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History of Jews in Philadelphia

Jews in Philadelphia can trace their history back to Colonial America. Jews have lived in Philadelphia since the arrival of William Penn in 1682.

Colonial History

Jewish traders have operated in southeastern Pennsylvania since at least the 1650s.[1] The first Jewish resident of the city on record was Jonas Aaron whose name appears in 1703 in the American Historical Register. Several Jewish families had immigrated to Philadelphia by 1734, as recorded by German traveler von Beck who listed them among the religious sects of the town.[2] Nathan Levy purchased ground for Jewish burial in 1738, obtained the grant on September 25, 1740, and is cared for by Congregation Mikveh Israel.[3][4]

In the War of Independence

Many Jews in Philadelphia took a prominent part in the War of Independence. Leading up to the conflict, several Jewish merchants and other citizens of Philadelphia signed the Non-Importation Resolutions. By doing so, they agreed "not to have any goods shipped from Great Britain until after the repeal of the Stamp Act." This was officially adopted on October 25, 1765. The Jewish signers included Benjamin Levy, David Franks, Samson Levy, Hyman Levy Jr., Mathias Bush, Moses Mordecai, Michael Gratz, and Barnard Gratz. The last two were brothers who had left Upper Silesia in Germany about 1755 and settled in Philadelphia.

In 1777, just after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, the following Jews agreed to accept the colonial paper money sanctioned by the king in lieu of gold and silver: Solomon Aaron, Joseph Solomon Kohn, Solomon Marache, Moses Mordecai, Barnard Soliman, and David Franks. Of these, Moses Mordecai and David Franks had signed the Non-Importation Resolutions.

During the conflict, David Franks was conspicuous for his loyalty to the British cause, being the English agent in charge of the prisoners; his daughter, Rebecca Franks, took part in the "Mischianza," the famous fête given in honor of General Howe during the British occupancy of Philadelphia. The majority of the Jews of the city, however, supported the American cause. Col. David Salisbury Franks was aide-de-camp to General Benedict Arnold at Philadelphia in 1779; Solomon Bush was major of the Pennsylvania militia; Col. Isaac Franks served with distinction in the war, as did Philip Moses, Russell and Benjamin Nones. Haym Solomon made loans to individuals in Congress, which were never repaid; his services as a financial agent during the war were invaluable. Another creditor of the Continental Congress was Aaron Levy, and his loans, like nearly all the others, were never fully repaid. At the close of the war the Jewish population of Philadelphia amounted to almost 500. In 1801, 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.

Congregation Mikveh Israel

 
Rebecca Gratz educator and philanthropist, member of congregation Mikveh Israel

Congregation Mikveh Israel, the first Jewish congregation in Philadelphia, had its beginnings about 1745 and is believed to have worshiped in a small house in Sterling Alley. In 1761, owing to the influx of Spanish and Portuguese Jews from England, the Netherlands and the West Indies, the question of building a synagogue was raised, but nothing was then accomplished in that direction. In 1773, when Bernard Gratz was parnas and Solomon Marache treasurer, a subscription was started "in order to support our holy worship and establish it on a more solid foundation." The number of Jewish residents in Philadelphia was suddenly increased at the outbreak of the American Revolution by the influx of Jewish patriots from New York, which had been captured by the British (Sept., 1776). The congregation removed from the house in Sterling Alley and then occupied quarters in Cherry Alley, between Third and Fourth streets.

The building in Cherry Alley, which had sufficed for the few families in the city, became inadequate, and steps were taken to secure a more commodious building. Gershom Mendes Seixas, who had fled from New York to Connecticut, was requested to act as the first rabbi of the reorganized congregation. The estimate for the new building was £600, and the subscription being inadequate, Haym Salomon, the banker and financial agent of the Continental Congress, agreed to pay one-fourth the cost. A lot was purchased in Cherry street, near Third street, and a suitable building erected.[5] The governor of Pennsylvania and his official family were invited to attend the dedication ceremonies, which were held on September 13, 1782. At this time the congregation had over 100 members;[6] its officers were Jonas Phillips (president), Michael Gratz, Solomon Marache, Solomon Myers Cohen, and Simon Nathan. On November 25, 1783, New York was evacuated by the British, and many of the members of the congregation returned to their former homes. The congregation also started Mikveh Israel Cemetery.[7]

It is estimated that in 1775, the city of Philadelphia had a population of approximately 35,000 of whom 300 were Jewish.[8] Mikveh Israel counted among its members revolutionary patriots including Jonas Phillips, the Gratz family, and Haym Solomon who financed the war.

When Washington was elected president of the United States the Congregation Mickvé Israel, together with the congregations of New York, Charleston, and Richmond, sent a congratulatory address, to which Washington replied (1790).

After Congregation Shearith Israel recalled the Rev. Gershom Mendez Seixas to New York, Congregation Mickvé Israel elected the Rev. Jacob Raphael Cohen in his stead. The latter had officiated as Chazzan of the Spanish and Portuguese synagogue in Montreal and had served in a like capacity in New York during the British occupation. He ministered to the Congregation Mickvé Israel until his death in Sept., 1811. As a result of the departure of its members, in 1788 the congregation encountered financial difficulties. A subscription list was started to meet the existing debts, and among those who contributed to it were Benjamin Franklin and David Rittenhouse. From this time on the congregation was ceaseless in its religious and charitable activities, and when Isaac Leeser's incumbency began, in 1829, it was, perhaps, the best-known synagogue in the United States. In 1815 Emanuel Nunes Carvalho was elected minister and continued in that capacity until his death in 1817; he was succeeded in 1824 by Abraham Israel Keys.[9]

Mikveh Israel erected its first building in 1782 on Cherry Alley, as well as a parsonage, school, mikvah, and oven for Matza baking for Passover. A commemorative marker stands at that place. When the 1782 building became inadequate, the synagogue built a larger synagogue on the same designed by William Strickland, a leading architect.[clarification needed] Prior to the Civil War (1861-1865) as the Jewish population grew and prospered, an elegant building was constructed on 7th Street, north of Arch designed by John McArthur Jr. (later, architect of City Hall of Philadelphia). Many Jews moved to the area between Broad and 16th Streets, north of Girard Avenue. A new building was constructed at Broad and York Streets in 1909, flanked by Gratz and Dropsie Colleges. Samuel Elkin and Henry G. Freeman Jr. donated $100,000; $40,500 for the site, $59,000 for the building in memory of Abraham and Eve Elkin.

Gratz College, a private, coeducational Jewish college in Melrose Park, Pennsylvania and traces its origins to 1856 when banker, philanthropist and communal leader Hyman Gratz, and the Hebrew Education Society of Philadelphia (established in 1849 by Rebecca Gratz and Isaac Leeser) joined together to establish a trust to create a Hebrew teachers college.[10] The amount of the endowment was nearly $200,000, worth $6.4 million in 2019.

German Immigration and Reform

Congregation Rodeph Shalom was founded in 1795, and is the first Ashkenazic congregation established in the Western Hemisphere.[11] In the last decade of the 18th century, a small group of Orthodox Jews from Germany, the Netherlands and Poland formed a minyan to worship in a manner consistent with their shared religious background. At first, services were held in various locations in Olde Philadelphia. In 1866, the congregation built its first sanctuary. Frank Furness, considered the most talented and exciting Philadelphia architect of his time, designed a Moorish-style synagogue on Broad and Mt. Vernon Streets.

