|

|
Home > My Ancestors
> Jewish > Timeline: 1850-1949
- 1851: The Ohabei Shalom congregation moves into a building on
Warren Street. There are approximately 125 Jewish
families in Boston.
- 1852: The Ohabei Shalom congregation dedicates Boston's first
synagogue.
- 1854: German Jews form their own temple, Temple Israel, on Pleasant
Street.
- 1858: East Prussian Jews form their own temple, Die Israelitische
Gemeinde Mishkan Israel.
- 1859: The Dutch congregation Beth Eil is established in the South
End.
- 1861: There are nearly 1,000 Jews in Boston.
- 1863: Adath Israel opens a school that educates in both Hebrew
and English.
- 1864: Nathan Strauss founds the Hebrew Benevolent Society.
- 1869: At this time, most new Jewish immigrants are from the Russian
Empire: White Russia, Ukraine, Lithuania, and Poland.
Others come from Galicia in the Austria-Hungary Empire
and the 'Orient': Greece, Turkey, Syria, and Morocco.
Prior to 1869, Jewish immigration came primarily from
Portugal and Germany.
- 1873: Establishment of Beth Abraham Congregation, the first Eastern
European congregation.
- 1875: The Young Men's Hebrew Association is formed.
- 1876: Leopold Morse becomes the first Jew elected to the United
States Congress from Massachusetts.
- 1887: Bernard Berenson (1865-1959) whose Lithuanian family settled
in Boston's West End, graduates from Harvard, where
his interest in art history was kindled.
- 1889: Leopold Morse opens the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews
and Orphanage.
- 1890: Lina Hecht founds The Hebrew Industrial School in the North
End. Its mission is to teach Eastern European girls
how to cook and sew.
- 1891: Russian Jews found the Benoth Israel Sheltering Home to
aid immigrants.
- 1892: North End butchers start a trust on kosher meats that prompts a meat
strike by Jewish housewives.
- 1893: Jews from Vilna, Lithuania create an informal place of
worship in the West End.
- 1895: Hungarian born Julius Rottenberg founds the 'Universal
Banking House', on Salem Street, to help immigrants
with economic problems.
-
1897: The Boston Council for Jewish Women is
founded.
- 1900: There are approximately 40,000 Jews in Boston
- 1902: Russian born, Philip Davis, organizes the Waist-makers',
Wrap-makers', and White-goods Workers' Unions.
- 1903: The Vilna Congregation
is formed.
- 1906: Horace Kallen and Henry Hurwitz, both Harvard graduates,
found the Harvard Menorah Society to promote Jewish
culture. It becomes a center of Zionist activity in
America. The Vilna Congregation purchases a Baptist
church at 45 Phillips Street. Also this year the Great
Chelsea Fire forces many Jews into the West End, North
End, and East Cambridge.
- 1907: Evrio becomes the first successful Hebrew School in Boston.
- 1908: Federated Jewish Charities is formed.
- 1910:
Jews begin moving to the South
End and Lower Roxbury
in large numbers.
- 1910-1920: Jews begin moving into Blue Hill Avenue, Grove Hall,
and on to the Elm Hill sections of Roxbury.
- 1911: Martha Michaels Silverman becomes the first female leader
of the Federation of Jewish Charities.
- 1912: The Hebrew Teachers Organization is founded.
- 1915: Eight Zionist organizations hold a week-long meeting in
Boston. Louis
Brandeis becomes the first Jew appointed to the
United States Supreme Court.
- 1917: Beth Israel Hospital opens.
- 1918:
Louis Epstein is elected as the Rabbi of Beth Hamidrash
Hagadol, three years after the congregation formed
the Crawford Street Synagogue in Roxbury.
- 1920: The Hebrew College is founded on 14 Crawford Street in
Roxbury
by the Bureau of Jewish Education in Boston.
- 1920-1940: Jews begin moving in large numbers into Weld Hill
and Mattapan Square sections of Roxbury.
- 1922: Elihu Stone is made Assistant United States Attorney for
Massachusetts.
- 1930: Boston banker Abraham Ratshesky is appointed ambassador
to Czechoslovakia by Herbert Hoover.
- 1931: The Jewish Welfare Society is formed in response to the
Depression.
- 1932: Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik arrives from Germany and becomes
the foremost leader of Boston's Orthodox community.
- 1937: Nurse Frances Slanger of Poland graduates from Boston City
Hospital. During World War II, she serves as a Lieutenant
during the Normandy invasion where she treats over
3,000 casualties before being killed in action in
1944 becoming the first Jewish nurse killed in battle.
- 1939: Felix Frankfurter becomes the second Boston Jew appointed
to the United States Supreme Court.
- 1941: The Associated Synagogues of Greater Boston brings together
all branches of Judaism for the first time. Charles
Wyzanski becomes the first Jewish judge of the United
States District Court of Massachusetts.
- 1943: 30,000 Jews hold a demonstration in Boston Garden protesting
Nazi atrocities.
- 1944: The Jewish Community Council is formed.
- 1948: Abram L. Sachar becomes the president of the newly opened
Brandeis University.
See 1750-1849 | See 1950-present
|
|