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  1. 1 maj 2022 · When the Jewish Federation of Cleveland conducted its last population study in 2011, approximately 80,800 Jews called Cleveland home.

  2. 4 lut 2017 · In 1976, he co-authored an article in the Harvard Business Review with his wife, Sherry Milliken Reum, analyzing the merits of employee stock-ownership plans. In addition to Sherry, his wife of 50 years, Mr. Reum is survived by his brother James and three children, Courtney, Carter, and Halle, all residing in Los Angeles.

  3. By 1926, the majority of Cleveland's Jews had moved out of the Hough and Woodland neighborhoods for the further east Kinsman and Glenville neighborhoods. Glenville became a dense center of Jewish life in Cleveland, with the Jewish demographics of the neighborhood reaching above 90% in the 1930s.

  4. It attempts to display and identify all of Cleveland's still-standing structures that were once home to Jewish congregations. They appear in this order: mid-town (East 38th - East 55th), Glenville and Mount Pleasant - Kinsman.

  5. Jewish Cemetery Database. Use the database link below to find information on burials at Jewish cemeteries in Cleveland. Access the cemetery database. Burial information was gathered from synagogues, individuals and funeral homes.

  6. A curator of the Jewish Museum in New York wrote: “I regard Park Synagogue as the most significant structure of its kind in our generation.” The Cleveland Heights facility is now referred to as Park Main, as the congregation built and maintains a second facility in Pepper Pike.

  7. The story of Jewish Cleveland is a tale of upward mobility, from a community of fifteen Bavarian Jewish immigrants to a population of over 80,000. The Jewish population of Northeast Ohio grew most dramatically in the first two decades of the twentieth century, reaching a high of 86,540 in the 1920s.

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