The congregation soon outgrew its building and replaced it with the current structure, completed in 1928. Inspired by the great synagogue of Florence, Italy, Rodeph Shalom is one of the few synagogues in this country that retains the Byzantine-Moorish style. It was designed by the firm of Simon and Simon, which built the Fidelity Building on Broad Street.[12] The sanctuary seats 1,640 people below star burst skylights. Its stained glass windows are one of the few remaining collections from the renowned D'Ascenzo Studio. The majestic bronze-and-enamel doors of the Torah ark grace the bimah. The D'Ascenzo Studio also designed the sanctuary's walls, ceiling, and dome, along with the carpet and ornamentation. The Broad Street Foyer houses the Leon J. and Julia S. Obermayer Collection of Jewish ritual art. More than 500 objects of Jewish ceremonial art from around the world dating back to the 18th century are on display. The Philadelphia Jewish Museum gallery, dedicated to Jacob Gutman, sponsors three to four exhibits of contemporary Jewish art each year, and is open for public viewing.[13][14]

 
Keneseth Israel's current building in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania

The Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel was organized March 21, 1847.[15] Its first Reader was B. H. Gotthelf, who held services in a hall at No. 528 N Second Street.[16] The Reform movement, which had originated in Germany, soon extended itself to America, and L. Naumberg, Solomon Deutsch, and David Einhorn (1861–66) furthered its progress in this congregation. The first marked change in the character of the liturgy took place in 1856. Samuel Hirsch succeeded to the rabbinate in 1866; he introduced many changes in the service. In 1887 Joseph Krauskopf was elected rabbi; and contributed much to the success and standing of this congregation.[17] It was during his incumbency that the Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel became the largest in Philadelphia. It had about 700 members in 1904. Its synagogue was situated on Broad Street, above Columbia Avenue from 1892 to 1957. In 1893 Joseph Leonard Levy was elected associate rabbi, but he resigned in 1902 to take up a rabbinical position in Pittsburg. The congregation supported a free public library and a reading-room prior to the opening of Philadelphia's Free Library.[18] Senior Rabbis of Keneseth Israel since 1923 when Krauskopf died include William Fineshriber, Bertram W. Korn, Simeon Maslin and Lance J. Sussman.

In 1876, in commemoration of the centennial of American Independence, the Order B'nai B'rith and Israelites of America erected in Fairmount Park a statue representing Religious Liberty. It was designed by Moses Ezekiel, and was the first public monument erected by Jews in the United States.

In Philadelphia there were in 1904, not including lodges, over 160 Jewish organizations, of which over 50 are synagogues; the remainder consisting of hospitals, foster homes, Sunday-schools, benevolent associations, colleges, young men's Hebrew associations, social clubs, literary societies, etc. (A list of local organizations was published in the "American Jewish Year Book" for 5661 [1900-1].)

Eastern European Immigration (1881-1924)

In the early years of Eastern European Jewish mass immigration in the 1880s, a size-able Jewish quarter was established in a well-defined area of old Philadelphia, today known as Society Hill and Queen Village. In The Presbyterian, a weekly journal published in Philadelphia in 1889 for the Presbyterian community, the editor wrote: “In Philadelphia we are likely to have a Jewish section, where emigrants from Eastern Europe will congregate. From Fifth Street to the Delaware River and south of Lombard Street these foreign Jews are crowding in, and being very poor, the Hebrew Charities are drawn upon heavily.”[19] The Jewish press saw a more confined quarter, extending from Spruce Street in the north to Christian Street in the South and from 3rd Street to 6th Street east to west. This was at a time when sweatshops were moving south from Kensington to Northern Liberties and then south of Market Street to Bank and Strawberry Streets. At this time, German-Jewish wholesale clothiers, like Snellenberg's, had their businesses on N. 3rd Street between Market and Arch streets. Many of these buildings stand today.[20]

The Society Hachnasath Orechim, or Wayfarers' Lodge, was organized November 16, 1890, and chartered April 29, 1891; it was one of the most active charitable associations in Philadelphia. The Hebrew Literature Society, founded in 1885, opened a new building at 310 Catherine street. The Home for Hebrew Orphans, The Jewish Sheltering Home for the Homeless and Aged, the Mount Sinai Hospital Association, the Pannonia Beneficial Association, and the Central Talmud Torah were all situated in the southern portion of the city. In addition, the newcomers have many social, political, and literary organizations.

When immigrant steamers from Liverpool would arrive, trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad backed down onto the piers of the American Line to whisk away immigrants on their journeys to Chicago and places out west. A size-able number of Russian-Jewish immigrants stayed in Philadelphia and settled in the Jewish quarter. Many concentrated around the eastern end of South Street for three primary reasons: rent was inexpensive; housing was near the sweatshops; and the neighborhood was near the Emigrant Depot at the foot of Washington Avenue and the Delaware River. Prior to 1900, few Jews lived south of Washington Avenue. The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia was bordered by Polish immigrants and Irish to the east, by African-Americans to the west and Italians to the southwest and, to the south, by Irish. Crossing well defined boundaries was dangerous for the immigrants. Curbside and pushcart markets were established; teams of horses flying over cobblestone streets made daily runs to the Dock Street wholesale market. Many Jewish immigrants opened businesses on Dock Street, that continue to operate to the present day including M. Levin & Co, Inc.

Central to the new immigrant neighborhood was South Street, called “the great Street for Polish Jews and huckstering of every variety.” Some writers called it the Russian quarter because so many of the newcomers were from the Imperial Russian Empire.[21] In 1887, the Public Ledger wrote: “On South Street many “neat” stores have been built and indications point to the further improvement of that old down-town avenue of retail trade.” Dock Street, the wholesale food market of its day, “is not a handsome street; it is old, full of crude commercial bustle in the hours of the day, and after night fall or in the early hours of the night until the nocturnal preparations for the next day begin, it is almost wholly deserted.”[22] The first Yiddish theatre was in the center of the quarter, located at the corner of 5th and Gaskill Streets. It was here that actors of the Yiddish theatre performed, Jacob Adler and Boris Thomashevsky.[23] In the 1890s, the S. 4th Street vegetable and meat market was started on the sidewalks; it eventually grew into the fabled S. 4th Street pushcart market, still remembered till this day.

Markets were located along S. 2nd Street, the Washington Market along Bainbridge Street from 3rd to 5th Streets and in the 4th Street pushcart market. Sweatshops in the quarter numbered over one hundred. On the 300 block of Lombard Street alone there were five sweatshops. After 1900, Jews moved south across Washington Avenue and within just a few years they lived in great numbers south of Washington Avenue and east of Broad Street. Many Jews in the clothing trade prospered during the 1920s and moved to West Philadelphia and Strawberry Mansion. After Congress cut off immigration from Eastern Europe in 1924, the old Jewish quarter began to die out. Although its demise was slowed, first by the Depression and then by the effects of World War II, outward movement from the quarter accelerated after the war ended. Today, there are four synagogues operating in the original Jewish quarter.

Two buildings originally built as synagogues—Congregation B'nai Abraham, 527 Lombard Street (built in 1910 and still continuing to operate and maintain a congregation), and nearby B’nai Rueben, 6th & Kater Streets (built in 1905 but used for commercial purposes since 1956, and converted residential in 2014) —survive.[24]

 
B'Nai Abraham

Historic Congregation B'Nai Abraham is located in the Society Hill section of Center City Philadelphia, and is supported by a lay led leadership board who act as stewards of the historic building. The congregation was established in 1874 as the "Russian Shul" following a wave of immigration to the Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia at the time, fleeing from Czar Alexander II. It moved into present space around the 1910s, making it historically significant as the oldest building in Philadelphia that was originally constructed as a synagogue and has been in continuous use as such. With the departure of much of the neighborhood's Jewish population in the mid-twentieth century, the congregation was no longer able to support a full-time rabbi and frequently lacked a minyan for Shabbat services.[25] In the early 21st century, it became affiliated with the Chabad movement and is now one of its two Center City synagogues.[26]

Society Hill Synagogue, 418 Spruce Street, renovated and uses the historic building previously home to the Roumanian Shul from 1910 until the 1960s. Congregation Kesher Israel, 412 Lombard Street, acquired the former Universality Church building in 1889 and continues as an active Conservative synagogue.

