1654–1800 on
East 23rd Street and
Asser Levy Place, Manhattan, New York City, was built as a free public bath in 1904–1906. The baths were intended to help relieve the unsanitary conditions in the slums. It is named after
Asser Levy, a prominent Jewish citizen of the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam, which preceded the English city of New York. The first recorded Jewish settler in
New Amsterdam was
Jacob Barsimson, who arrived in August 1654 on the
Dutch West India Company ship, the Peartree (
de Pereboom), on a passport from the
Dutch West India Company. A month later, a group of Jews came to New Amsterdam as refugees from
Recife, Brazil. Portugal had just re-conquered
Dutch Brazil (what is now known of the Brazilian State of
Pernambuco) from the Netherlands, and the Jews living there fled the
Portuguese Inquisition. A court record from September 7, 1654, shows that 23 Jews arrived on the
St. Catherine, and were ordered to pay their freight and debts. Scholars differ on the exact route they took, but the text suggests they came via Cape St. Anthony, probably in Cuba, after earlier detention in Jamaica. Upon the ship's arrival, Governor
Peter Stuyvesant objected to their settlement, fearing their "customary usury" and that they may have been a burden, in their impoverished state. Jews in Amsterdam sent a petition to the Dutch West India Company, requesting permission for Jews to travel to and settle in the new colony. They argued that land was plentiful and adding more loyal individuals would help to facilitate the company's goal of expanding their colony. Stuyvesant's objections were overruled by the Company in an order issued February 15, 1655 and Jews were allowed to travel, trade and live in the colony. Still, numerous restrictions were imposed on them, and many left after a few years. For example, Levy protested the policy of the exemption of Jews from enlisting in the army and being forced to pay an additional tax instead. the Sephardi customs were retained.
1800–1881 An influx of
German and Polish Jews followed the
Napoleonic Wars in Europe. The increasing number of Ashkenazim led to the founding of the city's second synagogue,
B'nai Jeshurun, in 1825. The late arrival of synagogues can be attributed to a lack of rabbis. Those who were interested in training as a Rabbi could not do so in America before this part of the century. New York City would later become host to several seminaries of various denominations, where rabbis could be ordained, by the 1920s. Numerous communal aid societies were also formed. These were usually quite small, and a single synagogue might be associated with more than a few such organizations. Two of the most important of these merged in 1859 to form the Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asylum Society was established.
1881–1945 The 36 years beginning in 1881 experienced the largest wave of immigration to the United States ever. Following the assassination of
Alexander II of Russia, for which many blamed "the Jews," more than a million of them to New York. Between 1880 and 1924, 2.5 million
Ashkenazi Jews from the
Russian Empire,
Kingdom of Romania, and
Austria-Hungary came to the United States and nearly 75 percent took up residence on the
Lower East Side. The Jewish population in New York went from about 80,000 in 1880 to 1.5 million in 1920. This new mix of cultures changed what was a middle-class, acculturated, politically conservative community to a
working-class,
Yiddish-speaking group with a varied mix of ideologies including
socialism,
Zionism, and religious orthodoxy. The population of Jews eventually hit over one million by the 1900s and crowded into Jewish neighborhoods where they were not restricted from renting due to discriminatory policies that persisted until the end of World War II. The less-fortunate began to make the
Lower East Side their own district as an influx of Jews reached the city between the 1870s and early 1900s. The Jews of Central and Eastern Europe faced economic hardship, persecution, and social and political changes in the 1800s through the early 1900s, causing them to flee to the United States. In Russia, there were waves of
pogroms between 1881 and 1921. '' manager
Baruch Charney Vladeck gives a speech at the cornerstone celebration of the Jewish-owned
Rolland Theater, June 24, 1928 New York was the publishing city of the Yiddish newspaper,
Forverts, first published in 1897. Several other Jewish newspapers followed and were being produced in common Jewish languages, such as Ladino, Yiddish, and Hebrew. These immigrants tended to be young and relatively irreligious, and were generally skilled – especially in the clothing industry, which would soon dominate New York's economy. By the end of the nineteenth century, Jews "dominated related fields such as the fur trade."
Growth in Hasidic Judaism While some Hasidic Jews arrived in the US during earlier waves of Jewish immigration to the United States, most remained in Europe, and many of those who did immigrate assimilated into other branches of Judaism. However, the rise of the Nazis and the devastation of the Holocaust drastically altered this situation. Many Hasidim, including numerous community leaders, were murdered during the Holocaust, and most of the survivors fled to either the United States or Israel. Prominent figures who escaped to the United States included the sixth
Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe,
Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, who in 1940 fled Nazi-occupied Poland for New York, aided by American diplomats who negotiated with the Nazis for his release. His son-in-law and successor,
Menachem Mendel Schneerson, also escaped to New York from Paris via Portugal, arriving in 1941.
Joel Teitelbaum, the
Satmar Rebbe, escaped to Switzerland aboard the
Kastner train and arrived in New York in 1946, following a brief stay in Jerusalem. In New York City, major centers of Hasidic Judaism are found in Brooklyn, in particular the neighborhoods of
Williamsburg,
Crown Heights and
Borough Park. The
Skverer Rebbe,
Yakov Yosef Twersky, having also survived the Holocaust, arrived in New York in 1950, and settled in Williamsburg. In 1954, one of his followers purchased a dairy farm near
Spring Valley, in the town of
Ramapo,
Rockland County, with the purpose of establishing a village for his followers, where they could escape the temptations of assimilation which they experienced in Williamsburg. The first families arrived in late 1956, and in 1961 it was incorporated as the village of
New Square – the first Hasidic community to be incorporated in the United States. In the 1970 census, New Square's population was 1,156; by the 2020 census, it had increased to 9,679. Similarly, in the 1970s, Teitelbaum founded a village for his followers in
Orange County, known as
Kiryas Joel; the first families arrived in 1974, and the village was legally incorporated in 1977. The village would grow extremely rapidly over the following decades, mainly due to its high birth rate–from a population of 2,088 in the 1980 census, to 32,954 in the 2020 census. The growth of the village led to conflicts with the town of
Monroe to which it belonged; to help resolve those conflicts, the town of
Palm Tree, coterminous with Kiryas Joel village, was separated from Monroe in 2019. For similar reasons, the
Kiryas Joel School District was separated from
Monroe-Woodbury Central School District in 1989. In 1990, followers of the
Vizhnitz Hasidic dynasty incorporated another village in the town of Ramapo,
Kaser. In the 2000 census, the village's population was 3,316; by the 2020 census, its population had increased to 5,491. Another predominantly Hasidic area in Ramapo is the unincorporated area (hamlet) of
Monsey, which grew from 8,797 in the 1970 census to 26,954 in the 2020 census. == Periods of discord ==