BAYSWATER SYNAGOGUE 1863-1938
ORIGIN and HISTORY
Page 4
THE STORY OF THE SYNAGOGUE
AT
THE beginning of the reign of Queen Victoria, the synagogal organisation of
London was almost exactly the same as it had been in the middle of the previous
century. In the City, there were (in addition to the ancient Spanish and
Portuguese Synagogue in Bevis Marks) the three historic "City" Synagogues - the
Great (founded in 1690), the Hambro' (founded in 1707) and the New (founded in
1761). The religious needs of the Jews of Westminster were satisfied by the
Western Synagogue in the Haymarket, together with a small secessionist body in
Maiden Lane. Except for this, there was no provision whatsoever for the
requirements of the increasing body of Jews who lived in the West End, and in
the new suburbs continuously springing up beyond. Yet the distribution of London
Jewry had by now fundamentally altered. The days were passing when the City
merchant lived above his shop. There was a continual stream to more desirable
areas of residence; a stream which, in the case of the Jews, with their
increased well-being under English tolerance, was probably more considerable
than in that of other sections of the population.
The City Synagogues however - Sephardi and Ashkenazi alike -
refused for a long time to countenance the formation of any fresh place of
worship outside the traditional area. This was by no means due, as might be
imagined at the first glance, to obscurantism. The older Congregations were
situated in the centre of the neighbourhood of close Jewish settlement. They
had on their shoulders the burden of the support of the poor and of the
multifarious charitable organisations. Were the wealthier members living further
west to secede and form their own religious organisation, the burden on those
who remained would be overwhelming; and the latter fought the idea tooth and
nail.
A breach in the traditional organisation was, however, effected when, in 1841,
the Reform Synagogue was opened (it may be noted that the original dispute was
due almost to geographical as to theoretical considerations). This threatened to
be a powerful counter-attraction to members of the City Synagogues who lived in
the vicinity, and had hitherto, dutifully trudged each Sabbath to Duke's Place
or Great St. Helen's.
In 1848, accordingly, the Great Synagogue determined to establish a subsidiary
place of worship near Oxford Circus for the benefit of those of its members who
resided locally, and after preliminaries there was opened in Great Portland
Street, in 1855, the precursor of the present Central Synagogue, dedicated in
1870.
This, however, was not sufficient to meet all requirements. The westward drift
from the City continued; and quite a large Jewish settlement had by now grown up
in what was then the new suburb of Bayswater, for whom the Sabbath walk to Great
Portland Street was no negligible matter. They comprised many members not only
of the Great, but also of the New Synagogue. The latter body had been invited
to collaborate in the establishment of the Great Portland Street Branch
Congregation, but for various reasons (mainly financial) had been unable to
participate in the scheme.
On 11th July, 1860, a preliminary meeting of residents in the Bayswater district
was held in the house of Mr. Lawrence Levy at 100, Westbourne Terrace, and
agreement was reached as to the desirability of establishing a new Synagogue in
the locality. There was general reluctance however to set up an Independent
Congregation. Negotiations were accordingly opened with the Great and New
Synagogues with a view to making the new place of worship a branch of both of
these communities, in the same manner as the Great Portland Street Congregation
had been of the former alone. After several meetings and conferences it was
resolved that "a Synagogue be established, and that it be a branch of the Great
and New Synagogues under the religious direction of the Chief Rabbi."
It was further agreed that on condition that an equal amount was raised locally,
each of the City Synagogues should make a grant of £1,500 towards the ground,
building and furniture of the proposed Synagogue, which should be the property
of the two parent bodies in equal moieties. Members of other recognised
Synagogues contributing to the maintenance of the Chief Rabbi's Fund should be
allowed, with the consent of their respective Synagogues, to rent seats in the
new place of worship, though any voluntary offering which they might make would
be applied to the Synagogue of which they were members.
