Newport, Rhode Island is the historic home to one of the oldest and certainly most
influential Jewish communities in early American history. These men and women arrived in
Newport as early as 1658 and by the time of the American Revolution they grew to a
population of over thirty families. Their rich and varied lives greatly contributed to
the ideals of religious freedom and open commerce that would become the hallmarks of the
emerging nation. With the family names of Lopez, Levy, Rivera, Seixas, deToro (Touro), Gomez and
Hays, these men and women represented the merging of old and new worlds through the
tradition and culture of colonial Sephardic Jewry. The following are brief
accounts of a few of the extraordinary Jewish men, women, and
institutions of
colonial-era Newport.

Mrs. Sarah Rivera Lopez
& son Joshua Lopez
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Aaron Lopez and his family arrived in Newport
around 1750 from New
York via Lisbon, Portugal. Lopez arrived in the new world as a
member of a "Marrano" family with the Christian name of
"Don Duarte Lopez." Lopez immediately dropped his
Christian name and took the Hebrew name of Aaron and submitted to
ritual circumcision. Within
twenty years, Lopez owned or had interests in over 80 sailing vessels.
Lopez was also
one of the original founders and contributors of Touro Synagogue and
by the end of his life was recognized as one of the "Merchant
Princes" of early America. His merchant trading interests
included rum, molasses, dry goods and African slaves.
For more on the Jewish Merchants and
African Slavery
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Aaron Lopez
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Jacob Rodriguez Rivera
(uncle and father-in-law of Aaron Lopez) hailed from a "Marrano" family from Seville,
Spain. He
arrived in Newport via Curacao in 1748 where he introduced the manufacture of spermaceti
candle-making. Next to Aaron Lopez, Rivera occupied the highest position in the
commercial, religious and social life of Newports Jewish community.
His daughter Sarah, married Aaron Lopez and his son Jacob owned a
grand mansion on the Parade that is today located at 8 Washington
Square. History also remembers the Rivera Home then the
residence of Deputy Governor John Gardiner who with the Reverend James
Manning in July, 1763 met with interested citizens and first made
the design known to establish a college in the English colony of
Rhode Island, which eventually became Brown University.
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Jacob Rodriguez Rivera
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Moses Levy and the Moses Seixas families both lived in
one of Newport's large colonial mansions at 29 Touro Street. Seixas was
a founding member of the nation's oldest Jewish Masonic Lodge (King David
in Newport) and Grand Master of the Masonic
Order of Rhode Island. Seixas was well known as the Cashier of the Bank of Rhode Island. President
(Parnas) of Touro Synagogue at the time of
the George Washington visit and letter to the congregation, Seixas also performed
the Covenant of
Circumcision (Brith Milah). Prominent merchant and
trader Moses Levy of
New York and Newport was one of several Ashkenazi Jewish families in
Newport at that time. Levy owned the Touro Street Mansion and willed the
property to Moses Seixas in 1792. Levy was also one of the original
benefactors of Touro Synagogue.
Rev. Isaac Touro
was the First Spiritual leader of Congregation Yeshuat Israel.
His family
came to America from Amsterdam via the West Indies, though originally from Spain where
family name was "de Toro." Rev. Touro arrived in Newport in 1759 when only
twenty years old, having been trained in Holland for the Jewish ministry.
He provided from
memory the design of the Touro Synagogue from the great Sephardic Synagogues of Amsterdam.
Sons Abraham and Judah would become great 19th century philanthropists.

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Moses
Michael Hays was not only brother-in-law
of Rev. Isaac Touro, but a prosperous merchant. Hays
introduced the Order of the
Scottish Rite Masonic Order to America. He was the Grand Master of Massachusetts
Masonic Lodge with Paul Revere and friend of Patriot Thomas Paine and he
helped organized the King David Lodge in 1769. Hays moved from Newport to Boston in 1780.
He is credited as being one of the founders of the Massachusetts Fire and
Marine Insurance Co., which grew to become the Bank of Boston. At
the Old Colony House, one of the oldest existing
government buildings in America, in June, 1776 (one month before the Declaration of
Independence) Hays delivered a now famous letter to Rhode Island General Assembly
protesting the requirement that Jews sign loyalty test before the fledging government. |
Ezra Stiles was a Congregationalist
minister in Newport and close friend of Isaac Touro and Aaron Lopez. His diaries contain the most
extensive descriptions of 18th century Jewish life in Newport. Later he would
become first President of Yale University and add Hebrew to the university
seal.
Judah Touro was the youngest son of Isaac
Touro and he moved to New Orleans in his early twenties where he made his
fortune as a merchant/trader. At the time of his death, his estate totaled nearly one
million dollars, most of which was given to charitable organizations,
orphanages, religious institutions, and towards good works in various cities
including his birthplace, Newport. Land was purchased with his generous gift in 1855 for
the purpose of providing a public park and preserving the historic Old Stone Mill.

Touro Synagogue
is the oldest existing Synagogue in North America (completed for Chanukah in 1763)
located on what was originally called Griffin Street. The founding Newport
congregation organized as "Yeshuat Israel" or Salvation of Israel
never named the synagogue Touro. Those recognizing Abraham Touros generous gifts to restore the building, street, and
boundary walls loosely called the synagogue "Touros Synagogue" in the
mid-19th century. Under the Bimah lies a trap door that was used to house runaway slaves
as part of the Underground Railroad. The trap door also represents the
Marrano tradition of remembering the perils of Jews living in Spain and
Portugal during the Inquisition and having to flee from soldiers of the Holy
Office at a moments notice.
The Hebrew Cemetery on Bellevue Avenue has origins dating back to 1677,
making it the oldest (existing) Jewish Cemetery in America.
The final resting place of many of the first Jewish families of Newport and America,
including Touro, Hays, Myers, Lopez, Hart, Seixas and Rivera. The 1712 map
of the Town of Newport identifies the cemetery on "Jew Street."
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