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Town of Tredegar 
Tredegar, a town in the Valleys of South Wales, is located at the north end of 
the river Sirhowy valley, about 1,000 feet above sea level. It lies about 30 
miles north of Cardiff, some 9 miles east of Merthyr Tydfil and 5 miles southwest of 
Brynmawr. (Not to be confused with New Tredegar, which lies some 5 miles to 
the south of Tredegar.) 
Until 1974, Tredegar formed the urban district of Tredegar in the county of 
Monmouthshire 
(which in many instances was then considered part of England and not Wales). From 1974 until 1996, it was part of the 
district of Blaenau Gwent in the new Welsh county of Gwent. In 1996, Gwent was abolished as an administrative 
county, and the district became the county borough of Blaenau Gwent - a unitary 
authority (within the ceremonial, or preserved, county of Gwent).  
The Jewish Community 
The Tredegar Jewish community dates back to at least the 1870s, when a Jewish 
congregation was established. In 1911, the town's Jewish community 
was the victims of an anti-Jewish riot, 
when the rioters rampaged through any property having Jewish connections in Tredegar. 
Windows were broken and shops were plundered and destroyed, but there were no injuries 
(see Tredegar Anti-Jewish Riots of 1911). 
Nevertheless, the Jews continued to live and trade in the town and harmony was 
re-established with their non-Jewish neighbours. By the 1940's, the number of 
Jews in Tredegar had dwindled to the extent that communal services could no 
longer be held. There was also a Jewish community in
New Tredegar.  
					
						| 
						 
						Congregation Data 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 
						Name: 
						 | 
						
						 Montefiore Centenary Synagogue, Tredegar, 
						also known as Tredegar 
						Hebrew Congregation 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 
						Address: 
						 | 
						
						 
						In 1884, the congregation's new synagogue  was 
						opened and consecrated by the Delegate Chief Rabbi, Dr 
						H. Adler.(iv) 
						The year 1884 was Moses Montefiore's 
						centenary year(v) and the synagogue  
						accordingly took the name "Montefiore Centenary Synagogue". 
						Although all references to the synagogue's address, 
						since at least the mid 1890s, was to 14a Morgan Street, Tredegar,(vi) 
						(current postcode NP22 3ND), at least one source 
						refers to the new synagogue, designed by local architect,
						W.S. Williams, 
						as being at Picton Street (now redeveloped, but in the 
						vicinity Gelli Close, NP22 3RE), Tredegar.(vii) It is currently uncertain whether the Picton 
						Street project was abandoned in favour of Morgan Street 
						or whether the 1884 synagogue was initially in Picton 
						Street but shortly thereafter moved to Morgan Street. 
						It appears that from 1911 until about 1913, the 
						congregation moved temporarily to 87 Victoria Street, 
						Tredegar, before moving back to Morgan Street,(viii) where it remained until the congregation was disbanded.   
						  | 
					 
					
						| 
						 
						Formation and First Synagogue: 
						 | 
						
						 
						The first congregation was formed in Tredegar in about 
						1872,(xi) although Jews 
						had been 
						resident in the town from some years previously.(xii) 
						Worshippers initially met in a portion of Mr. Lewis 
						Lyons's house, which he had fitted out for use as a synagogue.(xiii) 
						This is believed to be the synagogue in 
						18 Queen Street, Tredegar, in use until 1884.(xiv) 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Closure: 
						 | 
						
						 
						The synagogue closed for regular services 
						in about 1944, 
						when a minyan was no longer available, 
						and the synagogue was sold in about 1954.(xvii) 
						It became a private 
						home.(xviii). 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Ritual: 
						 | 
						
						 Ashkenazi Orthodox 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Affiliation: 
						 | 
						
						 The congregation was an 
						unaffiliated congregation under the aegis of the Chief 
						Rabbi.  
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Ministers 
						and Readers: 
						(To view a short profile 
						of a minister whose name appears in blue - hold 
						the cursor over the name.)  
						 | 
						
						 
						Rev. Samuel Shynman 
						- reader 1971 until at least 1874.(xxi) 
						
						Rev. Jacob Phillips 
						- reader from 1888 until 1891.(xxii) 
	
						
						Rev. M. Weinstock 
						- reader in about 1889.(xxiii) 
					
						Rev. Aaron David Rosowski 
						- reader in 1880s and 1890s.(xxiv) 
					
						Rev. J.B. Zaccheim 
						- minister from about 1896 until about 1898.(xxv) 
					
						Rev. Solomon Noah Levin 
						- minister from about 1898 until about 1902.(xxviii) 
					
						Rev. Benjamin N. Michelson 
						- visiting minister (from Newport) in 
						1901/2.(xxix) 
					
						Rev. Solomon Bloch 
						- reader/minister from about 1904 until about 1915.(xxx) 
					
						Rev. Henry Olivestone 
						- minister from 1916 until about 1918.(xxxi) 
					
						Rev. Ticktin 
						- minister from about 1922.(xxxii) 
					
