Savannah - Georgia
Savannah, Georgia is a beautiful, historic city located along the
eastern coast of the United States. It was first established in
1733 by George Oglethorpe and it was the first capital of Georgia.
Savannah was also the first planned city in America.
The downtown area of Savannah, consisting of 24 squares, is one of
the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the United
States. The historic sites in Savannah include homes, forts, places
of worship, cemeteries, and a city market area.
Two of the oldest religious institutions in the United States are
located in Savannah. The First Bryan Baptist Church is an
African-American church with roots that date back to 1788. The
church split into two congregations in 1832 and the First African
Baptist Church was established by slaves who had been members of
the earlier Bryan Baptist Church.
Savannah is also home to Temple Mickve Israel, the third oldest
synagogue in the United States. The congregation was started in
1733 by 42 members, mostly Spanish and Portuguese Jews, who came
with James Oglethorpe to America for religious freedom. They first
started a congregation, then built a cemetery and afterwards a
ritual bath or mikvah.

The first congregation only survived until 1742 when 3,000
Spanish soldiers landed on St. Simons Island and threatened the
Savannah citizens. The Spanish and Portuguese Jews feared for their
lives and fled Savannah and abandoned Mickve Israel. Only two
German-Jewish families remained in Savannah and, for many years,
they prayed in different locations.
In 1818, the congregation was large enough to build its own
synagogue and they built a small wooden building, the first
synagogue in Georgia, but it was, unfortunately, destroyed in a
fire in 1829. The congregation then built a larger brick building
that was completed in 1841. The congregation soon grew too large
for the new building and the current Mickve Israel structure was
built in Neo-Gothic style starting in 1876 and completed in
1878.

