In 1656, Shearith Israel became the first synagogue that was established in the territory that came to be known as the United States. The synagogue, also known as the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, was founded in New Amsterdam (today known as New York City) by 23 Jews who immigrated to the New World from Dutch Brazil. Despite Peter Stuyvesant, the antisemitic governor of New Amsterdam, making attempts to bar the Jews from settling in the colony, official permission was granted in 1655. A cemetery society was established in 1656 and the congregation was organized the same year, although securing a building would only come decades later.

Congregation Shearith Israel of New York purchased a lot on Mill Street in Lower Manhattan on December 17, 1728, for the purpose of erecting the first synagogue structure in New York and it was dedicated on April 8, 1730. Congregation Shearith Israel is the first of six synagogues dedicated during the Colonial period. The others were: Mickve Israel in Savannah, GA (1735); Beth Elohim in Charleston, SC (1749); Touro Synagogue in Newport, RI (1763); Mikveh Israel in Philadelphia, PA (1773) and Kahal Kadosh Beth Shalome in Richmond, VA (1789).

Eventually Congregation Shearith Israel was rebuilt and expanded in 1818 and moved from location to location. The congregation first moved to 60 Cosby Street in 1834, to 19th Street in 1860 and finally to West 70th Street (its current location) in 1897.

In the 19th century, before the immigration of thousands of East European Jews at the end of the century, most Jews arriving in the United States came from Germany and chose to join the Reform movement. The Spanish Portuguese Synagogue always conducted a traditional service. Shearith Israel’s rabbi, Henry Pereira Mendes, helped found a rabbinic seminary to counterbalance the progressive Reform Movement. The American Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) was founded in 1886 to train traditional rabbis, and its classes initially met in Shearith Israel. Rabbi Mendes was also integral in founding a traditional synagogue umbrella group and the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America (known as the Orthodox Union, or OU), as an alternative to the Reform movement’s Union of American Hebrew Congregations (UAHC). In 1896, Rabbi Mendes was elected president of JTS. As the U.S. Conservative movement slid further away from tradition, Shearith Israel disassociated from JTS. Congregation Shearith Israel remains a member of the Orthodox Union.

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