Temple Emanu-El of SF: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Temple Emanuel with Mission Bay in background 1867 AAB-1705.jpg]]
'''Temple Emmanu-el, 1867, [[MISSION BAY|Mission Bay]] and Long Bridge in distance.'''
[[Image:Temple Emanuel 1867 AAB-1709.jpg]]
'''Temple Emmanu-el, 1867.'''
[[Image:jewishsf$union-square-1891.jpg]]
[[Image:jewishsf$union-square-1891.jpg]]


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'''The old Temple Emmanu-el on Sutter near Powell Street (destroyed in the 1906 earthquake). '''
'''The old Temple Emmanu-el on Sutter near Powell Street (destroyed in the 1906 earthquake). '''


Contributors to this page include:
''Photos: San Francisco History Room, San Francisco Public Library''


''San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer ''
[[S Bachman Letters | Prev. Document]]  [[Temple Emmanu-el 1990s |Next Document]]
 
Gaar Collection,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer
 
Shvetsky,Kate - Writer


[[S Bachman Letters | Prev. Document]] [[Temple Emmanu-el 1990s |Next Document]]
[[category:Jewish]] [[category:1860s]] [[category:German]] [[category:1880s]]

Revision as of 15:32, 5 October 2008

Temple Emanuel with Mission Bay in background 1867 AAB-1705.jpg

Temple Emmanu-el, 1867, Mission Bay and Long Bridge in distance.

Temple Emanuel 1867 AAB-1709.jpg

Temple Emmanu-el, 1867.

Jewishsf$union-square-1891.jpg

View north across Union Square 1891.

Temple Emmanu-el was the wealthier of two original Jewish congregations, representing the German-born Jews in early San Francisco.

On Rosh Hashana of 1849 the young merchant Lewis Abraham Franklin's storage tent on Jackson Street became the site of the first Jewish service held in San Francisco. However, the first synagogue would not be established for five more years.

A rift between those of German and Polish background marked a breakdown within the small Jewish community. The establishment of two separate synagogues in 1854 - Emmanu-el for the German Jews, and Sherith Israel helped solidify the division that would last well into the 20th century. The German Jews brought to America their European cultural bias against Eastern European Jews as inferior and considered themselves the "aristocrats of the emigres."

The Temple Emmanu-el congregation of 260 mostly German Jews soon moved into a newly built large and elegant synagogue on 450 Sutter St. in 1864. Dr. Julius Eckman, an active pro-Union supporter during the Civil War and ironically a Polish Jew, was the first rabbi to preside over the elite congregation.

Jewishsf$old-temple-emmanu-el.jpg

The old Temple Emmanu-el on Sutter near Powell Street (destroyed in the 1906 earthquake).

Photos: San Francisco History Room, San Francisco Public Library

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