Post World War II

In 1964, the Six Million Jewish Martyrs statue, the first public memorial in the United States in remembrance of the Holocaust, was unveiled at 16th Street and Benjamin Franklin Parkway. In 2018, The Horwitz-Wasserman Holocaust Memorial Plaza was unveiled at the same site.[27] In 1976, Mikveh Israel moved to Independence Mall, close to its original site, together with the National Museum of American Jewish History. The building opened on July 4, 1976, the Nation's Bicentennial. In August 2010, the National Museum of American Jewish History moved to new building at 5th and Market Streets. The synagogue is now the sole inhabitant of the current building. The former exhibit space is now the Social Hall, decorated with paintings dating from the 1700s to the present from the Archives. There is also an exhibit in the lobby.[28]

Haredi community

A Haredi community exists in Philadelphia as well. The Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia was founded in 1953. It is led by Rabbi Shmuel Kamenetzky, and formerly Rabbi Elya Svei also. The community also includes kollelim, such as the Philadelphia Community Kollel, founded in 2001 in Merion Station,[29] and the Northeast Community Kollel.

Notable Jews from the Philadelphia area

Settlers

  • David Franks (1720-1794) - Merchant and Loyalist in the American Revolutionary War.
  • Nathan Levy (1704-1853) - Merchant, established first Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia in 1740.
  • Samson Levy (1757-1781) - Merchant, signer of the Non-Importation Resolutions in 1765.
  • Isaac Miranda - First Jew in the English colonies to hold a judicial position, arrived in Philadelphia about 1710 where he engaged in trade with native peoples and eventually owned property in the town.

Art

Business

Clergy

Literature

  • Mary Matilda Cohen, -Journalist (1854-1911)
  • Nina Morais Cohen, -Author and suffragist (1855-1918)
  • Rebecca Gratz (1781-1869) - Educator and philanthropist.
  • Abraham Hart (1810-1885) - Publisher, philanthropist, briefly president of the Jewish Congregation Mickvéh Israel.
  • A. B. Magil (1905-2003) - Marxist journalist and pamphleteer
  • Mordecai Manuel Noah (1785-1851) - Sheriff, playwright, diplomat, journalist and utopian.
  • Moses Polock (1817-1903) - First dealer in the United States who dealt exclusively in rare books. At his death he was the oldest bibliophile in the country.[31]
  • A. S. W. Rosenbach (1876-1952) - American collector, scholar, and seller of rare books and manuscripts.

Medicine

Military

Law

Politics

Philanthropy

  • Rebecca Machado Phillips (1746-1831), founder and director of early Philadelphia charitable organizations.

Sports

Cultural activity

Books

The earliest publication relating to the Jews published in Philadelphia was a sermon by Moses Mendelssohn delivered by his preceptor David Hirchel Frankel, and translated from the German. It was printed from the press of Andrew Stewart in 1763. The first Hebrew Bible that appeared in the United States was published in Philadelphia in 1814 by Thomas Dobson, the printer being William Fry.

Newspapers

The Occident and American Jewish Advocate was the first Jewish newspaper published in Philadelphia, founded Isaac Leeser in 1843. It was edited by him it until his death in 1868 and for one year thereafter by Mayer Sulzberger. The paper went defunct in 1869. Other now defunct newspapers include The Jewish Index (1872-1873) and The Jewish Record (1975-1886), published under the editorship of Alfred T. Jones.[32] There were several daily papers published in Yiddish in the past, with the most notable being the Jewish Evening Post.

The Jewish Exponent was first published on April 15, 1887 and currently serves as the city's sole Jewish newspaper. It is the second oldest Jewish newspaper published today in the United States.[33]

Jewish Federation

 
Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia headquarters in Jewish Community Services Building

From a period immediately after the Revolutionary war efforts have been made to collect money for the charitable organizations by appealing to the general public. Lotteries were held early in the 19th century; subscription lists were constantly being formed. A ball was given in 1843 in aid of three societies. In 1853 and in 1854 dinners were given in aid of the Hebrew Charitable Fund, at which many noted citizens were present. The year following, a ball was given instead of a dinner, and it proved such a success financially that it was thought expedient to continue this form of entertainment; the Hebrew Charity-Ball Association was formed in consequence of this determination, and annual balls were given with great success until 1901, when they were discontinued owing to the establishment of the Federation of Jewish Charities.[34][35] As of 2019, The Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia (JFGP) has its headquarters in the Jewish Community Services Building in Center City, Philadelphia.[36]

United Hebrew Charities

The United Hebrew Charities, a union of six institutions, was organized in 1869, with Simon W. Arnold as its first president. Max Herzberg is president. The combination of the principal charitable societies of Philadelphia was formed on March 17, 1901; Jacob Gimbel was its first president. The federation as originally formed embraced nine institutions—the Jewish Hospital Association, Jewish Foster Home, Society of United Hebrew Charities, Hebrew Education Society, Orphans' Guardians, Jewish Maternity Association, Jewish Immigration Society, Young Women's Union, and Hebrew Sunday-School Society. Later, the National Farm School, the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives (at Denver), and the Alliance Israélite Universelle became beneficiaries. The income of the Federation (1903) was $123,039, with a membership of 1,916.[37][38]

In 1901, Lewis Elkin bequeathed $2,000,000 (today $65,140,000) to the city of Philadelphia for the support of superannuated female school-teachers. This is the largest bequest for a charitable object yet made by a Jewish resident of the city. Simon Muhr among other benefactions left a bequest for general educational purposes. The Simon Muhr Work Training School, built in 1899, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.[39]

Association of Jewish Immigrants

In 1882, the great exodus from Russia took place; thousands of Jews forced to emigrate took up their residence in Philadelphia; at the present time they constitute a majority of the Jewish population. A society for the protection of immigrants arriving from the Slavonic provinces was organized October 5, 1884, and called the "Association of Jewish Immigrants"; Louis E. Levy was president. In 1903, 5,310 Jewish immigrants arrived at the port of Philadelphia. In general, they quickly became prosperous; many had entered the learned professions, and they built synagogues and hospitals in the southern portion of the city, where most of them resided.[40][41] They had many synagogues and ḥebras, the most important being the Congregation B'nai Abraham, founded in 1882; Bernard Louis Levinthal was rabbi of this and the associated congregations in 1904.

Young Men's Hebrew Association

The Young Men's Hebrew Association, an outgrowth of a former institution—the Hebrew Association—was organized May 12, 1875, with Mayer Sulzberger as president. The object of the association is "to promote a higher culture among young men"; its membership in 1904 numbered over 1,000, under the presidency of Adolph Eichholz. Its building is situated in North Broad street. The Young Women's Union was originally a branch of the Hebrew Education Society, and was organized through the efforts of Mrs. Fanny Binswanger Hoffman on February 5, 1885; the object of the union is to educate the younger children of immigrant Jews. It maintained a kindergarten, day-nursery, sewing-school, etc. Mrs. Julia Friedberger Eschner was president.

Social Clubs

There are several Jewish social organizations. The Mercantile Club was established November 10, 1853, and incorporated April 17, 1869. Louis Bomeisler was its first president. The club occupies a building in North Broad street; Clarence Wolf was its president in 1904. The Garrick, the Progress, and the Franklin are other Jewish clubs. The Golden Slipper Club was founded in the early 1920s by a group of Jewish Masons who formed a card club and used the winnings to support families in need of basic necessities such as milk and coal. Golden Slipper Club and Charities exists in 2020 to perform philanthropic work through its Camp, Gems for seniors, and Club for people in the region who share its values of Charity, Good Fellowship & Loyalty. Golden Slipper will celebrate 100 years of service to the Philadelphia region in 2022.

