Jewish Amer. Society for Historic Preservation

Shaping the Future by Remembering the Past

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Completed Prgms 1

Mobile, Alabama

Annapolis, Md.

Little Rock, Arkansas

Cotopaxi, Colorado

Cong. Medal of Honor

Wilmington, Delaware

Pensacola, Florida

Palm Beach (1), Florida

Palm Beach (2), Florida

Keokuk, Iowa

New Orleans, La. -1

New Orleans, La. -2

Kansas City, WWI Museum

Leavenworth, Kansas

Bangor, Maine

Montgomery Cnty, Maryland

Hagerstown, Maryland

Jackson, Mississippi

Completed Prgms 2

Natchez, Mississippi

Helena, Montana April, 2001

Buffalo, New York

Omaha, Nebraska

Virginia City, Nevada

Las Vegas, N.M.

Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Lancaster, Pa.

Deadwood, South Dakota

Memphis, Tennessee

Salt Lake City, Utah

Wild Horse Butte, Utah

Richmond, Va.

Spokane, Washington

Charleston, W. Va.

Cheyenne, Wyoming

Leo Frank

The Last Herzl

International Programs

Buchenwald - Little Camp

Adam Worth - London

Joan Winters - Jerualem

Col. Patterson - Avihayil

American Holocaust Mem.

Hero Miles

Am. Jewish History

Boynton Beach Chronicles

Zionism and Israel

Article Submissions

Completed Programs 3


Mordecai Noah and St. Paul's Cathedral

An American proto-Zionist solution to the "Jewish Problem"

St. Paul's Marker
St. Paul’s was the first permanent house of
worship erected in Buffalo; the cornerstone was
laid June 24, 1819. Being one of the largest public
buildings in the village, St. Paul’s was the scene of
numerous religious and civic activities. The first
recorded Roman Catholic Mass in Buffalo was
offered in St. Paul’s. The completion of the Erie
Canal, in 1825, ended the role of St. Paul’s Church
as a simple mission on the western frontier of
New York State. Buffalo grew rapidly. St. Paul’s
became the mother church to newer parishes.
 
 
Sept. 15, 1825, St. Paul’s was the center of an
extraordinary, humanitarian and ecumenical
event. Mordecai Noah, of New York City,
proposed that Grand Island, across from Buffalo,
become a City of Refuge, he named Ararat, as
a proto-Zionist solution to millennia of Jewish
exile and homelessness. The Rev. Addison Searle
permitted the dedicatory ceremony to be held,
with much pomp, in St. Paul’s. The project was
not successful.
 
The present church was completed in 1851,
and was designated as the Diocesan Cathedral
in 1866. On May 10, 1888, the Cathedral was
almost entirely destroyed by fire. Only the outer
walls and two spires remained. Dr. Israel Aaron,
Rabbi of Temple Beth Zion, offered St. Paul’s
congregation free use of the Temple on Sundays
until their church could be rebuilt. The restored
Cathedral was dedicated on January 3, 1890.
Today, the Cathedral Parish of St. Paul continues
its long history of ecumenicalism, social service
and spiritual ministry to the metropolitan
community.
 
Wardens and Vestry of St. Paul’s Cathedral and
te Very Rev. N. DeLiza Spangler, Dean of the Cathedral
and Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation
 

Rev. Deliza Spangler, Wayne Mori - Archivist, Jerry Klinger - JASHP
St. Paul's Dedication and Address
St. Paul's Cathedral-click for Cathedral presentation
Document
The Blessing and Dedication of the Mordecai Noah Marker
Mordecai Noah -Click to article link
Document
"My religion an object of hostility? I thought I was a citizen of the United States, protected by the constitution in my religious as well as in my civil rights. My religion was known to the government at the time of my appointment, and it constituted one of the prominent causes why I was sent to Barbary; if then any 'unfavorable' events had been created by my religion, they should have been first ascertained, and not acting upon a supposition, upon imaginary consequences, have thus violated one of the most sacred and delicate rights of a citizen".

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