CONGREGATION SHEARITH ISRAEL

(Redirected from Shearith Israel)
Congregation Shearith Israel
'Congregation Shearith Israel' is the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States.Congregation Shearith Israel, Building Report, ''International Survey of Jewish Monuments''. Retrieved 3 April 2007. Located on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, the synagogue was founded in 1655.

Contents
Foundations and Synagogue Buildings
Clergy
Ministers
Hazanim
Prominent members
See Also
References
External links

Foundations and Synagogue Buildings


Landmark plaques.
Entrance.

The first group of Spanish and Portuguese Jews arrived in New York (New Amsterdam) in September 1654. After some legal troubles with Governor Peter Stuyvesant, Jews were given official permission to settle in the colony in 1655. This marks the founding of the Congregation Shearith Israel. Despite their permission to stay in New Amsterdam they continued to face legal troubles and were not given permission to worship in a public synagogue during for some time (throughout the Dutch period and even into the British). The Congregation did, however, make arrangements for a cemetery beginning in 1656. It was not until 1730 that the Congregation was able to build a synagogue of its own, which was built on Mill Street in lower Manhattan. Prior to 1730, as is evidenced from a map of New York from 1695, the congregation worshipped in rented quarters on Beaver Street and subsequently on Mill Street. Since 1730 the Congregation has worshipped in five synagogues:

★ Mill Street, 1730

★ Mill Street re-built and expanded, 1818

★ Crosby Street, 1834

★ 19th Street, 1860

★ West 70th Street, 1897 (present building.)

Clergy


Ministers


Gershom Mendes Seixas - The Hazzan of the Congregation and an ardent American patriot who moved the Congregation to Philadelphia during the Revolutionary War.

Jaques Judah Lyons

Henry Pereira Mendes

David de Sola Pool

Marc D. Angel

★ Hayyim Angel
Hazanim


Abraham Lopes Cardozo

Prominent members


Some prominent members of the Congregation have been:

Mordecai Manuel Noah -

Benjamin Cardozo - Justice of the United States Supreme Court.

Emma Lazarus - Poet

Commodore Uriah P. Levy

Isaac Pinto

See Also


Jewish history in Colonial America

References


External links



Official Site

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