						Rabbi Reuben Rabinowitz 
						- visiting minister in mid 1920s.(xxxiii) 
					
						Rev. Chaim Goldman 
						- minister from about 1925 until about 1930.(xxxiv) 
					
						Rev. Abraham Freedman 
						- minister from about 1930 until about 1933.(xxxvi) 
	
						
						Rev. Samuel Schwartz 
						- minister from about 1936 until 1946(xxxvii) 
	
						
						Rev. Aron Cohen 
						- reader from about 1939 until about 1946(xxxviii) 
		 | 
					 
					
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						 Lay Officers: 
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						 Unless otherwise stated, all data on lay officers has been extracted from listings in 
						Jewish Year Book (first published 1896/7).(xl) 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						
						 
						Presidents 
						
						1870s 
						- Jacob G. Shynman(xli)
						
						 1895-1897 
						- S. Rosenbaum
						
						 1897-1901 
						- Lewis Birnstein
						
						 1905-1915 
						- Samuel Woolfson
						
						 1915-1916 
						- I. Gaba
						
						 1916-1917 
						- M. Bandas
						
						 1917-1918 
						- P.J. Cohen
						
						 1918-1919 
						- H. Wolfson
						
						 1919-1923 
						- J. Cohen
						
						 1923-1927 
						- Moss Berstein
						
						 1927-1933 
						- D. Cohen
						
						 1933-1950 
						- J. Cohen
						
						  | 
						
						 
						Treasurers 
						
						1895-1897
						- S. Rosenbaum
						
						 1897-1898
						- Lionel L. Harris
						
						 1898-1901
						- Lewis Birnstein
						
						 1901-1913
						- H. Broder
						
						 1913-1915
						- M. Bendis
						
						 1915-1916
						- P.J. Cohen
						
						 1916-1919
						- A. Craimer
						
						 1919-1933
						- Moss Bernstein
						
						 1933-1936
						- A. Craimer
						
						 1936-1948
						- no data
						
						 1948-1951
						- I. Cohen
						
						 from 1951
						- J. Feldman
						
						  | 
					 
					
						| 
						
						 
						Secretaries and Hon. Secretaries 
						 | 
						 
					
						| 
						
						 1887 
						- Marks J.S. Lyons(xlii)
						
						 1895-1897 
						- Marks J.S. Lyons
						 1897-1898 
						- Lionel L. Harris
						
						 1898-1901 
						- Marks J.S. Lyons
						 1901-1910 
						- H. Broder
						 1910-1911 
						- G. Rosenbaum
						 1911-1912 
						- S. Louis Harris
						 1912-1913 
						- Joseph Cohen
						  | 
						
						 1913-1914 
						- G. Rosenbaum
						
						 1914-1916 
						- M.J. Cohen
						
						 1916-1927
						- Moss Bernstein 
						
						 1927-1931
						- Sefton Cohen 
						
						 1931-1933
						- Moss Bernstein 
						
						 1933-1936
						- Sol Cohen 
						
						 1938-1940
						- Aron Cohen 
						
						  | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Membership Data: 
						 | 
						
						
						 Number of Seatholders - Board of Deputies Returns(xlv) 
						
		 
			
				| 
				 1874  | 
				
				 1880  | 
				
				 1890  | 
				
				 1900  | 
			 
			
				| 
				 
				21  | 
				
				 
				20  | 
				
				 
				23  | 
				
				 
				15  | 
			 
		 
		
						Number of Seatholders(xlvi) 
						 
						
		 
			
				| 
				 1874  | 
				
				 1895  | 
				
				 1910  | 
				
				 1911  | 
			 
			
				| 
				 
				15  | 
				
				 
				20  | 
				
				 
				19  | 
				
				 
				27  | 
			 
		 
		
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Registration District: 
						 | 
						
						 Blaenau Gwent, 
						since 1 April 1974(xlvii) - Link to Register Office website 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Cemetery Information: 
						 | 
						
						 
						There is no Jewish cemetery in 
						Tredegar,  although in 1874, shortly after the 
						congregation was established, the community received a piece of land as a gift 
						for use as a cemetery, but having no funds to build a wall around the plot, 
						the proposed cemetery was never established.(xlviii) 
						
						The 
						closest cemetery is in 						Brynmawr,
						opened in 1920, which was governed by a joint board, the Brynmawr and District Jewish Burial Board, 
						which included residents from the other local Jewish communities, including 
						Tredegar.   
						
						There is also a Jewish cemetery at 
						Merthyr Tydfil. 
						 | 
					 
					 
				
				
				
				
					
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						Online Articles, Videos and Other 
						Material relating to the Tredegar Jewish Community 
						
						on JCR-UK 
						
						
							 on Third Party Websites 
						
						
						  Notable Jewish Connections with Tredegar 
						
							- 
							
						    Rabbi Dr Solomon Goldman 
							 (1910-1991), minister at St John's Wood United Synagogue, London (1950-76), was born in Tredegar. 
							 
