Krauskopf on the corner of Broad Street and Columbia Avenue (now Cecil B. Moore Avenue) Following the departure of Rabbi Samuel Hirsch, Keneseth Israel conducted a national search for a new rabbi and, in 1887, hired Rabbi
Joseph Krauskopf of Kansas City. Krauskopf served as the congregation’s rabbi from 1887 until his death in 1923. Before arriving in Philadelphia, Krauskopf was widely admired in Kansas City, where his public lectures attracted large audiences beyond the Jewish community and several were later published as books. Under his leadership, KI transitioned from usingGerman to English. He reinstated Sunday services (which had waned in the last years under Hirsch), established
confirmation ceremonies at age sixteen, and discontinued the traditional
bar mitzvah at age thirteen. In 1892, Krauskopf founded a congregational library. He also encouraged the hiring of an assistant rabbi to serve the expanding membership. When Krauskopf began his tenure, Keneseth Israel had about 250 members; within several years, membership had risen to more than 400 families. That same year, the congregation dedicated a new synagogue building on North Broad Street with seating for 1,600 worshippers. By the early 1900s, membership exceeded 1,000 families, and the religious school enrolled more than 500 students, making Keneseth Israel one of the largest synagogues in the United States. Throughout his ministry, Krauskopf delivered weekly Sunday lectures to large audiences, many of which were later distributed as pamphlets—more than a thousand in total during his career. Shortly after his arrival in Philadelphia, he helped found the
Jewish Publication Society in 1888, with early institutional support from Keneseth Israel. Krauskopf was an early visitor to Jewish agricultural settlements in
Palestine and expressed support for
Zionism as a means of resettling European Jews there. At the same time, he emphasized his belief in the full civic loyalty of American Jews and spoke frequently about patriotism and American identity. Krauskopf was friends with
Theodore Roosevelt and following Roosevelt’s death, Krauskopf commissioned a large stained-glass window in his memory, which remains in the entrance foyer of Keneseth Israel’s Elkins Park synagogue. During
World War I, Krauskopf and the congregation organized programs for servicemen stationed in or passing through Philadelphia. In 1917, Assistant Rabbi
James G. Heller took a leave of absence to serve as a U.S. Army chaplain. In 1923, the congregation honored Krauskopf with the title of rabbi for life, at full salary. He died shortly after the appointment.
Fineshriber Rabbi William H. Fineshriber served as senior rabbi of Keneseth Israel from 1923 to 1949. Following the death of Rabbi Joseph Krauskopf in June 1923, Associate Rabbi
Abraham J. Feldman officiated while the congregation conducted a search for new leadership. Later that year, the synagogue appointed William H. Fineshriber, a graduate of the
University of Cincinnati and Hebrew Union College, as senior rabbi. Fineshriber’s tenure was marked by social engagement, public advocacy, and liturgical evolution. Continuing his record of social activism, he invited prominent public figures to address the congregation, including
Margaret Sanger. He also conferred honorary membership on physicist
Albert Einstein, who later spoke at Keneseth Israel’s 90th anniversary celebration. Nationally, Fineshriber participated in efforts to promote censorship and conservative moral standards in the film industry, working with Hollywood leaders to develop the
Hays Code. Reflecting the mainstream position of the Reform movement during the interwar period, Fineshriber supported Jewish emigration from Eastern Europe to
Mandatory Palestine and opposed the establishment of a
Jewish state. He maintained that Jews constituted a religious community rather than a nationality and affirmed the Reform movement’s stance—articulated by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations—of complete disassociation from
Zionism. During the 1930s, some members of Keneseth Israel, including Gil and Eleanor Kraus, participated in
Holocaust rescue efforts, notably bringing at least fifty German-Jewish children to safety before the outbreak of
World War II. Fineshriber reinstated bar and bat mitzvah ceremonies, reintroduced
Torah readings on Saturdays and during the
High Holidays, restored the role of
cantor, and incorporated string instruments such as violin and cello into services. During his tenure, the congregation adopted the
Union Prayer Book, which replaced the Sunday service manual and hymnal created under Rabbi Krauskopf.
Malcolm H. Stern served as an assistant rabbi at Keneseth Israel in the 1940s. ==Neo-reform, 1949-2001==