Lloyd Street Synagogue Explained

Lloyd Street Synagogue
Image Upright:1.4
Festivals:-->
Organizational Status:-->
Ownership:Jewish Museum of Maryland
Country:United States
Map Type:USA Baltimore
Map Size:250
Map Relief:1
Coordinates:39.2905°N -76.6013°W
Architecture Type:Synagogue
Architecture Style:Greek Revival
General Contractor:Messrs Curly and Sons
Established:1830
Year Completed:1845
Construction Cost:$20,000
Date Destroyed:-->
Materials:Brick
Elevation Ft:-->
Module:
Lloyd Street Synagogue
Embed:yes
Added:April 19, 1978
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:78003142
Designated Other1:BCL
Designated Other1 Abbr:BCL
Designated Other1 Date:1971

The Lloyd Street Synagogue is a Reform and Orthodox Jewish former synagogue located on Lloyd Street, Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States. The Greek Revival-style building is the third oldest synagogue building in the United States and was the first synagogue building erected in Maryland. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 and designated as a Baltimore City Landmark in 1971.

The Lloyd Street former synagogue building is now owned by the Jewish Museum of Maryland and is open to the public as a museum in the Inner Harbor area of Baltimore.

History

The Lloyd Street Synagogue was built by the Baltimore Hebrew Congregation, incorporated on January 29, 1830,[1] as Nidche Yisroel. For the first fifteen years of its existence, services were held in a small room above a local grocery store. The Lloyd Street synagogue was dedicated by the Rev. S. M. Isaacs of New York and the Rev. Isaac Leeser of Philadelphia, together with the ministers of the congregation, Abraham Rice and A. Ansell (Anshel).[2]

In 1889, the building was sold to The St. John the Baptist Roman Catholic Church, a parish that served mainly immigrants from Lithuania, which used the building until 1905. In 1905, it was sold to congregation Shomrei Mishmeres HaKodesh, an Orthodox Jewish congregation of immigrants from Eastern Europe, which continued to use the building until 1963, when the building was threatened with demolition.[1] [3] The effort to preserve Lloyd Street was the impetus for the founding of the Jewish Historical Society of Maryland, now the Jewish Museum of Maryland.[4] [5]

Baltimore architects Robert Cary Long, Jr. and William Reasin designed the building in the fashionable Greek Revival style.[1] Four doric columns support a classic pediment, all painted light pink. The body of the building is brick. The building is a near-twin of St. Peter the Apostle Church, designed by Long in 1842.

Lloyd Street Synagogue is the third oldest synagogue building in the United States (several earlier buildings are no longer standing). The two oldest synagogue buildings, both in active use, are the Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island and Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim Synagogue, in Charleston, South Carolina.[6]

The building was designated as a Baltimore City Landmark in 1971, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978,[5] and lies within the Baltimore National Heritage Area.[7]

In 2011, archaeologists uncovered a mikveh under the synagogue. It is believed to be the oldest known mikveh in the United States.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. ""Baltimore Travel Itinerary-The Lloyd Street and Chizuk Amuno Synagogues:. National Park Service. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
  2. http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/2420-baltimore . BALTIMORE . February 18, 2014.
  3. "History". Shomreimish Mishmeres.
  4. Web site: The Jewish Traveler:Baltimore . Helen Mintz . Bilitsky . Hadassah Magazine . February 2002 . 83 . 6 . June 16, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081123025728/http://www.hadassah.org/news/content/per_hadassah/archive/2002/Feb_02/traveler.htm . November 23, 2008 .
  5. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration: Lloyd Street Synagogue . 1976 . January 4, 2024 . LeFaivre, Michele . Maryland Historical Trust.
  6. Web site: Gordon, Mark W. . Rediscovering Jewish Infrastructure: 2022 Update on United States Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Synagogues . . November 4, 2021 . February 22, 2023 .
  7. Web site: Lloyd Street Synagogue . Explore Baltimore . Baltimore Heritage Area Association . 2018 . January 4, 2024 .
  8. News: Jewish ritual bath found in Baltimore may be oldest in U.S. . Frank D. . Roylance . The Baltimore Sun . February 13, 2011 .