Jewish Publication Society

The original Jewish Publication Society was established in Philadelphia November 9, 1845, Abraham Hart being its first president. The society owed its existence to Isaac Leeser. It published eleven works, including two by Grace Aguilar. The present Jewish Publication Society of America, a national organization, with headquarters at Philadelphia, was formed June 3, 1888; Morris Newburger was its first president. The society has published many works of value, including Israel Zangwill's Children of the Ghetto; a new translation of the Bible was started in the early 20th century, the Book of Psalms having already been issued by 1904. In 1904, Mayer Sulzberger was chairman of the publication committee; Edwin Wolf was president.

Museums and Art Galleries

The National Museum of American Jewish History, a Smithsonian affiliated museum, was founded in 1976.[42] The Philadelphia Museum of Jewish Art, founded in 1975, exhibits contemporary art that illuminates the Jewish experience. The Old City Jewish Arts Center, a gallery created in 2005, explores Judaism through the language of the arts.

See also

Bibliography

  • H. P. Rosenbach, Hist. of the Jews in Philadelphia Prior to 1800, Philadelphia, 1883;
  • H. S. Morais, The Jews of Philadelphia, 1894 (the most complete account);
  • Morris Jastrow Jr., in Publications Am. Jew. Hist. Soc. No. 1, pp. 49–61;
  • Henry Berkowitz, ib. No. 9, pp. 123–127;
  • A. S. W. Rosenbach, ib. No. 5, pp. 191–198;
  • Watson's Annals;
  • Westcott, History of Philadelphia;
  • Memoirs Hist. Soc. Pennsylvania;
  • The Occident;
  • The Jewish Exponent:
  • American Jewish Year Book, 1901;
  • Fifty Years' Work of the Hebrew Education Society, Report for 1899 (containing many portraits);
  • Archives of the Congregation Mickvé Israel.

Notes

  1. ^ "The Jewish Community of Philadelphia". The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
  2. ^ Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society. American Jewish Historical Society. 1893. p. 49[1]. German traveler Von Beck.
  3. ^ "Temple launches Torah Studies course". northjersey.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  4. ^ . toacorn.com. Archived from the original on 28 March 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  5. ^ "Search - Almanac Online -". almanacnews.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  6. ^ (see list in Rosenbach's "Jews of Philadelphia," p. 22)
  7. ^ "Judaism course begins this week in Edwards - VailDaily.com". vaildaily.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  8. ^ Hirschfeld, Fritz (2005). George Washington and the Jews. Published by University of Delaware Press. p. 50. ISBN 0-87413-927-9. Retrieved May 15, 2009.
  9. ^ "A Circuitous Relationship - SD JEWISH JOURNAL". sdjewishjournal.com. 29 October 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Gratz College - The College Board". bigfuture.collegeboard.org. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
  11. ^ "Laguna Beach Local News » Business Ethics Examined". lagunabeachindy.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  12. ^ "Jewish Institute in Madison offers course on money matters/ethics". nj.com. 2012-01-17. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  13. ^ "Sustainable Business Practices Examined at Chabad of South Brunswick". patch.com. 12 January 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  14. ^ "Chabad of East Boca Raton To Offer Business Ethics Course - Search Results - BocaNewsNow". bocanewsnow.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  15. ^ "Our History". Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel. J Village Network. 2014-02-06. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  16. ^ Sabbath offers serenity in a fast paced world Triblocal.com
  17. ^ ‘Meaningful Life' course offered in Edwards, www.vaildaily.com
  18. ^ "Home". mississauga.com.
  19. ^ The Presbyterian, Vol. LIX, No. 9, March 2, 1889 (Presbyterian Historical Society).
  20. ^ For a listing of the wholesale clothiers and sweatshops on Bank and Strawberry Streets, see Harry D. Boonin, The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia (JWT of Philadelphia, Inc., 1999), Appendix B.
  21. ^ The Life of Michael Valentine Ball (1868-1945), Transcribed and Researched by Edward L. Ball (Warren, PA, June 2003), p. 167. (Privately printed).
  22. ^ Rudoph J. Walther, Happenings in Ye Olde Philadelphia (Walther Printing House, Philadelphia, 1925), p. 176, and Dock Street from the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, January 27, 1919, by Penn (William Perrine).
  23. ^ David B. Tierkel, History of the Yiddish Theatre in Philadelphia, unpublished Yiddish typescript, 1934, Yiddisher Visnshaftlikher Institute, YIVO, New York.
  24. ^ "The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia". phillyhistory.org. 5 March 2008. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  25. ^ "Historic Congregation B'nai Abraham". Historic Congregation B'nai Abraham. Retrieved 2016-02-23.
  26. ^ "Chabad-Lubavitch Centers in Philadelphia".
  27. ^ Schucht, Eric (2019-04-26). "Honoring Survivors at Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony (Updated)". Jewish Exponent. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  28. ^ "Our History". mikvehisrael.org. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  29. ^ "18th Annual Dinner - The Philadelphia Community Kollel". Phillykollel.org. Philadelphia Community Kollel. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  30. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1892). "Hassler, Simon" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  31. ^ Polock, M. (Moses); Henkels, firm auctioneers (1904). A collection of valuable Americana gathered by the late Moses Polock, esq., the oldest bookseller in the United States, sold ... March 9 and 10, 1904. Cornell University Library. Philadelphia : Bicking Print.
  32. ^ "JONES, ALFRED T. - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
  33. ^ "Philadelphia's 'jewish Exponent' to Celebrate Its 75th Anniversary". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1962-03-30. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
  34. ^ www.nj.coml
  35. ^ "Ancient Marriage Secrets Revealed at Larchmont-Mamaroneck Chabad". patch.com. 18 April 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  36. ^ "Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia Offices" (Archive) Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved on January 19, 2014. "Jewish Community Services Building 2100 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 "
  37. ^ "www.triblocal.com". triblocal.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  38. ^ "JLI Teens :: News". jliteens.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  39. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  40. ^ "Jewish business ethics to be topic for course". toledoblade.com. 28 January 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  41. ^ . Highbeam.com. 27 January 2012. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
  42. ^ Rothstein, Edward (2010-11-11). "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Identity". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-3-12.

References

Further reading

External links

  • Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia
  • Congregation Rodeph Shalom
  • Congregation Mikveh Israel
  • Congregation Keneseth Israel
  • Congregation Shivtei Yeshuron-Ezras Israel

