Jonathan Cohen's photos with the keyword: synagogue
Templo Adventista del Septimo Dia – Delancey Stree…
05 Jul 2015 |
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Today the church at 126 Forsyth Street is known as the Templo Adventista del Septimo Dia (Seventh Day Adventist Church). But this wasn’t always the case. Look closely at the tan-and-red facade and you will notice evidence of the building’s Jewish past. Many Jewish stars are quite visible within the ornate window arches. Regardless of religious affiliation, however, this house of worship is an icon of Lower East Side history.
The Romanesque Revival building was erected in 1890 by a renowned architect named Josiah Cleveland Cody, and was a temporary home to a missionary group attempting to proselytize among the Jewish people. Their efforts did not bear fruit and they soon sold the building to the Chevrah Poel Zedek Anschei Illia. The Chevrah was founded by a small group of immigrants from the shtetl of Illia, in the province of Vilna, Lithuania. These immigrants longed for a taste of home in the midst of a foreign land. They decided to form a fellowship in order to have a place to pray together and meet with their fellow countrymen, to help each other, and to hear news from the old home.
For approximately the first ten years of its existence, the congregation had wandered from one small rented location to another on the Lower East Side. As time went on, some of the members became rich and more Americanized. They wanted to have a large synagogue of their own with a cantor, choir, and rabbi. A renovation in 1909 brought retail storefronts, and extra money to the congregation. But by the mid-1920s, the synagogue was in decline, thanks in part to "changes in the neighborhood." Nevertheless, the tight-knit community remained there until the 1960s when the building was finally sold. The new owners removed both the dome on the roof and the rose window above the main entrance – as attested by the photo below.
Congregation Chasam Sopher – Clinton Street below…
01 Jul 2015 |
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Congregation Chasam Sopher is an Orthodox synagogue located at 10 Clinton Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. It was formed in 1892 by the merger of two congregations of immigrants from Poland. It occupies a historic Romanesque Revival synagogue building built in 1853 by Congregation Rodeph Sholom. It is among the oldest synagogue buildings still standing in the United States, the second-oldest synagogue building in New York State, and the oldest still in use in the state.
Renovation of the upstairs, completed in 2006, included conservation of the Torah ark, the installation of new stained-glass windows, and stripping the interior of paint to expose the original wood. The outside was also landscaped, creating a garden for the neighborhood.
The congregation bears the name of Moses Schreiber (1762–1839), known to his own community and Jewish posterity by his pen name, Chatam Sofer (literally: "Seal of the Scribe" – pronounced "Chasam" in the accent of east and central European Jewry). The Chatam Sofer was one of the founders of ultra-Orthodox Judaism in first half of the nineteenth century.
Anshei Minsk Synagogue – St. Andrew Street, Toront…
Happy Hanukkah from Greenbelt, Maryland – חג האורי…
Beth Joseph Synagogue, Exterior – Lake Street, Tup…
Beth Joseph Synagogue, Interior – Lake Street, Tup…
The Former Temple Emanuel – Pearl Street, Denver,…
Moorish Revival "Minaret" – The Former Temple Eman…
Stained Glass Window – The Former Temple Emanuel,…
The Northern Wall – The Former Temple Emanuel, Pea…
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