The agreement under-estimated local enthusiasm - but also the scale of the
enterprise. Actually, the contributions amounted to upwards of £7,000; yet even
with this sum, and the £3,000 received from the parent bodies, and a loan of
£2,000 from the Bank, there was a considerable deficit by the time the work was
completed. For, unlike most Congregations, the Bayswater Synagogue did not have
a period of probation in a temporary home, but rose full-fledged into existence
on the chosen site in Chichester Place, almost at the corner of Harrow Road -
then a pleasant suburban thoroughfare. The total cost (including site,
decorations, and some subsequent alternations in 1867) was £15,611. The building
was designed in the fashionable red-brick Gothic by N. S. Joseph, and held 341
persons in the body of the building and 334 in the ladies' gallery.
It was on 10th July 1862 (12th Tammuz 5622) that the Chief Rabbi, the Rev. Dr.
N. M. Adler, laid the Foundation Stone; and he formally consecrated the
building, in the presence of a large and distinguished gathering, on 30th July
1863 (14th Ab 5623). It was an event of some moment in the larger life of the
Metropolis and, while the work of construction was in progress, on 21st February
1863, the Illustrated London News published an illustrated article on the
new place of worship.
The first seat-holders, about 240 in number, included some of the elite
of the Anglo-Jewish community. There was Samuel Montagu, subsequently first Lord
Swaythling; Lionel Cohen, one of the most devoted workers in Anglo-Jewry, whose
family has continued to be associated with the Synagogue ever since; the wives
of the three Barons Rothschild - Lionel, Meyer, and Anthony - whose husbands
were among the pillars of the Great Portland Street Synagogue; Ellis Franklin,
Samuel Monatgu's brother-in-law and himself the father of a notable family; and
many others. It was an outstanding triumph for the new Congregation, when, only
a few months after the consecration Alderman Benjamin Phillips, one of its
founders, was elected Lord Mayor of London.
The Bye-laws of the new Congregation were established by a Joint Committee of
the Great and New Synagogues, which continued its sessions until 1866. In one
important respect, the precedent followed at Great Portland Street was
abandoned. That Congregation, as a branch of the Great Synagogue, had been
managed entirely from the City by the Honorary Officers of the parent body. The
fact that in this case there were two sponsoring bodies made this precedent
impracticable. It was accordingly necessary to appoint local Honorary Officers
and Committee, with limited powers of legislation and of control over income and
expenditure, subject to the veto of the parent Synagogues. The arrangement had
certain obvious disadvantages. But, as it happens, for some years to come the
principal members of the Bayswater Branch Synagogue had seats on the Boards of
the parent bodies. When this circumstance no longer prevailed, difficulties
seemed inevitable; but (as will be seen) by then a radical change in the
synagogal organisation of the Metropolis had taken place.
The first President of the new Congregation was David Benjamin, who thirty years
before had collaborated in the establishment of the first Synagogue in Tasmania,
and whose brother was founder of the Melbourne Hebrew Community. His colleague
was Lawrence Levy, in whose house the first meeting had been held. Louis Jacobs
was Treasurer, with somewhat truncated responsibilities owing to the jealous
control of the parent Congregation. The latter had supplied, however, in
addition to money, many of the necessary appurtenances for use in the new House
of Prayer, including some of considerable value. The Bayswater Synagogue thus
has in regular use to the present day various splendid specimens of ritual
silver made in London in the eighteenth century, some of which have been loaned
from time to time to the recently-established Jewish Museum - itself testimony
to their beauty.
In the period following its foundation, the Synagogue continued to flourish
exceedingly. The Jewish population of the neighbourhood was increasing rapidly.
At the Great Portland Street Synagogue, it was said that the foundation of the
Bayswater Community had taken away a whole Congregation; but the vacant seats
were filled again within a very short time. A similar process of expansion was
discernible in the new place of worship. Within three years of the consecration,
extensive alterations were already found necessary, steps being taken to
increase the capacity both in the body of the Synagogue and in the gallery. Not
long afterwards, a second gallery was added. Year by year, even after the
payment of the agreed rates to the parent Synagogues, the accounts showed a
considerable surplus income. This was allowed to accumulate until in 1870 it
amounted to a sum sufficient to liquidate the deficit in the Building Account,
as well as to repay the loan from the Bank.