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Jews in Philadelphia can trace their history back to Colonial America Jews have lived in Philadelphia since the arrival of William Penn in 1682 Contents 1 Colonial History 1 1 In the War of Independence 2 Congregation Mikveh Israel 3 German Immigration and Reform 4 Eastern European Immigration 1881 1924 5 Post World War II 5 1 Haredi community 6 Notable Jews from the Philadelphia area 6 1 Settlers 6 2 Art 6 3 Business 6 4 Clergy 6 5 Literature 6 6 Medicine 6 7 Military 6 8 Law 6 9 Politics 6 10 Philanthropy 6 11 Sports 7 Cultural activity 7 1 Books 7 2 Newspapers 7 3 Jewish Federation 7 4 United Hebrew Charities 7 5 Association of Jewish Immigrants 7 6 Young Men s Hebrew Association 7 7 Social Clubs 7 8 Jewish Publication Society 7 9 Museums and Art Galleries 8 See also 9 Bibliography 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksColonial History EditJewish traders have operated in southeastern Pennsylvania since at least the 1650s 1 The first Jewish resident of the city on record was Jonas Aaron whose name appears in 1703 in the American Historical Register Several Jewish families had immigrated to Philadelphia by 1734 as recorded by German traveler von Beck who listed them among the religious sects of the town 2 Nathan Levy purchased ground for Jewish burial in 1738 obtained the grant on September 25 1740 and is cared for by Congregation Mikveh Israel 3 4 In the War of Independence Edit Many Jews in Philadelphia took a prominent part in the War of Independence Leading up to the conflict several Jewish merchants and other citizens of Philadelphia signed the Non Importation Resolutions By doing so they agreed not to have any goods shipped from Great Britain until after the repeal of the Stamp Act This was officially adopted on October 25 1765 The Jewish signers included Benjamin Levy David Franks Samson Levy Hyman Levy Jr Mathias Bush Moses Mordecai Michael Gratz and Barnard Gratz The last two were brothers who had left Upper Silesia in Germany about 1755 and settled in Philadelphia In 1777 just after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War the following Jews agreed to accept the colonial paper money sanctioned by the king in lieu of gold and silver Solomon Aaron Joseph Solomon Kohn Solomon Marache Moses Mordecai Barnard Soliman and David Franks Of these Moses Mordecai and David Franks had signed the Non Importation Resolutions During the conflict David Franks was conspicuous for his loyalty to the British cause being the English agent in charge of the prisoners his daughter Rebecca Franks took part in the Mischianza the famous fete given in honor of General Howe during the British occupancy of Philadelphia The majority of the Jews of the city however supported the American cause Col David Salisbury Franks was aide de camp to General Benedict Arnold at Philadelphia in 1779 Solomon Bush was major of the Pennsylvania militia Col Isaac Franks served with distinction in the war as did Philip Moses Russell and Benjamin Nones Haym Solomon made loans to individuals in Congress which were never repaid his services as a financial agent during the war were invaluable Another creditor of the Continental Congress was Aaron Levy and his loans like nearly all the others were never fully repaid At the close of the war the Jewish population of Philadelphia amounted to almost 500 In 1801 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 Congregation Mikveh Israel Edit Rebecca Gratz educator and philanthropist member of congregation Mikveh Israel Congregation Mikveh Israel the first Jewish congregation in Philadelphia had its beginnings about 1745 and is believed to have worshiped in a small house in Sterling Alley In 1761 owing to the influx of Spanish and Portuguese Jews from England the Netherlands and the West Indies the question of building a synagogue was raised but nothing was then accomplished in that direction In 1773 when Bernard Gratz was parnas and Solomon Marache treasurer a subscription was started in order to support our holy worship and establish it on a more solid foundation The number of Jewish residents in Philadelphia was suddenly increased at the outbreak of the American Revolution by the influx of Jewish patriots from New York which had been captured by the British Sept 1776 The congregation removed from the house in Sterling Alley and then occupied quarters in Cherry Alley between Third and Fourth streets The building in Cherry Alley which had sufficed for the few families in the city became inadequate and steps were taken to secure a more commodious building Gershom Mendes Seixas who had fled from New York to Connecticut was requested to act as the first rabbi of the reorganized congregation The estimate for the new building was 600 and the subscription being inadequate Haym Salomon the banker and financial agent of the Continental Congress agreed to pay one fourth the cost A lot was purchased in Cherry street near Third street and a suitable building erected 5 The governor of Pennsylvania and his official family were invited to attend the dedication ceremonies which were held on September 13 1782 At this time the congregation had over 100 members 6 its officers were Jonas Phillips president Michael Gratz Solomon Marache Solomon Myers Cohen and Simon Nathan On November 25 1783 New York was evacuated by the British and many of the members of the congregation returned to their former homes The congregation also started Mikveh Israel Cemetery 7 It is estimated that in 1775 the city of Philadelphia had a population of approximately 35 000 of whom 300 were Jewish 8 Mikveh Israel counted among its members revolutionary patriots including Jonas Phillips the Gratz family and Haym Solomon who financed the war When Washington was elected president of the United States the Congregation Mickve Israel together with the congregations of New York Charleston and Richmond sent a congratulatory address to which Washington replied 1790 After Congregation Shearith Israel recalled the Rev Gershom Mendez Seixas to New York Congregation Mickve Israel elected the Rev Jacob Raphael Cohen in his stead The latter had officiated as Chazzan of the Spanish and Portuguese synagogue in Montreal and had served in a like capacity in New York during the British occupation He ministered to the Congregation Mickve Israel until his death in Sept 1811 As a result of the departure of its members in 1788 the congregation encountered financial difficulties A subscription list was started to meet the existing debts and among those who contributed to it were Benjamin Franklin and David Rittenhouse From this time on the congregation was ceaseless in its religious and charitable activities and when Isaac Leeser s incumbency began in 1829 it was perhaps the best known synagogue in the United States In 1815 Emanuel Nunes Carvalho was elected minister and continued in that capacity until his death in 1817 he was succeeded in 1824 by Abraham Israel Keys 9 Mikveh Israel erected its first building in 1782 on Cherry Alley as well as a parsonage school mikvah and oven for Matza baking for Passover A commemorative marker stands at that place When the 1782 building became inadequate the synagogue built a larger synagogue on the same designed by William Strickland a leading architect clarification needed Prior to the Civil War 1861 1865 as the Jewish population grew and prospered an elegant building was constructed on 7th Street north of Arch designed by John McArthur Jr later architect of City Hall of Philadelphia Many Jews moved to the area between Broad and 16th Streets north of Girard Avenue A new building was constructed at Broad and York Streets in 1909 flanked by Gratz and Dropsie Colleges Samuel Elkin and Henry G Freeman Jr donated 100 000 40 500 for the site 59 000 for the building in memory of Abraham and Eve Elkin Gratz College a private coeducational Jewish college in Melrose Park Pennsylvania and traces its origins to 1856 when banker philanthropist and communal leader Hyman Gratz and the Hebrew Education Society of Philadelphia established in 1849 by Rebecca Gratz and Isaac Leeser joined together to establish a trust to create a Hebrew teachers college 10 The amount of the endowment was nearly 200 000 worth 6 4 million in 2019 German Immigration and Reform EditCongregation Rodeph Shalom was founded in 1795 and is the first Ashkenazic congregation established in the Western Hemisphere 11 In the last decade of the 18th century a small group of Orthodox Jews from Germany the Netherlands and Poland formed a minyan to worship in a manner consistent with their shared religious background At first services were held in various locations in Olde Philadelphia In 1866 the congregation built its first sanctuary Frank Furness considered the most talented and exciting Philadelphia architect of his time designed a Moorish style synagogue on Broad and Mt Vernon Streets The congregation soon outgrew its building and replaced it with the current structure completed in 1928 Inspired by the great synagogue of Florence Italy Rodeph Shalom is one of the few synagogues in this country that retains the Byzantine Moorish style It was designed by the firm of Simon and Simon which built the Fidelity Building on Broad Street 12 The sanctuary seats 1 640 people below star burst skylights Its stained glass windows are one of the few remaining collections from the renowned D Ascenzo Studio The majestic bronze and enamel doors of the Torah ark grace the bimah The D Ascenzo Studio also designed the sanctuary s walls ceiling and