It is reported that in 1877, there were 48 Jews living in the Arizona territory. Over succeeding decades, Arizona's Jewish population rose (2,000 in 1897), fell (500 in 1907), and by 1973 rose to over 21,000. Current figures put the Jewish population of Tucson (Pima County) at 21,400. [Ira Sheskin and Arnold Dashefsky, Jewish Population in the United States, 2011 [PDF] Berman Institute – North American Jewish Data Bank, University of Connecticut. c. 2011.]
- Selected Images of Southern Arizona
- Jewish Pioneers Built Railroads
- Mercantile Interests includes the A & B Schuster store in Holbrook store and the Jacobs Block in Tucson
- Jewish Ranchers
- Set of Ten Dolls Honoring Southwestern Jewish Women Pioneers
- Bloom Family of Tucson
- Capin Collection
- Philip and Samuel Drachman
- "Jewish Pioneers, Temple Due Honors," appeared in the November 12, 1982 Tucson Citizen. It gives snapshots of the lives of pioneer Jews Samuel and Philip Drachman, Albert Steinfeld, Isodore Gotthelf, and Sam Mansfeld.
- How did Jewish pioneers living in Tucson in the 19th century maintain rituals? Read this short note from George Hand's diary for March 16, 1877
- The Goldwater Brothers
- The Barron M. Jacobs Family
- Judah Aaron Kaufman
- Alex Levin of Tucson
- The Isador Elkan Solomon Family
- "Solomonville: A Jewish Town on the Frontier in Arizona Territory The Memoirs of Anna Freudenthal Solomon" by Anna Freudenthal Solomon
- The Albert Steinfeld Family
- Two articles from the February 24, 2006, Arizona Jewish Post "Growing Up Jewish In Nogales: Memories Of a Bygone Era," by Renee Claire and "Tucson Was a Wonderful Place to Grow Up In the '40s and '50s," by Lori Olshansky Sobel
- "Two Jacobs Brothers, Pioneer Merchants, Were First Tucson Bankers" October 27, 1929, Tucson Daily Citizen