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The project thanks This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for some of the information about Pittsburgh.

In 1848, the first synagogue, Shaare Shamayim (The Gates of Heaven), was established at the corner of Penn Avenue and Sixth Street.white oak

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CEMETERIES:

See "Graves vandalized, flags burned in Jewish cemetery " by Lillian Thomas, Post-Gazette, Oct. 25th, 2001. "Nearly 100 gravestones were wrenched from bases and smashed onto walkways or pushed down steep slopes of the Beth Hamedrish Hagadol-Beth Jacob Congregation cemetery in Pittsburgh's McKees Rocks suburb Monday night. The vandals also pulled a dozen U.S. flags off veterans' graves and burned them in a pile at the top of the hill at the site. ... The vandalism at the 128-year-old Orthodox congregation's cemetery led to warnings being sent to local Jewish organizations and synagogues to be on the lookout for possible further violence or vandalism. ... There are some 5,000 graves at the site, which has been used for Jewish burials in the area for 128 years." Source: The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette [January 2002]

Beth Hamidr Hagodol: Source: "Directory of Jewish Local Organizations in the United States", pp. 330-583. American Jewish Year Book 5680 (September 25, 1919 to Sept. 12, 1920); Volume 21. Edited by Harry Schneiderman for the American Jewish Committee Submitted by Alan Hirschfeld.

Parent Category: UNITED STATES