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JCR-UK is a genealogical and historical website covering all Jewish communities and
congregations throughout the British Isles and Gibraltar, both past and present.
NOTE: We are not the official website of this congregation, which can be reached
by clicking on the congregation's logo below.
The former synagogue in Jackson Row, Manchester
(© Ulf Heinsohn,
CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons)
Congregation Data |
Name: |
Manchester Reform Synagogue
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Former Name: |
Manchester Congregation of British Jews,
until about 1968(i)
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Address: |
The congregation is currently using temporary premises at Manchester University's Chaplaincy on Oxford Road,
Manchester, while it seeks a new permanent home.(ii)
(The congregation is considered part of the
"North Manchester" Jewish community.) |
Previous Addresses: |
● Jackson's Row, Manchester, M2 5NH
(to November 2022),
designed by architect Peter Cummings
(formerly Caminesky), FRIBA.(iii)
18 May 1952 - Consecration of the synagogue(iv)
29 November 1953 - Official opening of the synagogue (built with funds from the War Damage Commission)(iv)
2021 - Following approval at an Extraordinary General Meeting of the congregation held on 25 July 2021, the congregation agreed to sell
the synagogue building (the last remaining synagogue in the centre of Manchester) for
£15 million. The site is being redeveloped as part of £200 million project.(v)
26 November 2022 - Synagogue holds final Sabbath service.(vi)
27 November 2022 - Special deconsecration service, marking the closure of the synagogue after some 70 years.(vi)
● Park Place, Cheetham Hill Road, Manchester, M4
(from 1858)
11 March 1857 - Foundation stone laid(vii)
25 March 1858 - Consecration of site for Synagogue(viii)
1 June 1941 - Synagogue destroyed in German air-raid(ix)
June - August 1941 - Services held temporarily at Cheetham Assembly Rooms(ix)
1941 - 1948 - Services held at Room 35, Houldsworth Hall, 90 Deansgate, M3(ix)
1948 - 1953 - Services held in prefabricated building on Park Place site(ix) |
Current Status: |
Active |
Date Founded: |
Founded in 1857,
as a breakaway congregation from Manchester's Orthodox synagogue, the
Halliwell Street
Congregation, which effectively split into two congregations: one
orthodox and the other reform.
It was only the second reform congregation to
be established in Britain and the first outside London. |
Ritual: |
Reform |
Affiliation: |
From the outset, the congregation was
associated with then only other reform congregation in Britain, the
West London Synagogue of British
Jews, founded sixteen years earlier, initially even adopting a
similar name that included reference to "British Jews" (indicating that
both congregations were inclusive of both Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews).
In 1942, the congregation was a founding member of Associated British Synagogues
(later known as Associated Synagogues of Great Britain), which
subsequent became the Reform Synagogues of Great Britain and is now the
Movement for Reform
Judaism, of which it is a constituent synagogue. |
Website: |
http://www.jacksonsrow.org |
Ministers:(xii) (To view a short profile of a minister
who also served other UK congregations - name in blue - hold the cursor
over his name.) |
Rabbi Dr. Solomon Mayer Schiller-Szenessy
- 1856 to 1860(xiii)
Rev. Dr. Gustav Gottheil
- 1860 to 1873(xiv)
Rev. Dr. Isaac Weiner
- 1873 to 1877(xv)
Rev. Laurence Mark Simmons
- 1877 to 1900(xvi)
Rev. Abraham Wolf
- 1901 to 1907(xvii)
Rev. Harry S. Lewis
- 1908 to 1913(xviii)
Rev. Jacob Phillips
- 1913 to 1940(xix)
Rabbi Percy Selvin Goldberg
- 1940 to 1974(xx)
Rabbi Toviah Ben-Chorin -
about 1975 to about 1977(xxi)
Rabbi Reuven Silverman
- 1977 to 2022(xxii)
Rabbi Robyn Ashworth-Stern
- initially associate rabbi from December 2018 and subsequently
principal rabbi to present (December 2022)(xxiii) |
Assistant Ministers & Readers : |
M. Stern - assistant minister at least in and about 1874(xxvii)
Rev. Moss (Moses) Henriques Valentine
- chazan (cantor) / reader from 1896 to about 1921(xxviii)
Rev. Moses Besso - assistant reader (1918-c.1924); reader
(c.1924-c.1934); assistant minister (c.1934 to at least about 1940)(xxix)
Eli Levy - reader from at least 1954 to about 1959.(xxx)
Rev. Y. Shabatay
- assistant minister from about 1959 to about 1960(xxxi)
Rev. S. Greenstein
- assistant minister from about 1970 to about 1971(xxxii)
Rev. Samuel Rodreigues-Pereira
- assistant minister from early 1970s to 1976(xxxiii) |
Officers: |
See
Lists of Presidents, Treasurers and Secretaries of the Congregation, 1896 to 1950s
List of Wardens of the Congregation, 1908 to 1956 |
Membership Data: |
General
1896 - 142 seatholders (xxxvii)
1903 - 160 seatholders (xxxvii)
1941 - 110 members(xxxviii)
National Reports and Surveys(xxxix)
1977 - 800 male (or household) members and 350 female members
1983 - 500 male (or household) members and 360 female members
1990 - 487 members (comprising 296 households, 93 individual male and 98
individual female members)
1996 - 767 members (comprising 530 households, 71 individual male and 168
individual female members)
2010 - listed as having 500 to 749 members (by household)
2016 - listed as having 300 to 399 members (by household) |
Charitable Status: |
The congregation, under the name Manchester Reform Congregation, is
a registered charity (no. 1118957), registered on 26 April 2007, the
governing document being the congregation's constitution, adopted
6 December 1971, as amended 21 April 1998.(xl) |
Local Government District: |
The congregation is situated in the metropolitan
borough of the City of Manchester, within the metropolitan county
of Greater Manchester (which no longer has any administrative powers).
From 1889 to 1974, the
locality was in the county borough of Manchester (a unitary authority), geographically (though not administratively) within the County of Lancashire.
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Cemetery
Information: |
The congregation is a member synagogue of the
Jewish Joint Burial Society
(JJBS), through which the congregation's members participate in a burial
scheme. The Manchester Reform Jewish Old Cemetery,
Whitefield, M25 was in use by the Congregation from 1856 to 1992. The
Southern Cemetery, Jewish Section,
Didsbury M20 was used by the Congregation from 1892 and
was subsequently also used by other congregations. See
also
Manchester Jewish Cemeteries Information on Manchester Jewish Community home page. |
Notes & Sources (↵ returns to text above)
|
Bibliography, On-line Articles and Other Material relating to this Congregation
on JCR-UK
on the Congregation's website
General
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Congregational Records |
Registration District (BMD): |
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At Manchester Register Office: |
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Greater Manchester Jewish Community home page
(including list of Jewish congregations in
Greater Manchester)
List of Reform Judaism Congregations
Jewish Congregations in the City of Manchester (metropolitan borough)
Street Directory of Jewish Congregations in Greater Manchester
List of Member Synagogues of the Jewish Joint Burial Society
List of Synagogues destroyed by German air raids during World War II
Jewish Communities of England home page
Page created: 1 March 2002
Data significantly expanded: 4 July 2017
Notes first added: 20 August 2019
Date page last amended: 23 September 2024
Research and formatting by David Shulman
Explanation of Terms |
About JCR-UK |
JCR-UK home page
Contact JCR-UK Webmaster:
jcr-ukwebmaster@jgsgb.org.uk
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