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Golden Book of Memoirs


The Golden Book of Memories [Cover]
D. H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, UNC at Asheville 28804
Title The Golden Book of Memoirs, Fiftieth Anniversary of Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila
Identifier  
Creator Congregation of Beth Ha-Tephila and friends 
Subject Keyword  Jewish Community in Asheville ; Beth Ha-Tephila ; Young Men's Hebrew Association ; Temple Association ; Jewish Aid Society ; Jewish Ladies' Aid Society ; Temple Sisterhood ; Union of American Hebrew Congregations ; anniversaries ; fiftieth anniversary ;
Subject LCSH Beth Israel (Asheville, N.C.) -- Sources
Bloom, Bernard 
Finkelstein, Leo, 1905-1998 
Finkelstein, Leo, 1905-1998 -- Family
Funston, Stanley 
Jews -- North Carolina -- Asheville -- Sources
Jews -- Southern States -- History
Kaplan, Paul 
Lions Club (Asheville, N.C.) -- Sources
Southern States -- Ethnic relations
Unger, Sidney 
Date
Publisher Stephens Press, Asheville, N.C.
Contributor

Extensive list on last 2 pages.

Type Source type: Text ; Images ; Book
Format image/jpeg/text
Source SpecColl   M79.13.5.5 in the Beth-Ha-Tephila Congregation Collection
Language EN=English
Relation UNCA Collections: Beth-Ha-Tephila Congregation (Asheville, NC 1891-1976)  ; Aaron Blomberg Family Papers ;Louis Blomberg Family Papers ; Choosing to Remember: From the Shoah to the Mountains ; Joseph Dave Family Papers ; Leo Finkelstein Oral History ; Golden Book of Memories, Fiftieth Anniversary of Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila  ; Lou and Ada Pollock Collection ; Samuel Robinson Papers ; Sol Schulman Collection ; Schandler Family Papers ;Schochet Family Papers ;"A Portion of the People: Three Hundred Years of Southern Jewish Life," Documenting the American South, UNC Chapel Hill,  http://www.lib.unc.edu/apop/index.html ; The Family Store Project: A History of Jewish Businesses, 1880-1990, a 12-panel exhibit displayed in a variety of locations in downtown Asheville in the fall of 2006 by History @ Hand.
Coverage 1887-1940
Rights Any display, publication or public use must credit D. H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Asheville. Copyright retained by the authors of certain items in the collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Donor Purchased by D.H. Ramsey Library Special Collections  
Description Prepared for the fiftieth anniversary of the Congregation Beth Ha Tephila in Asheville, NC in 1941, this 36 page booklet contains and anniversary message from the Rabbi, a history of the Congregation, a program for the fiftieth anniversary Sabbath Service and the Banquet, a look to the future of the Congregation,  and a list of membership in 1941.
Acquisition
Citation  D. H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Asheville 28804
Processed by Special Collections staff, Erica Ojermark, 2004
Last update
  Page Image Description Thumbnail
  Cover   [Title] The Golden Book of Memoirs: The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila, Asheville, N.C., August 1941.
  1   Title and brief accomplishments of the pioneers of 1891 noted, founders of a congregation and society. 
  2   Picture of Temple Charter Members and text. 
  3   Pictures of Officers and Rabbi. 
  4   Text list Temple Officers, Directors, Sisterhood Officers, Brotherhood Officers and Fiftieth Anniversary Committee. 
  5   Text list of Past President of Congregation, of Sisterhood and of Brotherhood.
  6   Text. The Message of the President.
  7   Text. The Fiftieth Anniversary Message of the Rabbi.
  8   Message continued.
  9   Text. To the Members, Officers and Rabbi of Beth Ha-Tephila Congregation, Asheville, North Carolina.
  10   Message continued.
  11   [Text. A History of Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila.]

A HISTORY OF CONGREGATION BETH HA-TEPHILA

Fifty years have passed since that day, August 16, 1891, when twenty-seven men founded Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila. The two -score years and ten are filled with thrilling, creative, turbulent episodes, stories of men and women of strong convictions speaking their mind and hearts with eloquence and vigor. There are tales of vigorous personalities who bestride the pages of our records. Joy and sorrow commingle, success and failure blend, as the memory of things past comes into our ken.

Greater than they knew was the accomplishment of those men who sat around a table in old Lyceum Hall on South Main Street (now Biltmore avenue) and took up the tasks their forefathers had begun. Their courage, their hope, their love of Judaism loom up significantly today as their contribution to all the generations that followed. We are grateful.

