Streets:
  1. South Terrace
  2. Parry Street
Wikidata:Q28220391
inHerit:1010
Loading map...
-32.05683, 115.74975
Wikipedia logo
Wikipedia has an article about Fremantle Synagogue.

You may wish to contribute to that article in preference to this one, so that your contributions may be of use to the greatest number of people.

Of course, anything that is not suitable for Wikipedia can be added here on Freopedia instead (within reason).

The Old Synagogue is a group of buildings on the corner of Parry Street and South Terrace, now used as a bar/restaurant/pub and that have had a variety of uses since construction began in 1902. They're number 92 South Terrace.

The WA Hebrew Congregation was established in Fremantle in August 1887, and services were conducted in 1891 in the (Enrolled Pensioner) Barracks on South Terrace. The site of the synagogue, on the corner of Norfolk Street (now Parry Street), next to the Barracks, was acquired in 1895, tho the building was not erected until 1902. The centre of Jewish activity in Perth moved to Perth, and services in Fremantle were discontinued in 1910. The building functioned as a synagogue for only eight years.

The synagogue in 1912.

By 1912 the synagogue was being used as part of an immigration centre - explaining the fencing in the photo above.

The site was sold to the Department of Defence in 1916, and used as an immigration centre. It was bought by the Council in 1969 and leased to various businesses, before being sold in 2004. The owner in April 2018 had been trying for a number of years to get a hotel up, with a four-storey new building at the rear of the old one. In May 2018 it was for sale at auction. In 2021 it is now a restaurant and bar complex trading as the Old Synagogue:
'The three-storey heritage building opened at the close of 2019 under Ross Drennan and Drew Flanagan of Nokturnl Events, whose portfolio includes Oktoberfest in the Gardens and New Year’s Eve festival Foreshore. The 1000-capacity dining and bar precinct is home to four different venues: modern-Asian restaurant Tonic & Ginger; cafe-bar Mr Chapple; cocktail bar (hidden behind a bookcase) L’Chaim; and three-storey pub Arbor.'

[[img/synagogue5.jpg|auction mart]]

The immigration fencing is mostly still in situ, but an entrance has been made through it for the building's next function - as an auctioneer's premises.

Eric Silbert:
The first meeting of the Fremantle Synagogue was in the guard room next to the barracks (in South Terrace). In 1887 Benjamin Solomon convened a meeting of a few Jewish people to discuss the need for a religious home. The first chairman of a group to form a Jewish Community was [[../people/alexanderlawrence.html|Lawrence Alexander]]. Alexander was a well known identity around Fremantle. I have the receipt book of that group where people gave their 2/6 and 2/-, to start this community. It is quite a nice collector's item to hold, the butt of the receipt book. ...
I was fascinated also to find out that the Fremantle Council has in its minutes discussion of a place of worship for a Jewish church. ... The site for that was the corner of South Terrace and Norfolk Street. It had on it a small building known as the old guard house, which ultimately became the Eighth Base Hospital. The old guard house was an important building in Fremantle in its day....
The Fremantle synagogue, even once it got under way, never had a minister. It only really ran for two or three years. I believe it had the high holy day services; the main important Jewish services like the Day of Atonement, New Year’s Day, Christmas Day and Good Friday. They had those and they had some good people who would take a service but they didn’t have a minister of religion. So it never really got off the ground for the reasons I’ve just mentioned. It obviously ran into financial problems because the people drifted away, so then they had a building and a congregation but no minister, and they had trouble paying the bills. The Perth Hebrew congregation had got under way and this was a competitor. They were not amused that this little congregation down here in Fremantle was called the Western Australian Hebrew Congregation. However that was the story of the synagogue in Fremantle. It’s a bit sad because yes, it did have services, and yes, it was built for religious purposes, but it never really got under way. Eric Silbert 1991: 81-83.

synagogue

Murray Edmonds' slide from 1972, Fremantle Library ref. ES00150, showing the Norfolk Street (now Parry Street) side of the building, with 1925 garage on this side of 1932 shops.

