry on account of her faith. Her portrait was painted twice by the noted American artist
Thomas Sully. One of those portraits (both are owned by the
Rosenbach Museum) is on display at the
National Museum of American Jewish History. == Death ==