Harman Patil (Editor)

Temple Israel (Leadville, Colorado)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Groundbreaking
  
August, 1884

Height
  
9.8 m

Architectural style
  
Carpenter Gothic

Construction cost
  
4,000 USD

Direction of façade
  
North

Capacity
  
84

Completed
  
September 1884

Affiliation
  
Reform Judaism

Temple Israel (Leadville, Colorado) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
201 West 4th Street, Leadville, Colorado

Ecclesiastical or organizational status
  
Inactive, now a pioneer Jewish Museum

Website
  
Temple Israel Foundation

General contractor
  
Robert Murdoch, restoration by Pat Kelly Maintenance

Similar
  
National Mining Hall of Fame, Mosquito Pass, Rocky Mountains, Dexter Cabin, Healy House

Temple Israel was erected at 201 West 4th Street in Leadville, Colorado, during the summer of 1884 in less than two months. The Temple Israel building is a rare example of a frontier synagogue. The small, 25 ft × 72 ft (7.6 m × 21.9 m), Carpenter Gothic structure was designed by George E. King and constructed by Robert Murdock for $4,000 on land donated by the silver baron Horace A. W. Tabor. Dedicated during services for Rosh Hashanah on September 19, 1884, the Reform synagogue served an interesting group of Jewish pioneers. Typically downtown merchants, they were an active element in the larger community as exemplified by David May, merchant and founder of the May department stores, County treasurer, vice president of the Congregation Israel, and chairman of its building committee.

The congregation splintered in 1892 when the more orthodox members created Knesseth Israel. Regular services in Temple Israel ceased by 1908 and the building was entirely out of service by 1914. Steve Malin acquired the building in 1937, stripping it of the steeples and re-roofing it. He lived with his wife and two daughters in rooms in the back whilst conducting his automobile radiator repair business in the front. During the Second World War it functioned as a dormitory/boarding house for mine workers and was sold in 1955 to the St. George Episcopal Church across West 4th Street to be their parsonage. The building returned to private ownership in 1966 and was subsequently converted into a four unit apartment house. The Temple Israel Foundation bought the building in 1992 and, after a fire in 2006, restored the synagogue to its original condition. The Temple Israel building now occasionally hosts services but mainly functions as a museum dedicated to the pioneer Jews of Leadville.

Besides the synagogue building, the Temple Israel Foundation also maintains the Leadville Hebrew Cemetery, to which it gained title in 1993. The cemetery is located outside of Leadville, about 3/4 of a mile from the synagogue. Records show that 132 people were interred in this cemetery from its foundation in 1880 through 1981, though only 5 of those died after 1930. 59 of the original headstones remain, and the foundation has provided markers for those that are missing. The foundation opened a section of the cemetery for new interments in 2001 with space for 51 graves, of which 8 were occupied as of 2015. The cemetery is largely maintained through a volunteer effort led by the Denver chapter of B'nai B'rith.

References

Temple Israel (Leadville, Colorado) Wikipedia