|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
City of Birmingham
and the Boroughs of Solihull and Walsall
Birmingham, in the English Midlands, is the second largest city in England, with a population of approximately one million. In the vicinity of Birmingham are a number of towns whose Jewish communities have looked to the Birmingham community for support or shares facilities, including Walsall immediately to Birmingham's northwest and Solihull immediately to Birmingham's southeast.
Until 1974, Birmingham, Solihull and Walsall were county boroughs, the first two in the county of Warwickshire and Walsall in the county of Staffordshire. Each then became metropolitan boroughs within the newly created metropolitan county of West Midlands (the areas of Solihull and Walsall being increased at the time by the incorporation of adjoining areas). These metropolitan boroughs became unitary authorities in 1986, when West Midlands lost its administrative county status, becoming purely a ceremonial and geographical county. Solihull had been an urban district until 1964, when it received county borough status.
Jewish Community and Congregations
The following congregations are, or were, considered to be part of the Birmingham & District Community
Birmingham Central Synagogue (active)
Birmingham Hebrew Congregation (active)
Birmingham Lubavitch Centre (active)
Birmingham New Synagogue (closed - merged with Birmingham Hebrew Congregation)
Birmingham Progressive Synagogue (active)
Birmingham's first Jewish congregations (to 1856)
Midland Reform Synagogue Movement (closed 1970)
Walsall Hebrew Congregation (closed)
The following are former or alternative names of the above congregations:
Beth Hamedrash - see Birmingham Central Synagogue
Birmingham Liberal Jewish Synagogue - see Birmingham Progressive Synagogue
Froggery Synagogue - see Birmingham's first Jewish congregations
Hurst Street Synagogue (1800's) - see Birmingham's first Jewish congregations
Hurst Street Synagogue (1900's) - see Birmingham New Synagogue
Park Road Synagogue - see Birmingham New Synagogue
Severn Street Synagogue - see Birmingham's first Jewish congregations
Singers Hill Synagogue - see Birmingham Hebrew Congregation
Wrottesley Street Synagogue (1800's) - see Birmingham's first Jewish congregations
Wrottesley Street Synagogue (1900's) - see Birmingham Central Synagogue
Articles on the Birmingham Jewish Community
Birmingham from "Provincial Jewry in Victorian Britain" - Papers for a conference at University College, London, convened by the Jewish Historical Society of Great Britain, prepared by Aubrey Newman - 6th July 1975. Reproduced here with his kind consent.
A Portrait of Birmingham Jewry 1851- Birmingham Jewish Local History Study Group
The Rise of Provincial Jewry - Birmingham by Cecil Roth, 1950. Available on JCR-UK as part of the Susser Archive.
Jewish Encyclopedia article on Birmingham by Joseph Jacobs and Leopold J.Greenberg, c-1906.
Birmingham Jewish Communities - History and Reality (at http://www.brijnet.org/birmingham/history.html) by Arthur Chesses.
On-line article, Jews of Medieval Warwick from the Victoria County History of Warwickshire, volume 8 (1969), pp. 486-7.
Jewish Population Data
|
1730 |
- |
First Jewish settlement (possibly earlier)
|
*Same source also gives 49
for Walsall in 1947
Other Birmingham Information
Jewish
Property and Heritage &
Bibliography, Local Research Libraries and other sources
Birmingham Cemetery Information
Warwick Medieval Jewish Community
About JCR-UK | JCR-UK home page | Contact JCR-UK Webmaster
Terms and Conditions, Licenses and Restrictions for the use of this website:
This website is
owned by JewishGen and the Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain. All
material found herein is owned by or licensed to us. You may view, download, and
print material from this site only for your own personal use. You may not post
material from this site on another website without our consent. You may not
transmit or distribute material from this website to others. You may not use
this website or information found at this site for any commercial purpose.
If you have questions or a request to distribute information, please e-mail the
JCR-UK Webmaster