AdminHistory | The United Synagogue was established by an Act of Parliament in 1870, to join together the major Ashkenazi synagogues in the London area. Its five original constituent synagogues were the Great, Hambro, New, Central and Bayswater Synagogues. The original aims of the United Synagogue were three-fold. It aimed to provide a financial framework and an overall structure for the increasing number of Orthodox synagogues in the London area, also to carry out a large amount of social and philanthropic work in the community at a level that the individual synagogues had found difficult to maintain; some of this social responsibility remained with individual synagogues, but the main activity was centralised under the United Synagogue's Head Office or under its various specially-appointed committees. The third function was to provide religious facilities for the orthodox Jewish community, by assisting in the formation of new congregations as the Jewish population of London moved into new residential areas. |
CustodialHistory | Formerly held with other Jewish collections in the Mocatta Library of University College London. |