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Temple Beth-El (Corsicana, Texas) facts for kids

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Temple Beth-El
Corsicana September 2017 25 (Temple Beth-El).jpg
Temple Beth-El in 2017
TempleBeth-El is located in Texas
TempleBeth-El
Temple
Beth-El
Location in Texas
TempleBeth-El is located in the United States
TempleBeth-El
Temple
Beth-El
Location in the United States
Location 208 S. Fifteenth St.,
Corsicana, Texas
Area less than one acre
Built 1898 (1898)
Architectural style Exotic Revival, Moorish Revival
NRHP reference No. 86003687
Quick facts for kids
Significant dates
Added to NRHP February 3, 1987

Temple Beth-El is an historic Moorish Revival synagogue located at 208 South 15th Street in Corsicana, Navarro County, Texas.

Landmark status

Temple Beth-El became a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1981. On February 3, 1987, Temple Beth-El was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Temple Beth-El is one of two State Antiquities Landmarks in Navarro County.

History

The Jewish community of Corsicana established a congregation in 1871. The congregation worshiped at each other's homes until it could raise the funding to build a synagogue.

Julius Magil served as rabbi in the early days of its new building. He was born December 29, 1870, at Mitau, Courland, which was then in the Russian Empire but is now part of Latvia. He received a secular education at Realgymnasium and University of Zürich, Switzerland. Rabbi Magil's religious training took place at the Talmudical College of Grobin, Courland. Rabbi Magil then studied medicine at Fort Wayne Medical College, and he received a Ph.D. from Rogers College in 1898.

The synagogue was built by a Reform Jewish congregation in 1898. It is a wood-frame building, with clapboard siding, keyhole windows in the front doors, and a pair of octagonal towers topped by onion domes. In 1900, 66% of the congregants were immigrants and over half were from Poland, Russia, or Hungary. 19% of the membership was from Germany and another 19% was from France. While Eastern European Jews tended towards Orthodox Judaism and German Jews tended towards Reform Judaism, Temple Beth-El was notable as a Reform synagogue with a predominantly Eastern European and heavily Polish membership.

Rabbi Ernest Joseph served as the spiritual leader of Temple Beth-El from 1968 to 1980.

In 1980, Temple Beth-El closed as a congregation, although a local rabbi still leads a Jewish service on a monthly basis. The property was donated to the City of Corsicana around 1990. The City uses it as a community center.

In 2010, the synagogue's stained glass windows were renovated. The synagogue's facade and domes were restored in 2013.

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