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{{Infobox Church
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[[Image:TempleBeth-El.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The Temple Beth-El on Palafox Street]]
|name=Temple Beth-El
 
|image=TempleBeth-El.jpg
 
|imagesize=288px
 
|caption=
 
|type=
 
|denomination=Reform Judaism
 
|organized=[[1876]]
 
|pastortitle=Rabbi
 
|pastorname=[[Joel Fleekop]]
 
|location=800 North [[Palafox Street]]
 
|previous_locations=37 East [[Chase Street]]
 
|website=[http://templebethelofpensacola.org/ http://templebethelofpensacola.org/]
 
|mapcode=<googlemap version="0.9" lat="30.421403" lon="-87.217326" type="map" zoom="16" width="300" height="250">
 
30.421627, -87.217084
 
Temple Beth-El
 
</googlemap>
 
}}
 
 
The '''Temple Beth-El''' (ק.ק. בית אל), located at the intersection of [[Palafox Street|Palafox]] and [[Cervantes Street]]s in [[North Hill]], is the oldest Jewish house of worship in Florida. Beth-El is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism, and has led the congregation in Reform Judaism services since the temple's foundation.
 
The '''Temple Beth-El''' (ק.ק. בית אל), located at the intersection of [[Palafox Street|Palafox]] and [[Cervantes Street]]s in [[North Hill]], is the oldest Jewish house of worship in Florida. Beth-El is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism, and has led the congregation in Reform Judaism services since the temple's foundation.
  
The current rabbi is [[Joel Fleekop]].
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The current rabbi is [[Leonard Zukrow]].
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
The first Jews who migrated to northwest Florida originally stopped at [[Milton, Florida|Milton]], twenty miles to the east, because Milton was a national hub for lumber production and distribution in the South (the first Jews to the area were skilled in lumber production; they came from heavily wooded areas in what is now southern Germany). Other Jewish families lived in Pensacola, but fled during Union occupation in the [[Civil War]]. The population began to return in [[1865]], and in late [[1876]] ten Jewish families joined together to establish a [[Wikipedia:Reform Judaism|Reform]] congregation and build a temple, located at 37 East [[Chase Street]] (near [[Jefferson Street|Jefferson]]). [[Gerson Forscheimer]] was the Temple's first president, and board members included [[S. M. Goldbach]], [[Lewis Kahn]], [[Michael Levy]], [[Adolph Goldstucker]], [[Morris Dannheiser]] and [[Jacob Kahn]]. The congregation had no rabbi, so Goldstucker conducted services.
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The first Jews who migrated to northwest Florida originally stopped at [[Milton, Florida|Milton]], twenty miles to the east, because Milton was a national hub for lumber production and distribution in the South (the first Jews to the area were skilled in lumber production; they came from heavily wooded areas in what is now southern Germany). Other Jewish families lived in Pensacola, but fled during Union occupation in the [[Civil War]]. The population began to return in [[1865]], and in late [[1876]] ten Jewish families joined together to establish a [[Wikipedia:Reform Judaism|Reform]] congregation and build a temple, located at 37 East [[Chase Street]] (near [[Jefferson Street|Jefferson]]). [[Gerson Forscheimer]] was the Temple's first president, and board members included [[S. M. Goldbach]], [[Lewis Kahn]], [[Michael Levy]], [[Adolph Goldstrucker]], [[Morris Dannheiser]] and [[Jacob Kahn]]. The congregation had no rabbi, so Goldstrucker conducted services.
  
[[Image:TempleBethEl-FormerBuilding.jpg|thumb|left|180px|Second temple at 37 East [[Chase Street]], looking southwest]]  
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[[Image:TempleBethEl-FormerBuilding.jpg|thumb|right|180px|Second temple at 37 East [[Chase Street]], looking southwest]]  
 
[[Image:BethEl2.jpg|thumb|right|Chase Street temple, looking southeast]]
 
[[Image:BethEl2.jpg|thumb|right|Chase Street temple, looking southeast]]
 
The Temple was granted a charter by the State of Florida in [[1878]] under the Beth-El name, making it Florida's first formally recognized Jewish congregation. Many of the lumber workers in Milton did not follow the congregation, and eventually started a smaller Jewish community in [[Okaloosa County]] when lumber opportunities dried up. Temple Beth-El joined the Union of American Hebrew Congregations in [[1889]] and engaged its first rabbi, [[Adolph Rosenberg]], in [[1892]].
 
The Temple was granted a charter by the State of Florida in [[1878]] under the Beth-El name, making it Florida's first formally recognized Jewish congregation. Many of the lumber workers in Milton did not follow the congregation, and eventually started a smaller Jewish community in [[Okaloosa County]] when lumber opportunities dried up. Temple Beth-El joined the Union of American Hebrew Congregations in [[1889]] and engaged its first rabbi, [[Adolph Rosenberg]], in [[1892]].
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==Well-known members==  
 
==Well-known members==  
 
*Paula Ackerman, both as a child and later serving the congregation as a rabbi.
 
*Paula Ackerman, both as a child and later serving the congregation as a rabbi.
 
==Temple leaders==
 
*Rabbi [[Sam Lasky]]
 
*Rabbi [[A. Posman]]
 
*Rabbi [[M. Gugenheim]]
 
*Rabbi [[Isaac E. Wagenheim]]
 
*Rabbi [[J. Schwartz]]
 
  
 
==Other images==
 
==Other images==

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