New West End Synagogue

The New West End Synagogue, located in St. Petersburgh Place, Bayswater, London, is one of the oldest synagogues in the United Kingdom still in use. It is one of two synagogues which have been awarded Grade I listed building status by Historic England, which has described it as “the architectural high-water mark of Anglo-Jewish architecture”.[2]

New West End Synagogue
New West End Synagogue façade from St. Petersburgh Place
Religion
AffiliationOrthodox Judaism
DistrictBayswater
LeadershipInterim Rabbi: Yossi Fachler
Year consecrated1879 (1879)
StatusActive
Location
LocationSt. Petersburgh Place
London, W2
United Kingdom[1] 51°30′39.8″N 0°11′25.5″W
MunicipalityLondon
Architecture
Architect(s)George Ashdown Audsley
Completed1879
Website
www.newwestend.org.uk
Designations
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameNew West End Synagogue
Designated27 June 1975
Reference no.1264769

History

Designed by George Audsley of Scotland in collaboration with Nathan S. Joseph, its foundation stone was laid on 7 June 1877 by Leopold de Rothschild[2] in the presence of the Chief Rabbi, Dr. Nathan Marcus Adler, and the building was formally opened on 30 March 1879.

Chaim Weizmann, the first president of the State of Israel, and Herbert Samuel, the British High Commissioner for Palestine during the British Mandate, were both members of the synagogue. Their seats are marked with plaques. The synagogue's first rabbi was Simeon Singer, who translated and edited the ‘’Authorised Daily Prayer Book‘’, which is still used in Orthodox synagogues across Great Britain.[3]

Perhaps the best known rabbi of New West End Synagogue was Louis Jacobs, whose ties with the synagogue were severed in what became known as the Jacobs affair, and who went on to found the Masorti movement.[4]

In August 2007, the New West End Synagogue was declared a national monument.[3]

Music

The New West End has a long heritage of choral music. The first choirmaster was David M. Davis, the compiler of The Voice of Prayer and Praise, known as the Blue Book, and the standard work on Anglo-Jewish minhag (customs). Davis spend 50 years as choirmaster, from 1879.[5] Mosaic Voices, the choir at New West End was founded and is conducted by Michael Etherton, who studied cello at Trinity College of Music and conducting at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance. He is also Chief Executive of UK Jewish Film. Most of the Mosaic Voices choristers are either professional singers or musicians. The choir's repertoire spans 400 years from works by Salmone di Rossi to new works commissioned by current or recent choristers such as Benjamin Till and Toby Young. Mosaic Voices' CD The Blue Book was released in 2019.

Architecture

Interior

The building was designed by George Ashdown Audsley and William James Audsley of Liverpool. Their output was primarily Protestant churches, but this project and that for the Old Hebrew Congregation, Prince's Road, Liverpool were two exceptions. Other activities included the publication of books on ornament and Japanese art. Both brothers eventually moved to the New York City area. George became a designer of pipe organs and published notable works on this.

The Audsleys were particularly fond of historical ornament from various sources. Their churches were High Victorian Gothic Revival, but their secular buildings and synagogues could feature elements of Egyptian, Greek, Saracenic, and Hindu architecture.

Particularly notable is the splendid Torah ark. Designed by Joseph, it closely resembles the ark he designed for Glasgow's Garnethill Synagogue; both arks are raised on platforms, approached by a series of circular marble steps, and project into the room in the form of a multi-domed and arched building.[6]

See also

References

  1. "NWES home page". Newwestend.org.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  2. Historic England (27 June 1975). "New West End Synagogue (1264769)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  3. Uni, Assaf (8 September 2007). "U.K. grants London Synagogue same national status as Stonehenge". Haaretz. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  4. Freedland, Michael; Romain, Jonathan; Romain, Rabbi Jonathan (4 July 2006). "Rabbi Dr Louis Jacobs". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  5. "New West End Synagogue – St Petersburgh Place". Newwestend.org.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  6. Sharman Kadish, Jewish Heritage in England : An Architectural Guide, English Heritage, 2006, pp. 195–6.
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