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The Hill, New Haven

Neighborhoods in New Haven, Connecticut
Aerial closeup YNHH 2010
Aerial closeup YNHH 2010

The Hill is the southwesternmost neighborhood of New Haven, Connecticut. As early as 1800, this area was known as "Sodom Hill". Located directly south of Downtown New Haven, this neighborhood is home to residential areas, some light industry, New Haven Union Station as well as Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Yale School of Medicine.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Hill, New Haven (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Hill, New Haven
Dewitt Street, New Haven

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Website Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.296 ° E -72.937 °
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Address

Hill Central School

Dewitt Street 140
06519 New Haven
Connecticut, United States
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Phone number
New Haven Public Schools

call+14752206100

Website
hillcentralschool.webs.com

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Aerial closeup YNHH 2010
Aerial closeup YNHH 2010
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Nearby Places

Beth Israel Synagogue (New Haven, Connecticut)
Beth Israel Synagogue (New Haven, Connecticut)

Congregation Beth Israel, also known as the Orchard Street Shul, is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue at 232 Orchard Street in New Haven, Connecticut. The synagogue building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The congregation was founded in 1913 by an orthodox congregation that was formed by Jewish families who had prospered sufficiently to move beyond the neighborhood of first immigrant settlement around Oak and Lafayette Streets to the area of upper Oak Street (renamed Legion Avenue in 1928) and Winthrop Avenue. First meeting in leased space, in 1915 the congregation moved into a remodeled house at 147 Orchard Street. In 1923 they purchased a lot at 232 Orchard Street for $12,000 (today $206,000) and built the present Colonial revival style building in 1925. The architect was Louis Abramowitz and the builder was C. Abbadessa.By the late twentieth century, the membership was elderly, the Jewish population of the city had moved elsewhere, and the future of the synagogue was in doubt.Efforts to preserve the synagogue were organized by the Cultural Heritage Artists Project and the synagogue returned to regular weekly use during 2011 under the leadership of Rabbi Mendy Hecht, whose grandfather Rabbi Maurice I. Hecht had been rabbi at the shul for 45 years, and whose father Rabbi Sheya Hecht had also served in the pulpit. The synagogue was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.The synagogue website [2] describes the historic restoration of the Orchard Street Shul that has taken place during 2012 and that there are traditional Shabbat services held every Saturday morning at 9:30 AM as well as on all Jewish holidays, with no tickets or membership required to attend High Holiday services.