At the very beginning, they were not sure of their ground. Asheville was a little mountain community, with wide, muddy streets. The roads into town were the narrow mountain roads, twisting in tortuous turns for mile on mile, worn down by countless generations of Indians and pioneers. The one-story buildings lined the streets. The hillfolk, gathering at corners for snatches of conversation, gazed curiously at the few Jews in their midst. The mountaineers of Western North Carolina were from England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, completely Anglo-Saxon. For the most part they were kindly, but the handful of Jews wondered. ...

But there were the children to think of; there was their own pressing need for fellowship of the right kind. And

  12   on August 16, 1891, they gathered together. They elected Abraham Whitlock as pro-tem president, Solomon Lipinsky as pro-tem treasurer, and G. H. Mayer as pro-tem secretary.

One of those present was not satisfied. E. Sternberger rose to his feet and said: "I move that this be a permanent organization." It was a memorable moment when they voted. For then and there, history was made. They took unto themselves the age-old Jewish responsibility for the care and education of their children, the establishment of a house of worship and the conduct of services, and the creation of a meeting-place for good fellowship. We today look back through the years, and we think of that "permanent organization" which they founded. "Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain who build it."

Who were the men and women who left a permanent impress upon all the pages of our history? There was Solomon Lipinsky, a vigorous, slow-talking but eloquent, suave, the founder of a great department store, influential among rich and poor. There was Siegfried Sternberg, a volatile personality, roubust and aggressive, yet kindly, a benefactor to untold numbers of Jews and Gentiles alike. There was Sir Philip S. Henry, the cultured English Jew, ever-ready to offer of his largess. There was Mrs. Minnie Loryea Barnett, attentive to the needs of the congregation, unfalteringly loyal and generous. And Mrs. Minnie Loryea Barnett, attentive to the needs of the congregation, unfalteringly loyal and generous. And Mrs. M.D. Long, gracious, magnetic, poised, a personality with every attractive quality and with a sense of responsibility to the community. Other names throng upon us -- S.H. Friedman, G. Alexander, Charles Rutenberg, Jacob Cohen, A. Kreslowsky, Ralph Rosenberg, M.D. Long.

There were the rabbis: Lazaron, Zeisler, Barrasch, Wessel, Rhine, Jacobson, and Kline. Each name conjures up pictures of a pulpiteer, a friend, a confidant. How their names bring us back through the kaleidescopic years!

  13   Friendly talks ... specail meals when the rabbi was guest ... funerals of beloved ones ... weddings of youngsters ... Bar-Mitzvohs ... Confirmations.

And now, fifty years after! In each heart and mind is a different story of those fifty years, a tale of which we can tell only a part.


A week after that first memorable meeting, a constitution and by-laws were ready. The men gathered together in Lyceum Hall on August 23, 1891. E. Sternberger was elected vice-president. The constitution and by-laws were adopted. Read the first article: "This organization shall be known as the Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila (The House of Prayer) and shall be conservative ... " And the second article: "This organization is formed for the purpose of holding religious services, establishing a Sunday School, purchasing a cemetery, acquiring a house of worship, or any other purpose within the scope of Judaism." Twenty-seven men signed their names as charter members.

Today, we honor their memory and dedicate this book to them, the Pioneers of 1891:

M. Marks E. Straus
Max Lindau M. Meyers
Louis Marks Max Marcus
S.J. Lindau A.L. Solomon
B. Swartzberg A. Whitlock
Morris N. Epstien G. H. MAyer
L. Bloomberg S. Lipinsky
L. Berman M.D. Long
Sam Fienstein B. Zagier
R. Jacobson M. Shuman
E. Sternberger J. Cohen
B. Whitlock  
  14   Today, [1941] two of them still worship with us: Louis Blomberg and Morris Meyers.

Were you to look over those old  "minutes of the meeting," some curious facts would come to light. Dues were $10 a year, payable quarterly. When one was sic months in arrears, he was suspended and could be reinstated only upon payment of all back dues and a majority vote ofr the congregation. The treasurer was bonded for $500, although his report never showed more than $165 in the ban at a single time.

The firest "minister" was Reverend A. Jacoby from Charleston, W. Va., to serve during the Holy Days of 1891. Mr. A.B. Schayer, himself a charter member of the congregation, was also engaged to assist him, "both men not to cost over $150" as set forth in the budget.

Lyceum Hall was the first "home" of the congregation. They used it for everything: worship, Sunday School and social affairs. It was rented from a fraternal order at the rate of $75 per year. Here G.H. Mayer, the secretary, served also as the first superintendent of the Sunday School. We haven't the record, but he probably taught the children from "The Catechism," a Sunday School popular in those days.