dome along with the carpet and ornamentation The Broad Street Foyer houses the Leon J and Julia S Obermayer Collection of Jewish ritual art More than 500 objects of Jewish ceremonial art from around the world dating back to the 18th century are on display The Philadelphia Jewish Museum gallery dedicated to Jacob Gutman sponsors three to four exhibits of contemporary Jewish art each year and is open for public viewing 13 14 Keneseth Israel s current building in Elkins Park PennsylvaniaThe Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel was organized March 21 1847 15 Its first Reader was B H Gotthelf who held services in a hall at No 528 N Second Street 16 The Reform movement which had originated in Germany soon extended itself to America and L Naumberg Solomon Deutsch and David Einhorn 1861 66 furthered its progress in this congregation The first marked change in the character of the liturgy took place in 1856 Samuel Hirsch succeeded to the rabbinate in 1866 he introduced many changes in the service In 1887 Joseph Krauskopf was elected rabbi and contributed much to the success and standing of this congregation 17 It was during his incumbency that the Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel became the largest in Philadelphia It had about 700 members in 1904 Its synagogue was situated on Broad Street above Columbia Avenue from 1892 to 1957 In 1893 Joseph Leonard Levy was elected associate rabbi but he resigned in 1902 to take up a rabbinical position in Pittsburg The congregation supported a free public library and a reading room prior to the opening of Philadelphia s Free Library 18 Senior Rabbis of Keneseth Israel since 1923 when Krauskopf died include William Fineshriber Bertram W Korn Simeon Maslin and Lance J Sussman In 1876 in commemoration of the centennial of American Independence the Order B nai B rith and Israelites of America erected in Fairmount Park a statue representing Religious Liberty It was designed by Moses Ezekiel and was the first public monument erected by Jews in the United States In Philadelphia there were in 1904 not including lodges over 160 Jewish organizations of which over 50 are synagogues the remainder consisting of hospitals foster homes Sunday schools benevolent associations colleges young men s Hebrew associations social clubs literary societies etc A list of local organizations was published in the American Jewish Year Book for 5661 1900 1 Eastern European Immigration 1881 1924 EditIn the early years of Eastern European Jewish mass immigration in the 1880s a size able Jewish quarter was established in a well defined area of old Philadelphia today known as Society Hill and Queen Village In The Presbyterian a weekly journal published in Philadelphia in 1889 for the Presbyterian community the editor wrote In Philadelphia we are likely to have a Jewish section where emigrants from Eastern Europe will congregate From Fifth Street to the Delaware River and south of Lombard Street these foreign Jews are crowding in and being very poor the Hebrew Charities are drawn upon heavily 19 The Jewish press saw a more confined quarter extending from Spruce Street in the north to Christian Street in the South and from 3rd Street to 6th Street east to west This was at a time when sweatshops were moving south from Kensington to Northern Liberties and then south of Market Street to Bank and Strawberry Streets At this time German Jewish wholesale clothiers like Snellenberg s had their businesses on N 3rd Street between Market and Arch streets Many of these buildings stand today 20 The Society Hachnasath Orechim or Wayfarers Lodge was organized November 16 1890 and chartered April 29 1891 it was one of the most active charitable associations in Philadelphia The Hebrew Literature Society founded in 1885 opened a new building at 310 Catherine street The Home for Hebrew Orphans The Jewish Sheltering Home for the Homeless and Aged the Mount Sinai Hospital Association the Pannonia Beneficial Association and the Central Talmud Torah were all situated in the southern portion of the city In addition the newcomers have many social political and literary organizations When immigrant steamers from Liverpool would arrive trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad backed down onto the piers of the American Line to whisk away immigrants on their journeys to Chicago and places out west A size able number of Russian Jewish immigrants stayed in Philadelphia and settled in the Jewish quarter Many concentrated around the eastern end of South Street for three primary reasons rent was inexpensive housing was near the sweatshops and the neighborhood was near the Emigrant Depot at the foot of Washington Avenue and the Delaware River Prior to 1900 few Jews lived south of Washington Avenue The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia was bordered by Polish immigrants and Irish to the east by African Americans to the west and Italians to the southwest and to the south by Irish Crossing well defined boundaries was dangerous for the immigrants Curbside and pushcart markets were established teams of horses flying over cobblestone streets made daily runs to the Dock Street wholesale market Many Jewish immigrants opened businesses on Dock Street that continue to operate to the present day including M Levin amp Co Inc Central to the new immigrant neighborhood was South Street called the great Street for Polish Jews and huckstering of every variety Some writers called it the Russian quarter because so many of the newcomers were from the Imperial Russian Empire 21 In 1887 the Public Ledger wrote On South Street many neat stores have been built and indications point to the further improvement of that old down town avenue of retail trade Dock Street the wholesale food market of its day is not a handsome street it is old full of crude commercial bustle in the hours of the day and after night fall or in the early hours of the night until the nocturnal preparations for the next day begin it is almost wholly deserted 22 The first Yiddish theatre was in the center of the quarter located at the corner of 5th and Gaskill Streets It was here that actors of the Yiddish theatre performed Jacob Adler and Boris Thomashevsky 23 In the 1890s the S 4th Street vegetable and meat market was started on the sidewalks it eventually grew into the fabled S 4th Street pushcart market still remembered till this day Markets were located along S 2nd Street the Washington Market along Bainbridge Street from 3rd to 5th Streets and in the 4th Street pushcart market Sweatshops in the quarter numbered over one hundred On the 300 block of Lombard Street alone there were five sweatshops After 1900 Jews moved south across Washington Avenue and within just a few years they lived in great numbers south of Washington Avenue and east of Broad Street Many Jews in the clothing trade prospered during the 1920s and moved to West Philadelphia and Strawberry Mansion After Congress cut off immigration from Eastern Europe in 1924 the old Jewish quarter began to die out Although its demise was slowed first by the Depression and then by the effects of World War II outward movement from the quarter accelerated after the war ended Today there are four synagogues operating in the original Jewish quarter Two buildings originally built as synagogues Congregation B nai Abraham 527 Lombard Street built in 1910 and still continuing to operate and maintain a congregation and nearby B nai Rueben 6th amp Kater Streets built in 1905 but used for commercial purposes since 1956 and converted residential in 2014 survive 24 B Nai Abraham Historic Congregation B Nai Abraham is located in the Society Hill section of Center City Philadelphia and is supported by a lay led leadership board who act as stewards of the historic building The congregation was established in 1874 as the Russian Shul following a wave of immigration to the Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia at the time fleeing from Czar Alexander II It moved into present space around the 1910s making it historically significant as the oldest building in Philadelphia that was originally constructed as a synagogue and has been in continuous use as such With the departure of much of the neighborhood s Jewish population in the mid twentieth century the congregation was no longer able to support a full time rabbi and frequently lacked a minyan for Shabbat services 25 In the early 21st century it became affiliated with the Chabad movement and is now one of its two Center City synagogues 26 Society Hill Synagogue 418 Spruce Street renovated and uses the historic building previously home to the Roumanian Shul from 1910 until the 1960s Congregation Kesher Israel 412 Lombard Street acquired the former Universality Church building in 1889 and continues as an active Conservative synagogue Post World War II EditIn 1964 the Six Million Jewish Martyrs statue the first public memorial in the United States in remembrance of the Holocaust was unveiled at 16th Street and Benjamin Franklin Parkway In 2018 The Horwitz Wasserman Holocaust Memorial Plaza was unveiled at the same site 27 In 1976 Mikveh Israel moved to Independence Mall close to its original site together with the National Museum of American Jewish History The building opened on July 4 1976 the Nation s Bicentennial In August 2010 the National Museum of American Jewish History moved to new building at 5th and Market Streets The synagogue is now the sole inhabitant of the current building The former exhibit space is now the Social Hall decorated with paintings