Showing posts with label West Bar Green Synagogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Bar Green Synagogue. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2025

The Wednesday Wedding of Dora Hurwitch and Aaron Hartman

Wednesday, June 20, 1888 was the wedding day of my paternal great aunt's older sister, Dora Hurwitch (1870-1943). She was born in Poland, the daughter of a peddler who brought his family to England where he later became a teacher. The groom was Aaron H. Hartman (1871-1942), a jeweler who was the son of a draper born in Poland. 

Of Dora and Aaron's children, three died before age 20. Their daughter Emily Hartman volunteered as a nurse during World War I and sadly died at age 22 when the flu epidemic swept through the Bermondsey military hospital where she was working in October, 1918. Her tombstone includes the poignant inscription "Thou o lord has done as it pleased thee."

Married by the groom's neighbor

In the 1881 England Census, Aaron Hartman and his family were listed in Sheffield just a few lines below "A. Alexander, Jewish Minister." And looking at the transcribed marriage record for Dora and Aaron from the West Bar Green Synagogue, the minister is "A. Alexander." Clearly the same man, who must have been well-known to the groom's family.

The West Bar Green Synagogue in Sheffield had a number of names and locations during its time. According to this brief history, "Rev. A. Alexander" was a "reader" during the early 1900s. After relocating to a more permanent place in 1914, the synagogue was unfortunately destroyed by German bombing during the Sheffield Blitz of December, 1940.

Aaron and Dora in retirement

In the 1939 Register, Aaron was shown as retired and his wife Dora's occupation was "unpaid domestic duties." Both Aaron and his bride, Dora, survived the blitz. In retirement, they were living in Lymington, Hampshire, England, a ferry ride away from the Isle of Wight. Lymington is more than 200 miles south of the couple's original home in Sheffield. 

Aaron died in December, 1942. Dora died in October of 1943. Both were buried in Ecclesfield Jewish Cemetery in Sheffield, where their children were buried. Remembering these folks from my father's family tree on the 137th anniversary of their wedding in Sheffield, England.