*** Welcome to piglix ***

Congregation Beth Ahabah

Beth Ahabah
Postcard of Temple Beth Ahaba.jpg
Early 20th century postcard of the current synagogue.
Basic information
Location 1111 West Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia
Geographic coordinates 37°33′05″N 77°27′20″W / 37.551278°N 77.4555°W / 37.551278; -77.4555Coordinates: 37°33′05″N 77°27′20″W / 37.551278°N 77.4555°W / 37.551278; -77.4555
Affiliation Union for Reform Judaism
Country United States of America
Status Active
Website www.bethahabah.org
Architectural description
Architect(s) Noland and Baskervill
Architectural style Roman Revival
Groundbreaking March 4, 1904
Specifications
Dome(s) one
Materials stone
Designated September 14, 1972
Parent listing West Franklin Street Historic District
Reference no. 72001528

Beth Ahabah (Hebrew: House of Love‎‎) is a Reform synagogue in Richmond, Virginia. Founded in 1789 by Spanish and Portuguese Jews as Kahal Kadosh Beth Shalome (Hebrew: Holy Congregation, House of Peace,) it is one of the oldest synagogues in the United States.

When the congregation was founded, there were 100 Jews in Richmond's population of 3,900. After meeting for some years in leased space, the congregation built its first synagogue in 1822. It was a handsome if modest, one-story, brick building in Georgian style.

The community grew and in 1841 the Ashkenazi members founded a new congregation called Beth Ahabah. In 1846 Beth Ahabah established the first Jewish school in Richmond, and 1846 built a synagogue at Eleventh and Marshall Streets. The Congregation moved toward Reform in 1867 with discussion of acquiring an organ, the decision to switch to family pews (mixing men and women,) and allowing women to join the choir. Beth Ahabah joined the Reform Movement Union of American Hebrew Congregations in 1875. A new building was erected, also at Eleventh and Marshall, in 1880. In 1898 K.K. Beth Shalome formally merged with Congregation Beth Ahabah.[1]

On March 4, 1904 the congregation laid the cornerstone for its present building, known as the Franklin Street Synagogue. The building was dedicated on December 9, 1904. The domed, Neoclassical synagogue was designed by the Richmond-based firm of Noland and Baskervill, who also designed nearby St. James' Church and the wings of the Virginia State Capitol. The synagogue has 29 stained glass windows. Most notable is a window on the building's eastern wall created and signed by the Louis Comfort Tiffany Studios in 1923. It depicts Mt. Sinai.

The congregation maintains the Hebrew Cemetery of Richmond and the Cemetery for Hebrew Confederate Soldiers, as well as the original site of the 1789 Franklin Street Burial Grounds, which was the first Jewish cemetery in Virginia.


...
Wikipedia

...