Buildings; Religious facilities; Synagogues; Confirmation (Jewish rite); Teenagers
A group of teenage girls and boys paired off stand in a V-formation on the steps outside the Keneseth Israel Temple with a man and woman standing at the point of the V.
Buildings; Religious facilities; Synagogues; Confirmation (Jewish rite); Teenagers
A man stands on a stage inside the Keneseth Israel Temple with a group of young teenage boys and girls. The boys wear suits and the girls wear white dresses and hold flowers.
Buildings; Religious facilities; Synagogues; Historic buildings
Adath Israel Temple exterior, located at 834 South Third Street, between York and Breckinridge Streets, Louisville, Kentucky, with view of cars parked along Third Street. The building has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1974....
Buildings; Religious facilities; Synagogues; Historic buildings
Adath Israel Temple exterior, located at 834 South Third Street, between York and Breckinridge Streets, Louisville, Kentucky. Inscription above columns reads "Mine house shall be an house of prayer for all people." The building has been...
Religious facilities; Synagogues; Schools; Buildings; People
Address: 232 E. Jacob Street, Louisville, Kentucky. Fifteen women and one man are seated for a group portrait. Most of the women hold bouquets of roses while the man has a flower on the lapel of his suit. The group sits in front of a tablet with...
Religious facilities; Synagogues; Schools; Buildings; Signs (Notices)
Address: 232 E. Jacob Street, Louisville, Kentucky. The congregation of Keneseth Israel poses for a picture during the cornerstone laying ceremony of their new school. Children stand in front in coats and hats and adults form lines to the back. A...
Religious facilities; Synagogues; Schools; Buildings
Address: 232 E. Jacob Street, Louisville, Kentucky. The congregation of Keneseth Israel Synagogue gathers in front of the new brick and limestone building, which is multiple stories with twin Corinthian columns. Menorahs and a tablet are carved...
Temple Adath Israel (Louisville, Ky.); Religious facilities; Buildings; Historic buildings; Synagogues
Address: 834 S. Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky. "Mine house shall be an house of prayer for all people" marks the entry of Temple Adath Israel. The words are carved above a series of Ionic columns which support a pediment with...
Temple Adath Israel (Louisville, Ky.); Synagogues; Religious facilities; Historic buildings; Group portraits; Organs; Altars; People
Address: 834 S. Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky. A group poses in pageantry costumes in the Temple Adath Israel. The children are dressed in white gowns with headbands. Some of the children hold horns. The adults wear a variety of costumes most...
Buildings; Temples; Organs; Altars; Temple Adath Israel (Louisville, Ky.)
Address: 834 S. Third Street. The interior of Temple Adath Israel is shown. The pews are arched to form a semi-circle around the altar. The altar contains an inscribed podium, two menorahs on large stands and two armchairs. A curtained section is...
Synagogues; Religious facilities; Buildings; Building construction; Signs (Notices)
Construction of Keneseth Israel Jewish Synagogue, on 232 East Jacob Street, Louisville, Kentucky. Boards and bricks cluttered in front of building, windows yet to be installed. Signs are posted indicating that the architects were Joseph &...
Synagogues; Religious facilities; Buildings; Building construction; Signs (Notices)
Construction of Keneseth Israel Jewish Synagogue, on 232 East Jacob Street, Louisville, Kentucky. Signs are posted indicating that the architects were Joseph & Joseph and the general contractors were Platoff & Bush. The Keneseth Israel...
Israel Goodman of Louisville, Kentucky, wearing a boater, suit and printed tie. The photograph has been cut so that only he is visible and spots of discoloration. Handwritten on back of image: Newsstand operator.
Illumination of books and manuscripts, Medieval--France; Manuscripts, Medieval; Illuminations 1200-1500
Leaf from a small portable Gothic Bible, copied in France in the thirteenth century. The Latin translation used throughout this period was known as the Vulgate, since Latin was the common or vulgar language read by all literate people of the time....