Monthly Archives: May 2015

Emanu-El History

Synagogue Emanu-El at 605 Windsor DriveCharleston, SC 29407 Charleston’s Synagogue Emanu-El celebrated its 60th anniversary on November 11, 2007, with a huge gala in the newly refurbished Zucker Social Hall. A sold-out crowd enjoyed an evening of magnificent décor, marvelous food, and exciting entertainment. The event commemorated six decades of congregational life, and also culminated […]

Oseh Shalom History

Bluffton’s Oseh Shalom: From 17 to 500 Members in Four Years Bluffton, South Carolina, is located in southern Beaufort County, almost equidistant from Hilton Head Island and Savannah, Georgia. Thee town dates from the early 1800s when Lowcountry rice and cotton planters seeking high ground and cool river breezes built residences in what was then […]

Charleston History

Charleston Jewry: 320 Years and Counting Charleston, South Carolina, was one of a handful of port cities where the early years of American Jewish history were played out. Jewish immigrants began arriving in the colonial capital as early as the 1690s, drawn by the promise of economic opportunity and the town’s reputation for religious freedom. As […]

Beth El History

Camden, SC Baruch Plaques Saved from the Scrap Heap — based on an article in the Newsletter of the Friends of the Camden Archives and Museum, April 2001 Four bronze plaques that once hung on the walls of Camden’s first hospital were saved from the scrap metal heap by Harry Kline, owner of Camden Steel and […]

Aiken History

Strangers in Paradise: A Century of Jewish Settlement in Aiken, SC Aiken is “a place you could only dream of in Europe,” wrote Hiram Surasky to wife Friedel in Poland in June 1902. “No matter what street you travel on here there are parks and alleys full of delightful aromas.” The Suraskys were among several members of […]

GI Jews: South Carolina Goes to War

Commemorating the 70th Anniversary of VE-DayMay 2-3, 2015Charleston, SC

Anderson History

The Jews of Anderson, South Carolina: Merchants and Manufacturers The first Jews to settle in Anderson, the Lessers, came from Prussia by way of New York and Georgia and were established in the town well before the Civil War. During the post-war occupation of South Carolina, Michael and Martha Lesser took an injured Union soldier, […]

History of Temple Beth Elohim

Corner Screven and Highmarket Streets Georgetown, SC  Temple Beth Elohim Cemetery, Founded 1772 Jews arrived in the historic seaport of Georgetown, S.C. in the mid 1700s and by 1800, were a small but important portion of the population. Two of the first to arrive were brothers Abraham and Solomon Cohen. Along with Mordecai Myers, these gentlemen were […]

Dedication of Temple Sinai Historical Marker

11 Church St Sumter SC May 22, 2009   Front (Left) The Hebrew Cemetery Society was founded in 1874, the Sumter Hebrew Benevolent Society was founded before 1881, and the two societies agreed to merge that year. A formal merger in 1895 created the Sumter Society of Israelites, the official name of Congregation Sinai. The […]

History of Temple Sinai

11 Church St Sumter SC The first Jewish citizens of the Sumter community came from Charleston about 1815. These early settlers were of Sephardic background and many had fled persecution in Spain. As oppression spread in Germany, Poland, and then Russia, immigrants from these countries also settled in South Carolina and the Sumter Community. Two […]