Spring Glen Synagogue Explained

Building Name:Spring Glen Synagogue
Image Upright:1.4
Map Type:New York
Map Size:250
Map Relief:1
Location:Old Route 209, Spring Glen, Wawarsing, New York 12428
Country:United States
Religious Affiliation:Judaism
Status:Synagogue
Functional Status:Active
Facade Direction:West
Established:1908
Year Completed:1918
Specifications:yes
Materials:Wood, aluminum
Module:
Embed:yes
Spring Glen Synagogue
Added:1998
Refnum:98001622

The Spring Glen Synagogue is a Jewish congregation and synagogue, located along Old US 209 in the hamlet of Spring Glen, part of the Town of Wawarsing in Ulster County, New York, in the United States. It was one of the first established in a Jewish American community in the Catskill region, and is still in use today.

History

Sam Meyerson, the region's first Jewish resident, bought land in the area shortly after 1900. His neighbors, all Christians of various Protestant denominations, decided to accept and befriend him after conferring about the matter among themselves. Other Jewish families followed, and a congregation was formally established in 1908.[1]

The congregation had been meeting at Spring Glen's Episcopal church. By the early 1910s, with more Jewish families buying summer homes in or near Spring Glen, members realized they needed a place of worship of their own. In July 1916, the Torah scrolls were dedicated. Two local Gentiles, stationmaster Wells C. Smith and postmaster John Thornton, presented the congregation with a Bible they had purchased.[2] Throughout most of 1917, a small white clapboard bungalow with blue trim house in the middle of the hamlet, festooned with wooden Stars of David, in the center of the hamlet, was under construction, finished in 1918.

In 1920 the congregation formally incorporated. The synagogue was open every morning and afternoon for prayers, and congregants helped sustain it through the off-season by holding their weddings, bar mitzvahs, Yom Tovs and other ceremonies there.

No significant changes have been made to the building since its construction other than the addition of discreet aluminum siding and bathrooms, during the 1960s.[3] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Shapiro. Dorothy. Spring Glen Synagogue History. 2008-01-04.
  2. News: Tannenbaum. Gershod. My Machberes. Jewish Press. August 22, 2007. 2008-01-04.
  3. Web site: LaFrank. Kathleen. National Register of Historic Places nomination, Spring Glen Synagogue. October 1998. 2008-01-04.