AMERICAN JEWISH ORPHANAGES
The 1623 children who were raised in New Orleans’s Jewish Orphans’ Home, renamed in 1924 as the Jewish Children’s Home, represent a fraction of the tens of thousands of children who lived in Jewish orphanages across the nation. Listed below are 53 American Jewish congregate residential institutions in which orphans or dependent children were housed. This list does not include non-residential benevolent societies and social service organizations. Additions and corrections are welcomed. (Revised August 27, 2024)
Note: Although no longer actively maintained, a comprehensive database about American Jewish orphanages and orphan benevolent societies was compiled in 2004 by alumni of the Hebrew National Orphans Home, Yonkers, NY. Click here to access the archived website.
(#) Date Opened |
Location |
Original Name |
(1) 1855* |
Philadelphia PA |
Jewish Foster Home |
(2) 1856 |
New Orleans LA |
Home for Jewish Widows and Orphans |
(3) 1860 |
New York NY |
Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(4) 1860** |
Charleston SC |
Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(5) 1861 |
Newark NJ |
Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(6) 1868 |
Cleveland OH |
Jewish Orphan Asylum |
(7) 1871 |
San Francisco CA |
Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(8) 1872 |
Baltimore MD |
Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(9) 1878 |
Brooklyn NY |
Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(10) 1879 |
New York NY |
Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society |
(11) 1879 |
Rochester NY |
Jewish Orphan Asylum of Western New York |
(12) 1889 |
Atlanta GA |
Hebrew Orphans Home |
(13) 1890 |
Pittsburgh PA |
J.M. Gusky Hebrew Orphanage |
(14) 1890 |
Boston MA |
Leopold Morse Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews & Orphans |
(15) 1893 |
Chicago IL |
Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans |
(16) 1895 |
Bronx NY |
Home for Hebrew Infants |
(17) 1896 |
Philadelphia PA |
Home for Hebrew Orphans |
(18) 1896 |
Cincinnati OH |
Jewish Foster Home |
(19) 1897 |
Boston MA |
Home for Destitute Jewish Children |
(20) 1899 |
Cleveland OH |
Jewish Infant Orphans Home |
(21) 1900 |
Baltimore MD |
Hebrew Children Sheltering & Protective Association Home (Betsy Levy Memorial Home) |
(22) 1901 |
Chicago IL |
Home of the Jewish Friendless |
(23) 1902 |
Philadelphia PA |
Hebrew Sheltering Home & Day Nursery |
(24) 1905 |
Chicago IL |
Marks Nathan Jewish Orphans Home |
(25) 1905 |
New Haven CT |
Jewish Home for Children |
(26) 1908 |
Denver CO |
Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children |
(27) 1908 |
Los Angeles CA |
Jewish Orphans Home of Southern California |
(28) 1908 |
Washington DC |
Jewish Foster Home |
(29) 1908 |
Providence RI |
Jewish Orphanage of Rhode Island |
(30) 1910 |
Hartford CT |
Hebrew Women’s Home for Children |
(31) 1912 |
Louisville KY |
Jewish Children’s Home |
(32) 1912 |
Erie PA |
B’nai B’rith Orphanage and Home for Friendless Children |
(33) 1913 |
New York NY |
Israel Orphan Home |
(34) 1914 |
Yonkers NY |
Hebrew National Orphan Home |
(35) 1914 |
Pittsburgh PA |
Jewish Home for Babies and Children |
(36) 1915 |
Bridgeport CT |
Hebrew Orphan Asylum |
(37) 1915 |
Jersey City NJ |
Hebrew Orphan Home of Hudson County |
(38) 1916 |
Baltimore MD |
Daughters of Hannah Infant Home |
(39) 1917 |
Philadelphia PA |
Downtown Jewish Orphan Home |
(40) 1918 |
Philadelphia PA |
North Eastern Hebrew Orphans Home |
(41) 1918 |
Minneapolis MN |
Jewish Sheltering Home for Children |
(42) 1919 |
Columbus OH |
Jewish Infant Orphans Home of Ohio |
(43) 1919 |
St. Louis MO |
Jewish Orphans Home |
(44) 1920 |
Cleveland OH |
Orthodox Jewish Orphan Asylum |
(45) 1920 |
Portland OR |
Jewish Shelter Home |
(46) 1920 |
Kansas City MO |
Jewish Orphans Home |
(47) 1920 |
Detroit MI |
Hebrew Orphans Home |
(48) 1921 |
Scranton PA |
Jewish Home for the Friendless |
(49) 1922 |
Cincinnati OH |
Orthodox Jewish Orphans Home |
(50) 1923 |
Brooklyn NY |
Pride of Judea Orphan Home |
(51) 1924 |
Milwaukee WI |
Jewish Children’s Home |
(52) 1926 |
Bronx NY |
Shield of David Home for Orphan Girls |
(53) 1930 |
Houston TX |
Pauline Stern Wolff Memorial Home |
*The Philadelphia Foster Home opened in a rented building. The Home for Jewish Widows and Orphans of New Orleans was the first purpose-built Jewish orphanage in the nation.
**Although Charleston’s Hebrew Orphan Society was founded in 1801, and purchased a building in 1833, the building housed orphans for only a few years before the Civil War.