							- 
							
						    Judge Aron Owen (1919-2009), a barrister and circuit judge, was born in Tredegar. Before his career as a lawyer he was minister at the Beth Hagadol 
							Synagogue in Leeds. 
							 
							- 
							
							David Wolfson, Baron Wolfson of Tredegar 
							KC (born 1968), a barrister and Conservative politician, who 
							served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice (1920-1922) and is  
							currently Shadow Attorney General. He adopted the title "Baron Wolfson of Tredegar, of Tredegar in the County of Gwent", on being 
							created a life peer on 30 December 2020, due to his family's connections with the town. 
							His grandfather, Rev. Samuel Wolfson (c.1909-1990), was 
							born in Tredegar. 
							 
							- 
							
							The trilingual film (Welsh, Yiddish and English)
							Solomon and Gaenor (1999) 
							was set against the backdrop of the anti Jewish riots in Tredegar in 1911.
							(See YouTube
							
							trailer and 
							interview 
							with Paul Morrison, writer/director.) 
							 
						 
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						| 
						 
						Other 
						Tredegar Jewish Institutions & 
						Organisations 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						 Educational & Theological
						 
						
							- 
							
							Hebrew Classes, founded 1888.(li) 
								
									| Number of pupils:(lii) | 
									Year | 
									1896 | 
									1912 | 
									1915 | 
									1918 | 
								 
								
									|   | 
									Number | 
									25* | 
									30 | 
									40 | 
									20 | 
								 
								
									 | 
									 | 
									
									* 10 boys, 10 girls and 5 infants | 
								 
								 
							 
							- 
							
							Chevra Shass, founded by 1914.(liii)
							  
						 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						
						 Welfare Institutions 
						
							- 
							
							Tredegar Hebrew Benevolent Society, founded 
							in 1873 for the purpose of affording relief to Jewish poor residents, strangers, etc.(lvi)  
							 
							- 
							
							Jewish Orphan (Aid) Society, West Monmouthshire & Breconshire Branch, founded 
							in December 1890.(lvii)  
							 
							- 
							
							Branch of Poor Aid Society, founded 
							in 1893, for relief to Jewish itinerant poor (may have 
		  					replaced the Hebrew Benevolent Society).(lviii)  
							 
							- 
							
							Itinerant Jewish Poor Society, 
							founded by 1911.(lix)  
							 
						 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						
						 Other Institutions 
						
							- 
							
							Anglo-Jewish Association, South Wales & Monmouthshire Branch, founded by 1901.(lxii)  
							 
							- 
							
							Jewish Literary and Social Society, founded by 1903,(lxiii) 
							probably succeeded by the Zionist and Literary Society 
							, founded by 1917.(lxiv) 
							 
							- 
							
							Jewish Scholars' Life Boat Fund, founded by 1913.(lxv) 
							 
						 
						 | 
					 
					 
				
  
				
					
						| 
						 
						
						Tredegar Jewish Population Data 
						 | 
					 
					
		| 
		 
		Year 
		 | 
		
		 
		Number  | 
		
		 Source  | 
					 
					 
				
	
					
		| 
		 
		1873 
		 | 
		
		 
		12 families  | 
		
		 The Jewish Chronicle of
		1 January 1873  | 
					 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1874 
		 | 
		
		 
		60  | 
		
		 The Jewish Directory for 1874   | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1895 
		 | 
		
		 
		102  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1896/7  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1902 
		 | 
		
		 
		80  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1903/4  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1904 
		 | 
		
		 
		100  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1905/6  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1909 
		 | 
		
		 
		150  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1910  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1911 
		 | 
		
		 
		150  | 
		
		 The Jewish Chronicle of
		25 
		August 1911  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1911 
		 | 
		
		 
		160  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1912  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1914 
		 | 
		
		 
		175  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1915  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1945 
		 | 
		
		 
		39  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1945/6  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1950 
		 | 
		
		 
		28  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1951  | 
	 
	
	
		| 
		 
		1951 
		 | 
		
		 
		27  | 
		
		 The Jewish Year Book 1952  | 
	 
	
		| 
		 Click HERE to view Jewish 
		population figures for the whole of Blaenau Gwent from UK Censuses since 2001. 
		 | 
	 
 
 
				  
				
					
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						Notes & Sources 
						(↵ 
						returns to text above) 
						 | 
					 
					
						| 
						
						
						 | 
					 
				 
				
				
				Former Jewish Communities in the county borough of Blaenau Gwent home page 
				
				Jewish Congregations in the former county of Brecknockshire 
				
				Jewish Congregations in the former administrative county of Gwent 
				
				Jewish Congregations in Wales, listed according to current unitary authorities 
				Jewish Communities & Congregations in Wales home page  
				
				
				 Page created: 23 August 2005
				 Data significantly expanded and notes added: 13 November 2024
				 Page most recently amended: 25 February 2025 
				Research by David 
				Shulman and Harold Pollins Formatting by David Shulman 
				 
				
				
 
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