Congregation Shearith Israel (Baltimore, Maryland)

Coordinates: 39°21′21″N 76°41′15″W / 39.35584°N 76.68746°W / 39.35584; -76.68746
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Congregation Shearith Israel
Hebrew: קהילת שארית ישראל דבאלטימאר
Shearith Israel, Glen Avenue synagogue
Religion
AffiliationOrthodox Judaism
Ecclesiastical or organisational statusSynagogue
LeadershipRabbi Yaakov Hopfer
StatusActive
Location
Location5835 Park Heights Avenue, Park Heights, Baltimore, Maryland 21215
CountryUnited States
Congregation Shearith Israel (Baltimore, Maryland) is located in Baltimore
Congregation Shearith Israel (Baltimore, Maryland)
Location in Baltimore, Maryland
Geographic coordinates39°21′21″N 76°41′15″W / 39.35584°N 76.68746°W / 39.35584; -76.68746
Architecture
FounderAbraham Joseph Rice
Date established1879 (merged congregation)
  • 1862 (as Shevet Achim)
  • 1851 (as Shearith Israel)
Completed
Website
sicbaltimore.org

Congregation Shearith Israel (Hebrew: קהילת שארית ישראל דבאלטימאר; nicknamed The Glen Avenue Shul) is a historic Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 5835 Park Heights Avenue, in Park Heights, northwest Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States.[1]

Shearith Israel is the oldest Baltimore congregation to remain Orthodox throughout its history.

History[edit]

Shearith Israel was the second congregation served by rabbi Abraham Joseph Rice in Baltimore[2] who opened Shearith Israel following his departure from Nidchei Yisrael (known today as The Baltimore Hebrew Congregation).[3] Rice resigned his post in 1849 following the board's decision to reconstitute and adapt certain reforms and their subsequent appointment of Henry Hochheimer.[4]

Former McCulloh Street synagogue, now Zerubabel Grand Lodge
Rabbi Abraham Joseph Rice, c. 1845.

Rice founded the first synagogue in 1851 on Howard Street in a rented home; it is unclear whether they had a Minyan during the early years.[2] The congregation was to later move to Greene and Redwood Streets (called German Street then, changed during World War I) after it merged with Congregation Shevet Achim of Eutaw Street in 1879 (the building today is used as Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church South).

McCulloh Street synagogue[edit]

At approximately 1905, the congregation built the McCulloh Street synagogue in the American Romanesque Revival style (with Moorish capitals, eastern-Gothic turrets, and a distinctive ocular window at the entrance). This synagogue was sold, approximately 1935, to become the Zerubabbel Grand Lodge, which it remains today.[5]

The synagogue was dedicated on September 11, 1903. The McCulloh Street Synagogue closed in 1958. Included in the voting membership was Henry Hartogensis, the prominent orthodox Gabbai and financial officer, who had transferred from Chizuk Amuno[6]

Upper Park Heights synagogue[edit]

Beginning in 1923, the board in the McCulloh synagogue appealed for a new building in Upper Park Heights, reflecting on the suburbanization of the Jewish community to streetcar suburbs of Park Heights, Druid Hill, and Garrison. The proposed project was commended for its frugality and conservatism, and was awarded the first mortgage granted to a synagogue by the Eutaw Savings Bank.[7] Possibly due to the funds saved with the frugal architecture, innovations were put into place such as an improved Mechitzah of curved wrought iron (the McCulloh Street synagogue only had an embankment wall) based on the design of the Hirsch-Breuer Congregation K’hal Adath Jeshurun (known as the Friedberger Anlage, or Synagogue of the Israelitische Religionsgesellschaft).

A member of the Kehillah, Nathan Adler, fundraised and planned a Mikveh in the building; the size of the structure was approved of by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, The Chofetz Chaim.

The dedication of the synagogue on Glen and Park Heights avenues (hence the name, the Glen Avenue Shul, then the only synagogue on Glen Avenue) took place in 1925, and the speakers were rabbis Isaiah Levy and Phillip Hillel Klein.

The constitution of the synagogue required that the only voting members (and those permitted for honors, such as Aliyah and Opening the Ark) were those who were Sabbath observant; despite the new synagogue having 150 members, less than 10 were voting members.[7] This contributed to the breakoff and formation of Beth Jacob Congregation (now defunct) next door.

Rabbinical leaders[edit]

The following individuals have served as rabbi of the Congregation Shearith Israel:

Ordinal[a] Officeholder Term start Term end Time in office Notes
Abraham Joseph Rice c. 1851 1862 10–11 years The first ordained rabbi in the United States, Rice was a Talmid Chacham, and a strict adherent and fighter for Orthodoxy (he excommunicated Isaac Mayer Wise).[2]
1 Dr. Abba Schepsel Schaffer 1893 1928 34–35 years [8][9]
2 Shimon Schwab 1937 1958 20–21 years Brought to Baltimore from Germany on the suggestion of Rabbi Dr. Leo Jung. Schwab led the congregation through the move from McCulloh Street to Glen Avenue, and the growth of the observant community, many of them German refugees.[citation needed]
3 Menachem Mendel Feldman 1958 1986 27–28 years
4 Yaakov Hopfer 1987 incumbent 36–37 years

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The congregation considers its establishment date as 1879, following its merger with Shevet Achim. However, the forebears of the congregation start from 1851, with Rabbi Rice.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Home page". Shearith Israel Cong. n.d. Retrieved April 4, 2022.[self-published source?]
  2. ^ a b c Sharfman, I. Harold (1988). The First Rabbi: Origins of Conflict Between Orthodox & Reform : Jewish Polemic Warfare in Pre-Civil War America : a Biographical History. Pangloss Press. ISBN 978-0-934710-15-2.
  3. ^ "Baltimore Hebrew Congregation". Explore Baltimore. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  4. ^ "HISTORY" (PDF). BALTIMORE HEBREW CONGREGATION.
  5. ^ "Zerubabbel Grand Lodge". Jewish Museum of Maryland.
  6. ^ "Article - Henry S. Hartogensis (1829 - 1918) – Sometimes You Have To Say No by Fred Shoken - B'nai Israel: The Downtown Synagogue". www.jewishdowntown.org. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  7. ^ a b "A fascinating account of Baltimore in the 1940s". Where What When. January 22, 2014. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Levine, Yitzvok (January 3, 2008). "Forty Years As Rav Of Baltimore's Congregation Shearith Israel". The Jewish Press.
  9. ^ "SCHAFFER, SCHEPSEL". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved April 4, 2022.

External links[edit]