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Home > My Ancestors >
Jewish > Timeline: 1750-1849
- 1784: Moses Michael Hays (1739-1805), a Dutch Jew, opens the
first marine insurance office in Boston. Housed at 68 State Street,
Hays insures ship cargoes against shipwrecks and piracy. He also helps
establish the first permanent, successful bank in Boston, Massachusetts
Bay Bank (1784). He was the first Jewish benefactor of Harvard and
the Grand Master of the Masonic Lodge from 1788-1792. His papers are
located at the American Jewish Historical Society.
- 1796: Israel Baer Kursheedt arrives in Boston to find only one
Jewish family in town and no synagogue.
- 1797: Moses Michael Hays founds the fire Fire Insurance Company
in Boston along with Paul Revere and others.
- 1821: Jews are granted full rights of citizenship in Massachusetts.
- 1840: Less than 40 Jews live in Boston.
- 1843: Philanthropist Judah Touro (1775-1850), a nephew of Moses
Michael Hays, is instrumental in erecting and financing the Bunker
Hill Monument. He was also the first Jewish settler of New Orleans
and fought with General Andrew Jackson during the Battle of New Orleans
in 1815. He leaves large sums of money to the Boston Female Society,
Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Asylum for Orphan Boys among
other places. The Kahal Kadosh Ohabei Shalom (The Holy Community Lovers
of Peace) Synagogue is established in the South
End.
- 1844: October 5, The first Jewish cemetery is established in
East Boston.
- 1848: Bavarian born Leopold Morse (1831-1892) arrives in Boston.
He works his way from peddler to businessman to congressman.
See 1645-1749 | See 1850-1949
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