It is diverting, and not uninstructive, to note how problems which are generally
regarded as peculiar to the preset day had already to be taken into
consideration at the Bayswater Synagogue from its earliest days. Even at that
time, it was impossible to count upon a spontaneous quorum of ten for daily
worship, and paid minyan-men (not too regular, incidentally, in their
attendance) had to be engaged. In 1869. Mr. Horatio J. Lucas, of Westbourne
Terrace, who had been asked to draw up a report on the choir, arrived at the
conclusion that "bad as the singing now is, I am only astonished that it is not
worse." What are no regarded as reforms, or concessions to the spirit of the
age, were present from the beginning. The late Sabbath service was a rule from
the outset. Offerings at the Reading of the Law were abolished as early as 1865
(though subsequently reintroduced, to be abolished again later on). The very
year after the opening, what has since been regarded as a daring departure from
tradition, was authorised, without any vestige of protest from the
ecclesiastical authorities; for it was determined "that it be the duty of the
Lecturer to hold confirmation of children of both sexes in the Jewish religion
in the Synagogue twice a year if necessary, after having undergone proper
examination by him."
There was a less pleasant episode in the record of the Congregation in the
1870's, worshippers being annoyed on their way in and out by persons who stood
in the lobby and distributed conversionist tracts. The matter was brought before
the Board of Deputies, whose Solicitor advised that the intrusion was a
punishable offence, and proceedings were taken to have the nuisance stopped. The
precedent is not without its importance in the present day.
From the very outset the Bayswater Synagogue was the centre of vigorous communal
life, and subsidiary institutions covering every aspect of Jewish activity came
into existence around it. Thus, ever since the foundation of the Congregation,
Ritual Baths were maintained in the immediate vicinity. Better know to the
general public are the Bayswater Jewish Schools. These were originally opened in
May 1866, at Gibson Place (now Formosa Street) as Girls' and Infants' Schools.
Subsequently, the school was removed to Westbourne Park Villas, where its scope
increased and a master was appointed for the first time. In 1879, the Schools
were transferred to 179 Harrow Road, and were placed under government
inspection. Here they remained until 1930, when they were removed to their
present site in Lancaster Road. They have changed a great deal in scope since
their foundation, but their usefulness to the community at large was never
greater than it is now, as they, too, approach the completion of three-quarters
of a century of existence.
The relations of the new Congregation to the City Synagogues long gave rise to
occasional perplexities. In the summer of 1864, one of the members desired to
have his daughter married in the Synagogue by its officiating clergy, and
application was made to the Board of Deputies for the certification of the
Secretary, as Marriage Registrar, in accordance with the Registration Act of
1836. The City Synagogues, however, demurred; it was not, in fact (as has been
indicated), a petty question, for they viewed with anxiety the possibility of
the new community establishing complete independence and thereby evading its
moral obligation towards poorer co-religionists in the East End. They maintained
that the Bayswater Synagogue, not being independent, was not a Synagogue within
the meaning of the Act. On the marriage of a seatholder he had to choose whether
he would become attached as a member to the Great Synagogue or to the New;
indeed, the term "member" of the Bayswater Synagogue did not so much as appear
in its rules! Accordingly, it was questionable whether the Marriage Secretary of
the Bayswater Synagogue (where one appointed) would in fact be the "Secretary of
the Synagogue to which the husband belongs" as the Act required, and its
Secretary could not, therefore, be certified in accordance with legal
requirements. But, though the Board of Deputies refused the application, the
Bayswater Synagogue was not disposed to accept its decision as final. Both sides
sought legal advice on the subject - the Bayswater Synagogue from Robert
Phillimore, the Queen's Advocate, and the parent bodies from the
Attorney-General, Roundell Palmer, himself. Both opinions were, however,
favourable to the Bayswater Synagogue's point of view. Agreement with the parent
bodies was reached, and a second, and more successful application, was made to
the Board of Deputies. On the 25th October, 1865, the first weddings were
solemnised under the congregational auspices, two cousins of identical name (a
manifest perplexity for historians of the future) marrying two brothers.