dating from the 1700s to the present from the Archives There is also an exhibit in the lobby 28 L R Rabbis Elya Svei Aharon Leib Shteinman Shmuel Kamenetzky Haredi community Edit A Haredi community exists in Philadelphia as well The Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia was founded in 1953 It is led by Rabbi Shmuel Kamenetzky and formerly Rabbi Elya Svei also The community also includes kollelim such as the Philadelphia Community Kollel founded in 2001 in Merion Station 29 and the Northeast Community Kollel Notable Jews from the Philadelphia area EditSettlers Edit David Franks 1720 1794 Merchant and Loyalist in the American Revolutionary War Nathan Levy 1704 1853 Merchant established first Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia in 1740 Samson Levy 1757 1781 Merchant signer of the Non Importation Resolutions in 1765 Isaac Miranda First Jew in the English colonies to hold a judicial position arrived in Philadelphia about 1710 where he engaged in trade with native peoples and eventually owned property in the town Art Edit Theresa Bernstein 1890 2002 Polish born painter who was one of the Philadelphia Ten Stella Drabkin 1906 1971 painter Simon Hassler 1832 1901 30 German born conductor and composer Sylvia Kauders actress 1921 2016 Philip Loeb 1891 1955 Stage film and television actor Sarai Sherman 1922 2013 painter and sculptorBusiness Edit David L Cohen Executive Vice President of Comcast Chief of Staff of Philadelphia Mayor Ed Rendell Adam Gimbel 1817 1896 Founder of the Gimbel Brothers Company Bernard Gimbel 1885 1966 President of the Gimbels department store Ed Savitz 1942 1993 amusement arcade operator Ralph J Roberts 1920 2015 Founder of Comcast Brian L Roberts CEO of ComcastClergy Edit Henry Berkowitz 1857 1924 Rabbi helped establish the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies and the Philadelphia Rabbinical Association in 1901 Jacob Raphael Cohen 1738 1811 Rabbi of Congregation Mikveh Israel in Philadelphia from 1784 until his death in 1811 Emanuel Nunes Carvalho 1771 1817 Religious leader and lexicographer Published the first Jewish sermon printed in the United States Amy Eilberg 1954 First female rabbi ordained in Conservative Judaism Linda Joy Holtzman Rabbi and author Marcus Jastrow 1829 1903 Talmudic scholar author of A Dictionary of the Targumim Talmud Babli Talmud Yerushalmi and Midrashic Literature Joseph Krauskopf 1858 1923 Rabbi author leader of Reform Judaism and founder of the National Farm School Isaac Leeser 1806 1868 Publisher helped found the Jewish press of America and produced the first Jewish translation of the Bible into English Gershom Mendes Seixas 1745 1816 First native born Jewish religious leader in the United States Henry Samuel Morais 1860 1935 Writer and Rabbi Sabato Morais 1823 1897 Italian American rabbi leader of Mikveh Israel Synagogue and pioneer of Italian Jewish Studies in America Henry Vidaver 1833 1882 Rabbi of Congregation Rodeph Shalom in Philadelphia from 1859 to 1861 Literature Edit Mary Matilda Cohen Journalist 1854 1911 Nina Morais Cohen Author and suffragist 1855 1918 Rebecca Gratz 1781 1869 Educator and philanthropist Abraham Hart 1810 1885 Publisher philanthropist briefly president of the Jewish Congregation Mickveh Israel A B Magil 1905 2003 Marxist journalist and pamphleteer Mordecai Manuel Noah 1785 1851 Sheriff playwright diplomat journalist and utopian Moses Polock 1817 1903 First dealer in the United States who dealt exclusively in rare books At his death he was the oldest bibliophile in the country 31 A S W Rosenbach 1876 1952 American collector scholar and seller of rare books and manuscripts Medicine Edit Isaac Hays 1796 1879 Ophthalmologist founding member of the American Medical Association first president of the Philadelphia Ophthalmological Society Solomon Solis Cohen 1857 1948 Physician professor of medicine and prominent Zionist Military Edit David Franks 1740 1793 An aide de camp for General Benedict Arnold during the American War of Independence Uriah P Levy 1792 1862 Naval officer real estate investor philanthropist Joseph George Rosengarten 1835 1921 Lawyer historian and Civil War veteran Haym Salomon 1740 1785 Businessman prime financier during the American Revolutionary War Law Edit Mayer Sulzberger 1843 1923 Judge newspaper publisher Moses Levy 1757 1826 Lawyer trustee of the University of Pennsylvania for twenty four years Samson Levy 1761 1831 Lawyer one of the incorporators of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine ArtsPolitics Edit Isaac Bacharach 1870 1956 Politician from New Jersey who represented the 2nd congressional district from 1915 to 1937 David Cohen 1914 2005 Lawyer and Philadelphia City Council member for 26 years Rose Gratz Fishstein 1895 Suffragist jailed for protesting in front of the White House Benjamin M Golder 1891 1946 Member of the United States House of Representatives for Pennsylvania from 1925 to 1933 Sam Katz Three time candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia subject of 2006 documentary film The Shame of a City Lewis Charles Levin 1808 1860 Served three terms in the U S House of Representatives for Pennsylvania Considered first Jewish congressman Leonard Myers 1827 1905 Member of the U S House of Representatives for Pennsylvania during the American Civil War Henry Myer Phillips 1811 1884 Member of the U S House of Representatives for Pennsylvania from 1856 to 1860 Ed Rendell Mayor of Philadelphia from 1992 to 2000 Governor of Pennsylvania from 2003 to 2011 Bernard Samuel 1880 1954 Mayor of Philadelphia from 1941 to 1952 Born to Jewish parents but converted to the Episcopalian faith as a young man Arlen Specter 1930 2012 District Attorney of Philadelphia from 1966 to 1974 United States Senator for Pennsylvania from 1981 to 2011 Joan Specter 1934 present City Council Member 1980 1996 Philanthropy Edit Rebecca Machado Phillips 1746 1831 founder and director of early Philadelphia charitable organizations Sports Edit Howard Eskin 1951 present sports talk radio personality on 94WIPCultural activity EditBooks Edit The earliest publication relating to the Jews published in Philadelphia was a sermon by Moses Mendelssohn delivered by his preceptor David Hirchel Frankel and translated from the German It was printed from the press of Andrew Stewart in 1763 The first Hebrew Bible that appeared in the United States was published in Philadelphia in 1814 by Thomas Dobson the printer being William Fry Newspapers Edit The Occident and American Jewish Advocate was the first Jewish newspaper published in Philadelphia founded Isaac Leeser in 1843 It was edited by him it until his death in 1868 and for one year thereafter by Mayer Sulzberger The paper went defunct in 1869 Other now defunct newspapers include The Jewish Index 1872 1873 and The Jewish Record 1975 1886 published under the editorship of Alfred T Jones 32 There were several daily papers published in Yiddish in the past with the most notable being the Jewish Evening Post The Jewish Exponent was first published on April 15 1887 and currently serves as the city s sole Jewish newspaper It is the second oldest Jewish newspaper published today in the United States 33 Jewish Federation Edit Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia headquarters in Jewish Community Services Building From a period immediately after the Revolutionary war efforts have been made to collect money for the charitable organizations by appealing to the general public Lotteries were held early in the 19th century subscription lists were constantly being formed A ball was given in 1843 in aid of three societies In 1853 and in 1854 dinners were given in aid of the Hebrew Charitable Fund at which many noted citizens were present The year following a ball was given instead of a dinner and it proved such a success financially that it was thought expedient to continue this form of entertainment the Hebrew Charity Ball Association was formed in consequence of this determination and annual balls were given with great success until 1901 when they were discontinued owing to the establishment of the Federation of Jewish Charities 34 35 As of 2019 The Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia JFGP has its headquarters in the Jewish Community Services Building in Center City Philadelphia 36 United Hebrew Charities Edit The United Hebrew Charities a union of six institutions was organized in 1869 with Simon W Arnold as its first president Max Herzberg is president The combination of the principal charitable societies of Philadelphia was formed on March 17 1901 Jacob Gimbel was its first president The federation as originally formed embraced nine institutions the Jewish Hospital Association Jewish Foster Home Society of United Hebrew Charities Hebrew Education Society Orphans Guardians Jewish Maternity Association Jewish Immigration Society Young Women s Union and Hebrew Sunday School Society Later the National Farm School the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives at Denver and the Alliance Israelite Universelle became beneficiaries The income of the Federation 1903 was 123 039 with a membership of 1 916 37 38 In 1901 Lewis Elkin bequeathed 2 000 000 today 65 140 000 to the city of Philadelphia for the support of superannuated female school teachers This is the largest bequest for a charitable object yet made by a Jewish resident of the city Simon Muhr among other benefactions left a bequest for general educational purposes The Simon Muhr Work Training School built in 1899 was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 