Nov 28, 2024  ::  27 Heshvan 5785
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Rules & Regulations - History - Rituals - Cemetery Contact


Cemetery History

The existence of Congregation Ohabai Sholom can be traced to 1851, when the first official act of the tiny Nashville Jewish community was to purchase three acres of land for use as a cemetery. (view original deed) This land is now part of the over nine acres which comprise The Temple Cemetery, located at 2001 Fifteenth Avenue North. Because of its historical significance and Victorian design elements, the cemetery was added in 2004 to the National Register of Historic Places. The serpentine roads and family plots that were added to the original 1851 property are consistent with the desire of the period for a park-like setting in which visitors to the cemetery could meditate and meander. See and aerial photo of the cemetery.

A cemetery in Hebrew is called a Beit Hayyim, a house of the living, and tours conducted in the cemetery introduce visitors to the history of the Nashville Jewish community through the individuals buried there. Because the non-Jewish wife of one of the original purchasers of the property had converted to Judaism in her native Holland, where no one was permitted to change their religion, upon her death in 1856, special rabbinic permission had to be granted for her interment in the cemetery. An officer in the Union Army, Let. Julius Lettman, was buried at the cemetery after being killed in the Battle of Murfreesboro in 1863. S. A. Bierfield was killed by the Ku Klux Klan in nearby Franklin, Tennessee in 1868. In 1866, Joseph Lowenheim narrowly escaped death at the hands of Klansmen when he was able to make a Masonic sign, which one of his attackers recognized. Hungarian, Polish, and Russian early settlers demonstrate the economic growth of the community. The names of those interred in the Temple Cemetery are listed on the Internet. Click here to visit the web site.

The cemetery originally was financed by the Ladies Working Society, the predecessor to The Temple Sisterhood, with funds derived from sewing burial shrouds and from bazaars. In 1905, the Board of Trustees of The Temple formed a Cemetery Committee, which continues to this day to have responsibility for the operation of the cemetery.

With the approval by the Temple Board of Trustees and the financial assistance of two grants from the Tennessee Historical Commission, one approved in 2005, and the other in 2006, the Cemetery Committee is renovating the nineteenth century stone walls which enclose the westerly and southern sides of the cemetery as part of a three-year master plan to restore the cemetery, which will continue to provide repose for, and document the history of, the Jews of Nashville for generations to come. This project should be completed by the fall of 2007.

For information about the pre-need purchase of interment rights to be buried at The Temple Cemetery (which include a three-year interest-free deferred payment plan for Members of the Congregation), please contact The Temple.




Jewish Traditions-Death and Dying

End-of-life issues are often some of our most difficult challenges. When someone you love has died, we hope to bring you the comfort and strength of our Jewish traditions. Working closely with area funeral homes, the rabbis at The Temple can provide you with the resources you need.

Funerals are held at the Temple in the Sanctuary or Chapel. They may also be held graveside at The Temple Cemetery.

Following a funeral it is customary to sit shiva. While not mandatory, many families find that being home, in the presence of loved ones and caring friends, brings tremendous comfort. One of our rabbis will be honored to officiate at the funeral of your loved one or to arrange for a shiva.

Please contact us so that we may assist you.
Click Here to read The Temple's Guide to Jewish Funerals and Mourning Customs

Click Here to view several articles and essays about Death and Dying from the Reform perspective.



Cemetery Contact

For information about Cemetery rules and regulations, or to report or talk about the death of a congregant, or the death of a family member who is not a Temple member, please call:

Mitzie Russell

615 352-7620
Ext: 292

For Information about the Cemetery Committee please contact the committee chair. You may leave a message for the chairperson at the Temple.




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The Temple
Congregation Ohabai Sholom
5015 Harding Road
Nashville, TN 37205
615-352-7620
[email protected]
www.templenashville.org