Jewish Amer. Society for Historic Preservation

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Cong. Medal of Honor

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Programs: Md - Tenn.

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Helena, Montana April, 2001

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Programs: Utah - Wyoming

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Clarion, Utah

Salt Lake City, Utah

Wild Horse Butte, Utah

Charleston, W. Va.

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Spokane, Washington

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The Last Herzl

Leo Frank - Gov. Slaton

Col. John Henry Patterson

International Programs

Buchenwald - Little Camp

Paramaribo, Suriname

Adam Worth - London

Rev. W. Hechler - London

Joan Winters - Jerualem

American Holocaust Mem.

Hero Miles

Am. Jewish History

Boynton Beach Chronicles

Zionism and Israel

Article Submissions

                Congregation Children of Israel

                                        B'Nai Israel

       First Permanent Jewish House of Worship in Tennessee
Jewish Historical Marker, Memphis, Tennessee
Congregation Children of Israel - click to enlarge

The historic marker, located at Main and Exchange in Memphis, Tn.,  was dedicated March 2, 2007. The dedication was on the same day that,  153 years earlier,  the state of Tennessee granted Congregation Children of Israel its charter.


The text:   
Congregation Children of Israel  B'Nai Israel  First  Permanent Jewish House of Worship in Tennessee

 

Jews have been part of Tennessee’s economic, social and political life since the late 18th century.  Congregation Children of Israel, chartered by the State of Tennessee, March 2, 1854, rented and eventually purchased a building near this site at Main and Exchange streets.  Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, the founder of American Reform Judaism, dedicated the new synagogue, March 26, 1858.  Growing rapidly, the congregation moved to larger accommodations on Poplar Avenue in 1884.  It moved again to the corner of Poplar and Montgomery in 1915, and to East Massey in 1976.  Congregation Children of Israel became known as Temple Israel in 1943.

The establishment of Congregation Children of Israel, in Tennessee, affirmed the American principles of freedom of religion and assembly. 

 
Erected by the Shelby County Historical Commission, the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation and Temple Israel.

Marker - Click to enlarge

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