39 Association of Jewish Immigrants Edit In 1882 the great exodus from Russia took place thousands of Jews forced to emigrate took up their residence in Philadelphia at the present time they constitute a majority of the Jewish population A society for the protection of immigrants arriving from the Slavonic provinces was organized October 5 1884 and called the Association of Jewish Immigrants Louis E Levy was president In 1903 5 310 Jewish immigrants arrived at the port of Philadelphia In general they quickly became prosperous many had entered the learned professions and they built synagogues and hospitals in the southern portion of the city where most of them resided 40 41 They had many synagogues and ḥebras the most important being the Congregation B nai Abraham founded in 1882 Bernard Louis Levinthal was rabbi of this and the associated congregations in 1904 Young Men s Hebrew Association Edit The Young Men s Hebrew Association an outgrowth of a former institution the Hebrew Association was organized May 12 1875 with Mayer Sulzberger as president The object of the association is to promote a higher culture among young men its membership in 1904 numbered over 1 000 under the presidency of Adolph Eichholz Its building is situated in North Broad street The Young Women s Union was originally a branch of the Hebrew Education Society and was organized through the efforts of Mrs Fanny Binswanger Hoffman on February 5 1885 the object of the union is to educate the younger children of immigrant Jews It maintained a kindergarten day nursery sewing school etc Mrs Julia Friedberger Eschner was president Social Clubs Edit There are several Jewish social organizations The Mercantile Club was established November 10 1853 and incorporated April 17 1869 Louis Bomeisler was its first president The club occupies a building in North Broad street Clarence Wolf was its president in 1904 The Garrick the Progress and the Franklin are other Jewish clubs The Golden Slipper Club was founded in the early 1920s by a group of Jewish Masons who formed a card club and used the winnings to support families in need of basic necessities such as milk and coal Golden Slipper Club and Charities exists in 2020 to perform philanthropic work through its Camp Gems for seniors and Club for people in the region who share its values of Charity Good Fellowship amp Loyalty Golden Slipper will celebrate 100 years of service to the Philadelphia region in 2022 Jewish Publication Society Edit The original Jewish Publication Society was established in Philadelphia November 9 1845 Abraham Hart being its first president The society owed its existence to Isaac Leeser It published eleven works including two by Grace Aguilar The present Jewish Publication Society of America a national organization with headquarters at Philadelphia was formed June 3 1888 Morris Newburger was its first president The society has published many works of value including Israel Zangwill s Children of the Ghetto a new translation of the Bible was started in the early 20th century the Book of Psalms having already been issued by 1904 In 1904 Mayer Sulzberger was chairman of the publication committee Edwin Wolf was president Museums and Art Galleries Edit The National Museum of American Jewish History a Smithsonian affiliated museum was founded in 1976 42 The Philadelphia Museum of Jewish Art founded in 1975 exhibits contemporary art that illuminates the Jewish experience The Old City Jewish Arts Center a gallery created in 2005 explores Judaism through the language of the arts See also Edit Philadelphia portal Judaism portalJewish American Jewish history in the United States pre 20th century Jewish history in Pennsylvania Jews in New York City List of Jewish Americans Religion in PhiladelphiaBibliography EditH P Rosenbach Hist of the Jews in Philadelphia Prior to 1800 Philadelphia 1883 H S Morais The Jews of Philadelphia 1894 the most complete account Morris Jastrow Jr in Publications Am Jew Hist Soc No 1 pp 49 61 Henry Berkowitz ib No 9 pp 123 127 A S W Rosenbach ib No 5 pp 191 198 Watson s Annals Westcott History of Philadelphia Memoirs Hist Soc Pennsylvania The Occident The Jewish Exponent American Jewish Year Book 1901 Fifty Years Work of the Hebrew Education Society Report for 1899 containing many portraits Archives of the Congregation Mickve Israel Notes Edit The Jewish Community of Philadelphia The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society American Jewish Historical Society 1893 p 49 1 German traveler Von Beck Temple launches Torah Studies course northjersey com Retrieved 27 March 2017 Faith Briefs www toacorn com Thousand Oaks Acorn toacorn com Archived from the original on 28 March 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Search Almanac Online almanacnews com Retrieved 27 March 2017 see list in Rosenbach s Jews of Philadelphia p 22 Judaism course begins this week in Edwards VailDaily com vaildaily com Retrieved 27 March 2017 Hirschfeld Fritz 2005 George Washington and the Jews Published by University of Delaware Press p 50 ISBN 0 87413 927 9 Retrieved May 15 2009 A Circuitous Relationship SD JEWISH JOURNAL sdjewishjournal com 29 October 2011 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Gratz College The College Board bigfuture collegeboard org Retrieved 2019 04 26 Laguna Beach Local News Business Ethics Examined lagunabeachindy com Retrieved 27 March 2017 Jewish Institute in Madison offers course on money matters ethics nj com 2012 01 17 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Sustainable Business Practices Examined at Chabad of South Brunswick patch com 12 January 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Chabad of East Boca Raton To Offer Business Ethics Course Search Results BocaNewsNow bocanewsnow com Retrieved 27 March 2017 Our History Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel J Village Network 2014 02 06 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Sabbath offers serenity in a fast paced world Triblocal com Meaningful Life course offered in Edwards www vaildaily com Home mississauga com The Presbyterian Vol LIX No 9 March 2 1889 Presbyterian Historical Society For a listing of the wholesale clothiers and sweatshops on Bank and Strawberry Streets see Harry D Boonin The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia JWT of Philadelphia Inc 1999 Appendix B The Life of Michael Valentine Ball 1868 1945 Transcribed and Researched by Edward L Ball Warren PA June 2003 p 167 Privately printed Rudoph J Walther Happenings in Ye Olde Philadelphia Walther Printing House Philadelphia 1925 p 176 and Dock Street from the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin January 27 1919 by Penn William Perrine David B Tierkel History of the Yiddish Theatre in Philadelphia unpublished Yiddish typescript 1934 Yiddisher Visnshaftlikher Institute YIVO New York The Jewish Quarter of Philadelphia phillyhistory org 5 March 2008 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Historic Congregation B nai Abraham Historic Congregation B nai Abraham Retrieved 2016 02 23 Chabad Lubavitch Centers in Philadelphia Schucht Eric 2019 04 26 Honoring Survivors at Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony Updated Jewish Exponent Retrieved 2019 04 27 Our History mikvehisrael org Retrieved 27 March 2017 18th Annual Dinner The Philadelphia Community Kollel Phillykollel org Philadelphia Community Kollel Retrieved July 21 2020 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1892 Hassler Simon Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Polock M Moses Henkels firm auctioneers 1904 A collection of valuable Americana gathered by the late Moses Polock esq the oldest bookseller in the United States sold March 9 and 10 1904 Cornell University Library Philadelphia Bicking Print JONES ALFRED T JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Retrieved 2019 04 26 Philadelphia s jewish Exponent to Celebrate Its 75th Anniversary Jewish Telegraphic Agency 1962 03 30 Retrieved 2019 04 26 www nj coml Ancient Marriage Secrets Revealed at Larchmont Mamaroneck Chabad patch com 18 April 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia Offices Archive Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia Retrieved on January 19 2014 Jewish Community Services Building 2100 Arch Street Philadelphia PA 19103 www triblocal com triblocal com Retrieved 27 March 2017 JLI Teens News jliteens com Retrieved 27 March 2017 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Jewish business ethics to be topic for course toledoblade com 28 January 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Economic crisis from a Jewish perspective Highbeam com 27 January 2012 Archived from the original on 29 March 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Rothstein Edward 2010 11 11 Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Identity The New York Times Retrieved 2021 3 12 References Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Philadelphia The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Further reading EditPeltz R From Immigrant to Ethnic Culture American Yiddish in South Philadelphia Stanford University Press 1997 External links EditJewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia Congregation Rodeph Shalom Congregation Mikveh Israel Congregation Keneseth Israel Congregation Shivtei Yeshuron Ezras Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Jews in Philadelphia amp oldid 1151715220, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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