When Purim came that first year, a successful party was held by the young men of the congregation. It netted $52.30, and they gave it to the congregation with the recommendation that it be used to buy an orgna, "the same to be the property of the congregation." The new organ aroused them to further efforts. They formed a choir "to improve the services," and in order to avoid expense from the music they used the traditional melodies.

The first annual election, held in 1892, saw Mr. Whit -

  15   lock retained in the presidency, M.D. Long as vice-president, and Mr. Schayer elected "reader" at a salary of $100 payable after the Holy Days. Toward the end of that year, Jacob Cohen replaced G.H. Mayer as secretary and also as superintendent of the Sunday School. Apparently, the two positions went together.

On November 25, 1892, Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila was duly chartered by registrtion in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court for Buncombe County, North Carolina. The charter was taken out to enable them to purchase land for cemetery use.

But then the arguments began! Where was the best place? Chunns Cove cost $250, Riverside cost $500. Finally, convenience decided the issue. Riverside it was, one acre. But now came another question. Who would take care of the deceased? What about the Burial Society (Chevra Kadisha)? Was it a part of the congregation or a separate organization? At first, the decision was to form a separate society. It was a long time before that "society" became a cemetery committee of the congregation. Mr. Kreslowsky, the father of Mrs. A. Whitlock, was in charge of the cemetery.

Another important question about the "reader" had to be decided. Should he wear a cap and robe, or not? The minutes of February 3, 1893 give [sic] the answer. Mr. Schayer was permitted to buy a cap and a robe.


The next ten years of the congregation's life are unknown. No written records are available. Perhaps the initial force had spent itself. Perhaps it was the depression of the 90's. Whatever it was, the congregation was not too weak to weather the first crucial period. And new forces were now at work. Newly arriving families found the congregation insuffici-

  16   iently orthodox. But Abraham Whitlock, the president and Solomon Lipinsky, energetic young merchant[s], were emphatic in their emphasis upon Reform Judaism. As a result, the small Jewish community was split into two congregations, orthodox and reform. Neither seemed to make much headway.

Three men served successively as secretaries of the congregation, Jacob Cohen, Bernard Whitlock and Solomon Lipinsky. There was no regular Sabbath service. The Sunday School was loosely organized and attendance was irregular. Such synagogue activities as there were, were held at Odd Fellows Hall in the Hilliard Building on Biltmore avenue (opposite Eagle street). When the lodge moved to the third floor of a building on Church street, the congregation moved with them. That is where find them at the turn of the century.


In April, 1902, a rare opportuity presented itself to the congregation. The present Temple edifice was available. It had been used as a Baptist Church since 1863, and sold to the Christian Church in 1891. In 1900, the trustees of that congregation deeded the building to their minister, the Reverenc T.M. Meyers, in lieu of the salary due him as minister. The Reverend Mr. Meyers had been forced to borrow on the property, and was glad to find a buyer in Congregation Beth Ha-Tephila. The purchase price was $2000.

It gave the congregation a new lease on life. Through the efforts of Mrs. M.D. Long, the ladies of the congregation foremed an auxiliary, known as The Jewish Ladies' Aid Society, to help pay for the edifice. "The Aid" did its work efficiently. In later years it brought forth new purposes: the care of the cmemtery, the making of shrouds, and visiting the sick.

  17   Established organization as Reform and recalls certain individuals involved in the 1900-1910's.
  18   Fiftieth Anniversary Sabbath Service, August 15, 1941.
  19   Fiftieth Anniversary Banquet Program.
  20   Continued from page 17, recalls growing of community  and first Rabbi's etc.
  21   Reform or Conservative debate continued and Solomon Lipinski's argument that only a Reform congregation would fit into American modern life. 
  22   Need for a leader for the congregation. Lists different leaders in the early 1920's.
  23   Sisterhood formed in 1922, first leaders. Discussion of building a new sanctuary. 
  24   Solomon Lipinski persuaded all that it was too soon for a new investment and building.
  25   New era beginning with 1925. Reviews that important events and peoples of that year and 1926/27.
  26   Continues reviewing events, peoples and funding in and for the congregation until 1930.
  27   Continues this review up until 1934.
  28   Continues to review up until 1938.
  29   Discusses the many changes in the congregation since 1938, development in services, growth of the community, youth programs, etc.
  30   Discusses current events and people in the community and changes that have occurred in the community.
  31   Continued.
  32   Speculations about the future.
  33   Continued hopes and anticipations for future developments in the community and concluding words about the importance of planning for the future and the gift of remembering the past.
  34   List of Membership of Beth Ha-Tephila
  35   Continued list of membership
  36   Continued list of membership