The Touro Synagogue is a synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, that is the oldest surviving Jewish synagogue building in North America and the only surviving synagogue building in the U.S. dating to the colonial era.
[edit] HistoryIt was designed by the noted British-Colonial era architect and Rhode Island resident, Peter Harrison, and is considered his most notable work. The interior is flanked by a series of twelve Ionic columns supporting balconies. The columns signify the twelve tribes of ancient Israel. Each column is carved from a single tree. Located at 85 Touro Street, the Touro Synagogue remains an active Orthodox synagogue. The building is oriented to face east towards Jerusalem. The ark containing the Torah is on the east wall; above it is a mural representing the Ten Commandments in Hebrew. It was painted by the Newport artist Benjamin Howland. The Touro Synagogue was built from 1759 to 1763, for the Jeshuat Israel congregation in Newport under the leadership of Cantor (Chazzan) Isaac Touro. The cornerstone was laid by Aaron Lopez, a prominent merchant in Newport involved in the spermaceti candlemaking business and other commercial ventures. The Jeshuat Israel congregation itself dates back to 1658, when fifteen Spanish and Portuguese Jewish families arrived, probably from the West Indies and many settled near Easton's Point.[1] The synagogue was formally dedicated on 2 December 1763. Other notable leaders included Henry Samuel Morais (1900–01). In 1790, the synagogue's warden, Moses Seixas, wrote to George Washington, expressing its support for his administration and its good wishes for him. He sent a letter in response, which read in part:
Judah Touro, the son of Isaac Touro and his wife, Reyna, had made a fortune as a merchant in New Orleans. He left $10,000 in his will for the upkeep of the Jewish cemetery and synagogue in Newport. A legend exists that the trap door under the tebáh (bimah) was used while the synagogue was a stop on the Underground Railroad. This is unfounded. In 1946, Touro Synagogue was designated a National Historic Site, and is an affiliated area of the National Park Service. The synagogue was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, on October 15, 1966. In 2001, the congregation joined into a partnership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation. [edit] CongregationThe congregation at Newport, never large, was composed of Jews with roots in the Sephardic, Spanish and Portuguese, diaspora, with some Ashkenazim by the eighteenth century. The first Jewish residents of Newport, fifteen Spanish Jewish families, arrived in 1658. It is presumed that they arrived via the community in Curacao. The small community worshiped in rooms in private homes for over a century, before they could afford to build a synagogue.[2] The community purchased and dedicated the Jewish Cemetery at Newport in 1677. The city of Newport faded in importance, shortly after American independence, after the capital of Rhode Island moved to Providence, which rapidly also surpassed Newport as a seaport. The Jewish community, too small to maintain a synagogue, removed the torah Scrolls and sent them for safekeeping along with the deed to the building to Congregation Shearith Israel in New York, which still formally owns the Touro synagogue. The keys left the Jewish community and were passed to the Goulds, a Quaker family in Newport. From the 1850's on, the building was occasionally opened for worship for the convenience of summer visitors. It was reopened on a regular basis in 1883 as Jewish life in Newport revived with the late nineteenth century immigration of eastern European Jews. The synagogue acquired a nearby building and ran a Hebrew School and other activities. In the late twentieth century, the number of Jews in Newport dwindled again. The synagogue has had a special relationship with Jewish naval families stationed in Newport. It continues to serve a small congregation, supplemented by travelers who spend the Sabbath in Newport. [edit] Images[edit] Notes
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