  
In 1492, the King and Queen of Spain--Ferdinand and Isabella-- 
ordered the expulsion of the Spanish Jewish Community. Thus, the vibrant Jewish 
Community which had flourished in Spain for centuries was evicted. Many Jews who 
fled the country immigrated to the New World. The Eighteenth Century witnessed a 
mass of Jewish settlement in present-day Texas.  
 
Authors Ruth Weinegarten and Cathy Schechter estimate in their study Deep in 
the Heart: The Lives and Legends of Texas Jews that the first permanent 
Jewish settler in Texas was Jao de la Porta. La Porta was a Portuguese Jew who 
settled in Galveston, Texas in approximately 1814. The Jewish Community also 
participated actively in the Texas Revolution of the 1830s. For instance, 
Adolphus Sterne, a German-American Jew (who ultimately married a Catholic who 
converted him to Catholicism) was close friends with Sam Houston. Houston 
referred to Sterne as "the rosy little Jew." After the 1845 annexation of Texas 
by the United States, Sterne served in the Texas State Senate from November 1851 
until his death in 1852. Sterne’s diary Hurrah for Texas was published in 
1986. 
 
Another important participant in early Texas Jewish life was Maj. Leon Dyer, a 
German-American Jew who originally immigrated to Baltimore, Maryland. In 
Baltimore, Dyer served as President of the Baltimore Hebrew Congregation and was 
an organizer of the United Hebrew Society. After Texas won independence from 
Mexico in 1836, Dyer received a commission as a major in the Texas Army. Major 
Dyer even guarded the captured Mexican General-President Santa Anna on a visit 
to then-President Andrew Jackson in Washington, D.C.  
 
In the years after the Texas Revolution, the Texas Jewish Community rapidly 
grew. In 1852, the first Jewish cemetery was established in Texas which was in 
Galveston. Shortly thereafter, Jewish cemeteries were established in Houston, 
San Antonio, Victoria and Jefferson, Texas. Congregation Beth Israel in Houston 
which was the first Texas synagogue to have an official charter was founded in 
1859. Beth Israel was originally Orthodox but switched to Reform Judaism fifteen 
years later. Over the course of the next half-century, various other synagogues 
were established in Texas: Temple Emanu-El was established in Dallas in 1873. 
Temple Beth El of San Antonio was founded in 1873. Hebrew Sinai Congregation was 
established in Jefferson, Texas, in 1873. In 1924, Agudas Achim Congregation of 
Austin, TX received a charter as an Orthodox synagogue. However, the synagogue 
is affiliated with Conservative Judaism today.  
 
Many prominent rabbis since have served Texas Jewry. A German-American rabbi, 
Zachariah Emmich of Temple Beth Israel in Houston was the first ordained rabbi 
in Texas. Other rabbis who served Texas Jewry included London-born Rabbi Henry 
Cohen. During his long tenure at Temple B’nai Israel of Galveston from 1888 
until his death in 1952, Rabbi Cohen was known as a man of benevolence and 
charity.” Without my grandfather," Rabbi Cohen's grandson--Rabbi Henry Cohen II 
told me, "Texas would not have such a charismatic religious leader to look up to 
and to serve as a model and mentor for not only other rabbis but for people of 
every faith." Indeed, during the First World War, Rabbi Cohen was instrumental 
in persuading Congress to provide Jewish members of the U.S. Navy with a 
chaplain of their own faith. In the 1920s, he established a reputation as an 
avowed foe of the Ku Klux Klan. 
 
Rabbi Henry Cohen II also recounted how his grandfather"…combined the role of 
the prophet...and that of counselor....” In response to the question of whether 
his grandfather ever wrote an ethical will, Rabbi Henry Cohen II responded, "My 
grandfather did not write an ethical will. He did not need to. His life was his 
will."  
 
Other prominent Texas rabbis have included Rabbi Alexander L. Gurwitz also of 
Galveston who published a Yiddish verse translation of the Pentateuch. Another 
rabbi, David Lefkowitz of Temple Emanu-El in Dallas was like Rabbi Cohen before 
him a staunch opponent of the Ku Klux Klan. Rabbi Lefkowitz also served as 
Vice-President of the World Union for Progressive Judaism and served on the 
Executive Board of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. 
 
More recently, Rabbi Jimmy Kessler of Temple B'nai Israel in Galveston was an 
original founder of the Texas Jewish Historical Society (TJHS) in 1980. Most 
recently, prominent Jewish Texans have included Rabbi David Jacobson of San 
Antonio who in 1976 became the first rabbi to serve as President of the National 
Conference of Social Welfare. Another prominent Jewish Texan is Richard S. 
"Kinky" Friedman who is a well-known singer and politician who unsuccessfully 
ran for Governor of Texas as an Independent in 2006. 
 
In the spirit of a Jewish biblical saying, "One generation passes away and 
another generation comes...." may the next generation of Texas and world Jewry 
inherit, nurture, and pass on an active and vibrant Jewish community! 
 
For more information, see a link to the Texas Jewish Historical Society website: 
 
http://www.txjhs.com/ 
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