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New York Architecture
Images- Gone Temple
Beth-El |
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architect
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Arnold Brunner |
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location
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Fifth Ave. and 76th
Street |
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date
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1891 |
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style
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Romanesque
Revival with
Moorish Revival influences |
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construction
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Indiana limestone |
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type
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Synagogue |
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images
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Jewish
Heritage Report
Vol. I, No. 2 / Summer 1997
Fifty Years Ago: Demolition of NYC's Beth-El
Fifty Years Ago...
The loss of important Jewish monuments is not new – it has been a
constant throughout Jewish history dating to the first destruction of the
Temple. Loss, however, has not always been through adversity, as the
following article from the New York Times, (April 1947) shows. Fifty years
ago New York City lost one its famous Jewish landmarks – Temple Beth-El,
designed by Arnold Brunner and built in 1891 at Fifth Ave. and 76th
Street. In an unrelated development, Edmund Safra of Republic National
Bank recently purchased property on 5th Ave. to serve as a new Sephardic
Synagogue. Two other synagogues exist on Fifth Ave.’s Upper East Side
– Fifth Ave. Synagogue (1956) at 62nd St. and Temple Emanuel (1929) at
65th St.
Historic Temple Being Demolished: Beth-El Edifice, Once Among Finest in
Country to be Replaced by Apartments
Historic Temple Beth-El at Fifth Avenue and Seventy-sixth Street is
being demolished to make room for an apartment house. The Romanesque
edifice, once regarded as one of the finest synagogues in this country,
now resembles a bombed-out building. Its floors are covered with rubble;
only the slender steel frame remains of the roof. The building, little
used since the eve of Yom Kippur (the day of Atonement) of 1929, will be
leveled in about six weeks. Its congregation merged with congregation
Emanu-El in 1927 and both worshipped in the old synagogue until the new
temple Emanu-el at Fifth Avenue and Sixty-fifth Street was dedicated on
January 10, 1930. The Rev. Dr. Samuel Schulman, last rabbi of Temple
Beth-El, recalled yesterday his last service there in 1929.
"I remember on that day that I quoted from the legend in the Talmud
that God was weeping over the ruins of His temple," he said. "So
I, too, felt, deep in my heart."
Yesterday a wooden screen hid the lower part of the temple. Inside the
Indiana limestone shell of the building, no trace remained of the interior
decorations. The temple, at the time of its dedication on September 18,
1891, had been described in The New York Times as "magnificently
decorated."
"The auditorium is amphiteratrical in form and has four galleries,
one on each side and two over the main entrance," the report read.
"The ceiling is arched and is supported at a height of seventy feet
by a marble colonnade. It is decorated with intricate gold tracery.
"The shrine at the eastern end is composed of columns of Mexican onyx
with gold capitals and bases supporting an onyx arch on which are the
tables of the law, framed in gold. "On each side are columns of
Numidian marble and the entire shrine rests on St. Baume marble. The
background is a semi-circular wall of marble and gold mosaic, surmounted
by a marble cornice, Above this is a marble colonnade supporting a half
dome ceiling and behind this colonnade are the organ and the choir loft.
"There are only four columns on the main floor and from these run the
arches which support the ceiling. The source of light by day and night is
a field of stained glass - 1,200 feet in extent in the ceiling."
Unimpressed by the beauty of the temple, Abe called it "a routine
job." He said the wood and steel in the building were worthless
except as scrap. Most of the stone is valueless, he added, except for the
Indiana limestone, which may be sold.
Construction of the temple in 1891cost $350,000. The site was valued at an
additional $250,000. After the merger of Temple Beth-El with Temple Emanu-El,
the old building was not used regularly for religious services. It
accommodated the crowds that overflowed from Temple Emanu-El on high
religious holidays. The last such service was held in 1946.
In addition, the building was used for about a year by the Park Avenue
Baptist Church while the Riverside Church, completed in 1931, was being
built on Riverside Drive and 122nd Street. During the war, part of the
temple was used as a dormitory for service men.
The building was sold for $420,000 on May 30, 1945. Emory Roth & Sons,
architects for the new owner, reported that he intended to erect an
eighteen-story penthouse apartment building containing 115 apartments as
soon as the demolition was complete.
Contact the Editor of Jewish
Heritage Report
http://www.isjm.org/jhr/no2/beth-el.htm
Updated: 24-Jul-98 |
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contact
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nyc-architecture.com
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Thanks to http://www.isjm.org/jhr/no2/fifty.htm
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