Eliezer Adler
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Eliezer Adler | |
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Personal life | |
Born | Stanisławów, Galicia (now Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine) | 30 August 1866
Died | 16 January 1949 | (aged 82)
Spouse | Sarah (Rosenthal) Adler |
Children | 8 |
Parents |
|
Religious life | |
Religion | Judaism |
Eliezer Adler (1866–1949) was one of the founders of the Jewish community in Gateshead, England.
Biography
[edit]Adler was born on 30 August 1866 in what is now Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine, then known as Stanisławów in Galicia, part of the Austrian Empire. Adler's parents were Yehuda Yona Hass and Chayale (nee Adler) Hass and he was probably registered as Adler because his parents were not civilly married. Adler arrived in Liverpool, England in 1882 at the age of 15 looking for a better way to financially support himself and his widowed mother.
Adler moved to Newcastle upon Tyne and when his mother died, he needed a minyan to say Kaddish. As the Newcastle synagogues were not up to his religious standard, Adler crossed the bridge to Gateshead for the services. This led to the establishment of the "Shomrei Shabbos" synagogue in 1887. From that beginning the Gateshead Jewish community went on to establish a cheder in 1912, the Gateshead Talmudical College in 1929, Gateshead Kollel in 1941 and the Jewish Teachers' Training College in 1944; institutions that thrive to this day.
"Eliezer Adler ... was to become the most prominent figure in the infant community, for he possessed a forceful personality, and a flair for organization. With his arrival "Jewish Gateshead" began to expand".[1] In honour of his historical importance, his seat in the Gateshead synagogue remains vacant.[2]
Adler married Sarah Rosenthal Doyschen and together they had 10 children. He was self employed as a hawker selling jewellery [3] and later as a furniture dealer.[4] Adler died on 16 January 1949 (15 Tevet) while living with his daughter in Manchester and is buried in Rainsough Jewish cemetery in Manchester.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Dansky, pg. 33
- ^ Dansky, pg. 82
- ^ "Eliezar Adler in 1901". Find My Past UK. 1901. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
- ^ "Eliezar Adler in 1911". Find My Past UK. 1911. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
- ^ "Eliezer (Hass) Adler". Geni. 1901. Retrieved 7 Sep 2022.
- Dansky, Miriam (1992). Gateshead : its community, its personalities, its institutions. Southfield, Michigan: Targum Press. ISBN 978-0-944070-88-8. OCLC 28050187.