When the Bayswater Synagogue was only three years old, the Chief Rabbi invited
the Wardens of the Great Synagogue to breakfast with him in his Succah,
on the first day of the feast of the Tabernacles 1866, and impressed upon them
the desirability of combining the Ashkenazi Synagogues of London in a single
organisation. This was the genesis of the United Synagogue. Lionel Cohen, one of
those present, a pillar of the Bayswater Synagogue as well as of the Great,
threw himself heart and soul into the scheme, and was mainly responsible for its
successful outcome. In effect, the Congregations originally involved consisted
of five only - the three historic City Congregations, together with the Great
Synagogue's Branch in Great Portland Street and the Joint Branch Synagogue of
the Great and New Synagogues at Bayswater. These, then, were invited to send
delegates to participate in the discussions. Though the improvement which the
suggested scheme would bring about in it status was obvious, the Bayswater
Synagogue was not over-enthusiastic in its support, rightly claiming that
"unless that local interest which is so beneficially felt by the members of the
existing Synagogues be maintained, no scheme for their amalgamation can be
satisfactorily be carried out." Various modifications to meet this objection
were introduced in the course of the discussions, which continued throughout the
year 1867. At the beginning of the following year the Amalgamation Scheme was
completed; in April it was ratified by the Synagogue, and in July 1870, the
royal assent was accorded to the Act of Parliament which embodied the scheme and
set up the United Synagogue.
From this date, the Bayswater Synagogue was on the same footing as the older
Congregations which had grown up during the formative period of Anglo-Jewish
life. In the administration of the United Synagogue, members of the Bayswater
Congregation played a peculiarly honoured part. Lionel Cohen was Vice-President
from the beginning, as also was Sampson Lucas, who was elected in 1876 to
succeed Sir Anthony de Rothschild as President; and the first Secretary, Dr.
Asher Asher, to whose devotion Anglo-Jewry owes so much, was likewise an
original member and regular worshipper at Bayswater.
By this time - so rapidly was the Jewish population of the vicinity increasing -
the new Synagogue was too small to accommodate all who sought membership.
Notwithstanding the temporary expedients resorted to in order to increase
seating accommodation, it was obvious that the problem could not be finally
solved without really drastic steps; and, indeed, it was not until the
construction of further Synagogues in the West and North-West of London that the
difficulties were removed. Very shortly after the establishment of the United
Synagogue, there was talk of a radical reconstruction, and the Bayswater
Enlargement Scheme was for sometime a foremost topic of communal discussion.
There were obvious objections to the plan, on the score both of policy and of
expense; and Assur Moses, a prominent member since the foundation, published
anonymously an amusing squib satirising the scheme, under the title of "Another
Battle of Talking." At last, at a general meeting of members, in 1875, thanks
mainly to the strenuous advocacy of Samuel Montagu, it was resolved to establish
another Synagogue not far away, on the north side of the Park. The Bayswater
Synagogue thus stands, as it were, in parental relation to the New West End
Synagogue opened in St. Petersburgh Place in 1879; though the new Congregation
ultimately proved a serious rival to the old.
It was first arranged for the Bayswater Synagogue to have three officiating
ministers. The longevity in the service of the Congregation of the original
incumbents was remarkable. On 12th May 1889, when the Synagogue had been in
existence for twenty-six years, illuminated addresses were presented to the
three Ministers, who had been in office since the establishment. On 8th March,
1903, two of them were again the recipients of testimonials on the occasion of
their having been elevated to a sphere of wider usefulness, which did not by any
means end his association.
The office of First Reader was originally filled by the Rev. Isaac Samuel, who,
born in London in 1833, had been acting as Minister at Bristol since 1860. He
was Secretary of the Jews' Deaf and Dumb Home for forty-one years, teacher of
Hazanut at Jews' College, a living repository of the liturgical traditions
of English Jewry, and for many years the only Jewish minister in England who
received stipendiary appointment in a non-sectarian institution as Jewish
chaplain. When the Synagogue celebrated its Jubilee after fifty years' existence
in 1913, he was still in office, and he died in 1914.
