Historical Marker

Congregation Agudath Jacob

Marker installed: 1998

In 1870, only fifty of Waco's 3,618 residents were Jewish. The Hebrew Benevolent Association and Cemetery of Waco were incorporated in 1873. The association was Waco's earliest Jewish community organization. Its purpose was to support local Jewish settlers. In the early 1880s political unrest in many eastern European countries led to heavy migration to the United States. Consequently, Waco's Jewish population grew rapidly.

In 1886, fifteen Orthodox Jewish families brought Rabbi Samuel Levy to Waco. Two years later, in 1888, Agudath Jacob, Waco's first Orthodox Jewish congregation, received its charter. By that time the number of Jewish families in Waco had grown to one hundred. Worship services were conducted in a rented room over a grocery store until 1894, when the congregation erected a frame synagogue at 624 Columbus Avenue. In 1914 a new brick synagogue was erected at the site, and Agudath Jacob membership rose to fifty families. The congregation included a ladies auxiliary society and the Talmud Torah Religious School. In 1923, a Hebrew institute was added to the Columbus Avenue facility. A new synagogue, which included a social hall and classrooms, was built in 1950 at 15th and Jefferson Streets. In 1966, the traditional orthodox congregation voted to ally itself with the conservative movement. The congregation erected a new synagogue on Hillcrest Drive in 1972, and in 1993 added a Hebrew school. Included among the congregation's longtime leaders are the Rev. Samuel Levy, who served for 62 years until his death in 1948; the Rev J. M. Rosenberg, who served as congregation secretary for 27 years, and Rabbi Charles Blumenthal, who served for 18 years. (1999).