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A consortium of Seattle's five Grand Army of the Republic posts – Stevens Post #1, Miller Post #31, Cushing Post #56, Saxton Post #103, and Green Lake #112 – established the cemetery in 1895 on land donated by Huldah and David Kaufman, two of the city's earliest Jewish settlers, who arrived in 1869.
A former synagogue of the Herzl Congregation is now the Odessa Brown Neighborhood Health Clinic. Congregation Beth Shalom, Seattle [1] Temple Beth Shalom, Spokane This merges the earlier Temple Emanu-El (who founded the state's first synagogue, opened September 12, 1892) and Keneseth Israel [1]: 14–15
Comet Lodge Cemetery, King County, Washington, burial records, researched by Tim O'Brian, copied by Interment.net and used by King County. Heather MacIntosh, "Rewriting the Past: Comet Lodge Cemetery Project", Preservation Seattle (Historic Seattle), July 2003. "Comet Lodge Cemetery holds history — and gravestones — dating to the 1800s".
Victor sold the property in 1914 to the American Necropolis Association, a St. Louis-based company that owned cemetery properties in several states. The ANA gave the cemetery the name "Washelli" (a Makah word meaning "westerly wind"), which had been the name of a central Seattle cemetery disestablished in 1887. In 1919, the Evergreen Cemetery ...
A Jewish cemetery (Hebrew: בית עלמין beit almin or בית קברות beit kvarot) is a cemetery where Jews are buried in keeping with Jewish tradition. Cemeteries are referred to in several different ways in Hebrew, including beit kevarot (house of sepulchers), beit almin (eternal home), beit olam [haba] (house of afterlife), beit ...
Bikur Cholim Machzikay Hadath, abbreviated as BCMH, is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue located at 5145 South Morgan Street, in the Seward Park neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, in the United States. It is the oldest synagogue in Washington state; [1] and practises Ashkenazi traditions.
Temple De Hirsch Sinai is a Reform Jewish congregation with synagogues at campuses in Seattle and nearby Bellevue, Washington, in the United States.The congregation was formed as a 1971 merger between the earlier Temple De Hirsch (Seattle, founded 1899) and Temple Sinai (Bellevue, founded 1961) [1] and is the largest Reform congregation in the Pacific Northwest.
Ohaveth Sholum Congregation (alternate spellings: Ohaveth Shalem, Ohaveth Shalom [1]) was the first synagogue in Seattle, Washington, in the United States.. Described by the Washington State Jewish Historical Society (WSJHS) as "a quasi-Reform temple," [2]: 10–11 it was the Seattle's first Jewish congregation.