Scotland
Highlands and Lowlands

Two views of Edinburgh
Scotland's first synagogue was built in Edinburgh and opened in
1816, with a cemetery opening in 1820. Glasgow has had Jewry since the 1790s but
it wasn't until 1823 when the first synagogue opened and 1832 for the first
cemetery. These two cities remain the main dwelling places of today's Scottish
Jews. There are/were small Jewish communities in Ayr, Dunfermline, Falkirk,
Greenock and Inverness.

Research Favourites
Harvey Kaplan is Director of the Scottish
Jewish Archives Centre at Garnethill Synagogue, 127 Hill Street, Glasgow.
Searching records by appointment on Friday mornings, otherwise by arrangement.
Harvey has compiled the Historical Database of Scottish Jewry, with records of
over 20,000 Jews in Scotland pre 1945, and will search these. His fees are
very reasonable and he will do a preliminary search beforehand. Contact Harvey
on harvey@hkaplan.freeserve.co.uk
Harvey suggests you read some of these if you
are interested in Scots Jewry:
Brook, S: The Club-the Jews of Modern Britain, London, 1989
(chapter on Glasgow)
Collins, Dr KE: Second City Jewry: the Jews of Glasgow in the Age of Expansion,
1790-1919, Glasgow, 1990
Collins, Dr KE (ed): Aspects of Scottish Jewry; Glasgow, 1987
Collins, Dr KE: Be Well!: Jewish Immigrant Health & Welfare in Glasgow 1860-1914
(2002)
Collins, Dr KE: Go and Learn: the International Story of Jews and Medicine in
Scotland; Aberdeen, 1988
Collins, Dr KE: Scotland's Jews - A Guide to the History and Community of the
Jews in Scotland; Glasgow, 1999
Conn, A (ed): Serving Their Country- Wartime Memories of Scottish Jews, Glasgow,
2002
Daiches, Prof David: Two Worlds - An Edinburgh Jewish Childhood, Sussex, 1957
Daiches, Prof David: Was - A Pastime from Time Past; London, 1975
Edward, Mary: Who Belongs to Glasgow? - 200 Years of Migration, Glasgow, 1993,
(chapter on Glasgow Jewry)
Hutt, C & Kaplan, HL (eds): A Scottish Shtetl - Jewish Life in the Gorbals,
1880-1974; Glasgow, 1984
Kaplan, HL: "Odyssey", Shemot, Spring, 1993
Kaplan, HL: "Four Photographs Solve a Mystery", Shemot, 2/4, October, 1994
Kaplan, H L: "Jewish Cemeteries in Scotland", Avotaynu, Vol.VII No 4, Winter
1991
Kaplan, H L: " North of the Border: Jewish Monuments in Scotland", "The Future
of
Jewish Monuments in the British Isles-Conference Abstracts", 13; October, 1991
Kaplan, H L: "Passage to America through Scotland" in Avotaynu, Vol V, No 4,
Winter 1989
Kay, Billy: Odyssey - Voices from Scotland's Recent Past, The Second Collection
(chapter on Glasgow Jewry), Edinburgh, 1982
Levy, Abraham: The Origins of Glasgow Jewry, 1812-1895; Glasgow, 1949
Levy, A: The Origins of Scottish Jewry, JHSE, 1958
Phillips, Abel: A History of the Origins of the First Jewish Community in
Scotland: Edinburgh, 1816; Edinburgh, 1979
Reisz, Matthew: "Glasgow"; Chapter 8 of: Europe's Jewish Quarters; London, 1991
Scottish Annual Reunion of Kinder: Recollections of Child Refugees from 1938
to the Present, Glasgow, 1999
Another source which I have had success with
is Poor Relief Applications
for Glasgow which can be searched by Des Garrity. He will do a search to see if
the person you are researching has submitted an application and if there is one
then for a charge he will photocopy the information (can be 3 pages) and forward
it to you.
Another source is the The Glasgow Hebrew Society, 222 Fenwick Road,
Giffnock, Glasgow G46 6UE.
Another great source of information on Lithuanian Jews in Scotland is John
Millar. There was a sizeable community in Bellshill, Lanarkshire and they
worked in the mines. John has a wealth of information about them and has
written a book called Lithuanians in Scotland.
And don't forget The Mitchell Library, in Glasgow. They have a great
website and the librarians in the research rooms are extremely helpful.
They also have a very efficient e-mail communication.
(All the above was submitted by Carole)
Scotland has a lot of records on line, for a
fee you can search but it's cheaper to order in person from the Record Office in
Edinburgh. See this URL to start you off:
www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk

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Landa. All rights reserved.
Revised:
02/22/03 21:03:04 -0000.