Congregation Mickve Israel minutes

Item

Country

US

Name of institution (official language of the state)

Language of name of institution

eng

Contact information: postal address

501 Whitaker Street, Savannah, GA 31401 (Research Center)

Contact information: phone number

001 9126512128 (Research Center)

Contact information: web address

Contact information: email

lgculler@georgiahistory.com (Georgia Historical Society Staff)

Reference number

GHS 1410

Type of reference number

Archival reference number

Title (official language of the state)

Congregation Mickve Israel minutes

Language of title

eng

Creator / accumulator

Congregation Mickve Israel (Savannah, Ga.)

Date(s)

1852/1928

Language(s)

eng

Extent

2 microfilm reels

Type of material

Textual Material

Scope and content

This collection consists of two rolls of microfilmed documents containing copies of the minute book of the Congregation Mickve Israel's Board of Adjunta from 1852 to 1928. The minutes were not filmed sequentially.

Administrative / Biographical history

The history of the Savannah Jewish community dates back to July 11, 1733, when 41 Jews from the Spanish and Portuguese congregation of London arrived at the newly created colony of Georgia. The Portuguese Jewish physician Dr Samuel Nunes Ribeiro and his family were among them. These founders brought a Sepher Torah, two cloaks and a circumcision box from London. This Torah is still used on commemorative occasions at Mickve Israel.
The congregation was founded not long after those first Jewish pioneers arrived. In the following years, they established a mikveh and a cemetery. The services were held in private homes. At an unknown date, the congregation rented a house on Market Square (Ellis Square), which was altered for regular congregational services. Although some Ashkenazic families, namely the Minis and the Sheftall, became identified with the Sephardic group, other Askhenazim arriving in Savannah did not integrate into the Sephardic congregation. This schism led to the delay in constructing a synagogue building. In the early 1740s, the congregation faced another challenge. The War of Jenkin's Ear and the advancement of the Spanish troops in the territory triggered the emigration of the Sephardic Jews. Only the Minis and Sheftall families remained in Savannah.
In 1786, after the Revolutionary War, there were enough conditions for reorganising the Mickve Israel congregation. Officers were elected, and a house on Broughton Street Lane was rented to serve as a synagogue. On November 20, 1790, Governor Edward Telfair granted the congregation a perpetual charter.
Only by 1818, before the growth of the Jewish population in Savannah, the congregation resumed the intention to build a synagogue. Moses Sheftall and Jacob De la Motta were the leaders of this movement. The first synagogue erected in the State of Georgia was consecrated by De la Motta on July 21, 1820. However, the small wooden structure was destroyed by a fire nine years later. Efforts to rebuild it began in 1834, and a new brick building was consecrated in 1841 by Reverend Isaac Leeser of Philadelphia.
Since its origins, the Mickve Israel congregation followed the Portuguese Minhag. However, in 1868, the first steps towards Reform Judaism were taken by omitting the celebration of the second day of festivals and introducing a choir with musical accompaniment. The transition took a long time and faced much resistance. The Portuguese Minhag remained in use until 1895. In 1902, the Union Prayer Book was adopted. Two years later, the transition of the Mickve Israel to Reform Judaism was complete after becoming a member of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. However, a last vestige of its Spanish-Portuguese heritage is proudly maintained in the Sephardic melody "El Norah Ah Lee Lah" sung during the closing hour of each Yom Kippur service.

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Links to finding aids

Existence and location of copies

Author of the description

Carla Vieira, 2022

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Place of distribution (Deprecated)
Title Alternate label Class
Congregation Mickve Israel (Savannah, Ga.) Collection Existence and location of copies
Congregation Mickve Israel (Savannah, Ga.) Records Existence and location of copies
Minutes and correspondence of the congregation, 1782-1790 Existence and location of copies
is part (item) of
Title Alternate label Class
Georgia Historical Society Collections (official language of the state)