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Old Jewish Cemetery, Cincinnati

Coordinates: 39°06′26″N 84°31′17″W / 39.10722°N 84.52139°W / 39.10722; -84.52139
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The Old Jewish Cemetery (also known as the Chestnut Street Cemetery and Bene Israel Burying Ground) in Cincinnati, Ohio, is the oldest Jewish cemetery west of the Allegheny Mountains.[1] Opened in 1821, it is located just northwest of Downtown Cincinnati in the Betts-Longworth Historic District. It is situated just west of Central Avenue on the north side of Chestnut Street, in the historic West End. The cemetery is sited on a tiny plot enclosed by high walls and a locked gate.

In 1821, when Benjamin Lieb was dying, he begged to be buried as a Jew. Morris Moses and Joseph Jonas, two of Cincinnati's six Jews, purchased the lot for Cincinnati's first Jewish cemetery from Nicholas Longworth for $75.00, and then buried Lieb there.

The cemetery has 85 graves and has been closed since 1849 after the cholera epidemic filled the cemetery.[2]

This cemetery is now part of Jewish Cemeteries of Greater Cincinnati (JCGC), a non-profit organization that resulted in the merger of almost all of the 26 Jewish cemeteries in the area. JCGC is governed by a board which began as representatives of the former cemetery owners, but is morphing into a pure community-based board, on the recognition by its founders that the care of the graves of ancestors should be a function of the entire Jewish community. This merger solved the problem of caring for cemeteries created by synagogues and other organizations that no longer exist.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Chestnut Street Cemetery (1921–1849) Jewish Cemeteries of Greater Cincinnati
  2. ^ International Jewish Cemetery Project Retrieved July 17, 2012.

References

  • Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of Ohio (1992 [1943]). Cincinnati, a Guide to the Queen City and Its Neighbors, Cincinnati: The Weisen-Hart Press, p. 226
OCLC 28402639