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Opinion

Farewell to Crumpsall's cathedral shul

Jenni Frazer mourns the closure of one of Manchester's landmark synagogues

December 21, 2017 11:47
0215 Tehillim by 1,000 boys at Crumpsall Shul
2 min read

Usually, when we hear of the closure of a synagogue, it is as a result of the fall in numbers of the community it served. Examples such as Sunderland, Grimsby, even most recently Nottingham, come to mind.

But the decision of Manchester’s Higher Crumpsall and Higher Broughton Hebrew Congregation to close down, after more than 70 years as one of the city’s most iconic synagogues, has other factors in play — and they are to do with the shifting demographics of the neighbourhood.

When Higher Crumpsall, as it was then, opened its beautiful white-domed building in 1928, it was a thing to marvel at both inside and outside. The building dominated Cheetham Hill Road, which stretched from the city centre out into the northern suburbs but, in 1928, the Ashkenazi Jews had not yet moved north to Prestwich and Whitefield — let alone gone to the south side of Manchester, which was strongly populated, in those early years, by Sephardi Jews.

But Cheetham Hill was the focal area of Manchester Jewry, and the buildings that grew up around Crumpsall Synagogue reflected that — the Talmud Torah, the Zionist headquarters at Mamlock House, and neighbouring congregations such as Heaton Park and Higher Broughton. The latter was to be subsumed into Higher Crumpsall in the early 1960s.