He has since been followed
in office by the Rev. D. Klein (1910-1934) and the Rev. L. Bryll (appointed
1935). The Second Reader at the time of the foundation of the Synagogue was the
Rev. Raphael Harris, who also acted as Secretary. He remained in office for
nearly half a century, until his retirement in 1910, and he died in 1911.
In 1863, the idea of a Synagogal Minister, other than Reader or Rabbi, was still
a little novel, indeed, the Rev. A. L. Green, the witty and eloquent Preacher at
the Great Portland Street Synagogue, officially filled on the position of
Chazan. The Bayswater Congregation therefore was in advance of the times
when it determined to appoint a Lecturer (as it was termed). There were two
candidates for Office - the Rev. A. P. Mendes, of Birmingham, scion of a devoted
family of Sephardi Jews, and the Rev. Hermann Adler, the twenty-five year old
son of the Chief Rabbi. It was the latter who was chosen, developing in the
pulpit of the Bayswater Synagogue that impressive delivery that was to make him
so great a force in Anglo-Jewish life in later years. It was here that he
preached a once-famous course of sermons on the Biblical passages adduced by
Christian theologians in support of the dogmas of their faith, which was
subsequently published and received the compliment of almost immediate
translation into Marathi for the benefit of the Bene Israel of India.
Dr. Adler remained in office until 1891, when he was elected to succeed his
father (for whom he had been deputising for some years) as Chief Rabbi. He was
followed as Preacher to the Bayswater Synagogue by the Rev. Professor (Sir)
Hermann Gollancz, M.A., D.Lit. - an eloquent speaker, indefatigable public
worker and prolific writer. In 1897, Dr. Gollancz obtained a Rabbinical diploma
from continental authorities. This departure, unusual at the time (for one Rabbi
only had hitherto been considered to suffice for the entire official London
community) was responsible for a prolonged controversy. In the end, however, Dr.
Gollancz's right to use the Rabbinical title was vindicated, thus initiating a
new era in the history and status of Anglo-Jewish ministry. It was, too, during
Dr. Gollancz's tenure of office, in 1912, that there took place the most famous
of a series of movements for ritual readjustment with which the Congregation has
been associated. On this occasion, it acted in conjunction with its
daughter-body, the New West End Synagogue, and the result was the sanction by
the Chief Rabbi of various slight modifications in the liturgical procedure,
which are now regarded as normal in many English Synagogues. In 1923, in
recognition of his contributions to learning, Dr. Gollancz was raised to
Knighthood, being the only Anglo-Jewish minister to the present day who has been
so honoured.
After his retirement, there has unfortunately been a more rapid rotation in the
ministry of the Congregation. Rabbi Dayan M. Gollop (1923-1930) resigned to take
up an appointment in a field which allowed his great abilities wider scope, at
the Hampstead Synagogue. He was followed by the Rev. Walter Levin (1930-1938) a
lovable and energetic worker for the community who, by his devoted services in
every communal case, earned the esteem and admiration of all. He, in turn, was
succeeded by the Rev. I. Levy, B.A., appointed in 1938.
Local conditions have changed greatly since the Bayswater Synagogue was
consecrated, three-quarters of a century ago. The days are long passed when it
was considered the most desirable among the London suburbs. Streets and squares
which in the 1860's were almost the height of fashion are now decayed and filled
with tenement-houses. The immediate purlieus of the Synagogue retain little of
their suburban freshness. Some of the families of the pious founders have died
out entirely; others have removed, with fashion, to different parts of London;
others, again, have affiliated themselves to those fresh Congregations which
have come into existence since 1863. The Bayswater Synagogue still retains,
nevertheless, much of the zest which infused it in those early days. Many are
those who, though now living far away, retain for sentimental reasons their
membership of the Synagogue in which they were brought up. Moreover, with the
expiry of century-old leases, the character of the neighbourhood is once again
changing, and great blocks of modern flats are replacing the peeling stucco of
the early Victorian frontages. In the years to come the district may once again
become the centre of an energetic Jewish settlement, as it was in the past. The
Bayswater Synagogue, strong in its great tradition, can look forward to the
future with confidence.
CECIL ROTH
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