Library:
October 1972 Parry Street facade of former Synagogue bulding, corner South Terrace and Parry Street. Designed by Oldham and Eales, it was the first purpose built synagogue in the state. [[../people/solomon.html|Elias Solomon]], a trustee of the local Hebrew congregation, Federal Member for the district and former Mayor, laid the fountain stone on 8 January 1902 and Mr J McCracken completed the building some months later. By 1910 the Jewish population had mainly moved to Perth and the synagogue was sold. In 1924 William Beer occupied and operated an auction mart from the premises. Sometime in the 1920s a brick corrugated iron rear addition and garage (1925) were completed. In March 1932 Beer acquired ownership of the property and Council approved plans on 20 June for a new brick frontage. Known as Beer’s Buildings, the work was completed by A.H. and H.A. Thorpe of West Perth, at a cost of 650 pounds. The building was acquired by Council in 1969 and leased to for various commercial purposes over the years (Barri’s Rugs, Skid Rose, a clothing outlet and gallery, and various cafes/restaurants). Council sold the building in 2004.

synagogue

[[../photographers/index.html|Skip Watkins]]' 1985 photo, Fremantle Library #E000169. The (now disused and about to be demolished for yet another carpark - and police station, in 2021) Stan Reilly Centre is to the right of the church, on the site of the former Barracks, with Fremantle Hospital extreme right.

synagogue

The synagogue in 1985, occupied by Barri's Complete Rug Centre. Beer's Buildings - as may be seen in the moulding in the corner facade - had been built in 1932 in front of the synagogue, right up to the street corner. Note the 1925 garage on the left.

synagogue

Skid Rose, a frock shop, kept the street number (92) on the corner, but did not highlight the name of the (Beer's) building. The garage is still there.

synagogue

There was also a restaurant here at one point. I think this is in the right order.

synagogue

An excellent view from the northwest, in somewhere around 2010, of the 1902 synagogue showing its relationship with the 1932 buildings to the west (right) and the associated buildings to the east (left) which have recently been removed as part of the current rebuilding as a hotel.

synagogue

The Beer's sign is obscured by a neon sign proclaiming its identity as a Cafe - which it had by ceased to be by the time this photo was taken. The garage has gone.

synagogue

synagogue hotel

In 2016 permission was given for a hotel, something like what is planned in the drawing above, to be built at the rear of the existing building. Update: the three-storey structure at the area was not built.

Holy Auction

Charlie Smith, Fremantle Herald, April 27, 2018

Is the heritage-listed Fremantle synagogue set to become a restaurant selling pork belly or bacon and eggs?
The owner of the former synagogue was in the midst of turning the iconic South Terrace property into a hotel, but heritage regulations have hampered his progress and he’s decided to put it under the hammer next month.
The interior of the synagogue has been renovated and there is development approval for a four-storey building at the rear of the site.
Real estate agent David Lightfoot says there has been a lot of interest in the property, including potential buyers keen to use the space for bars, restaurants, function rooms and even offices.
“The sellers have spent a lot of time, money and effort getting development approval for the hotel,” he says.
“Somebody could come along and make the most of what has already been approved, or seek approval for a whole range of other uses.”
The property is in the entertainment precinct and is listed as “no zoning”, which permits an array of uses subject to council approval.

The former synagogue was the first to be built in WA in 1902.
The site was sold to the Department of Defence in 1916, and over the years it has been a clothing outlet, cafe and carpet shop.
Fremantle council sold the synagogue in 2004.
It will go to auction on May 31.

interior

These are the only photographs of the interior I've come across.

This is 8 Jan 2019 information about what was then about to happen to the building: The Old Synagogue In Fremantle Is About To Get A Delicious Makeover. It's full of BS including 'there are plans in the works to bring it back to life with a new restaurant and bar that will blow your mind.' ... Personally, I prefer my mind un-blown.

2019

Update 2019. The City Council has approved the latest plans for the building (above). Here is part of the news release.

FCC:
A proposal to breathe new life into an iconic Fremantle heritage building has been approved by Fremantle Council’s planning committee.
The plans approved by the committee last night involve converting the old Fremantle Synagogue, on the corner of South Terrace and Parry Street, into a new restaurant and hospitality venue.
It will feature four different offerings on the one site – with a restaurant, multi-level beer garden including a rooftop deck, basement cocktail bar and a casual front bar. ...
The old Synagogue is in a very prominent location in Fremantle but has been vacant for a number of decades, so it’s exciting to know something will finally be happening with that site. ...
The Old Synagogue was the first synagogue built in Western Australia and is on the State Register of Heritage Places. The redevelopment proposal is supported by the State Heritage Office.
The 117-year-old building operated as a synagogue for only eight years. It has since been used for a variety of purposes including an auction mart, rug shop, clothing outlet, art gallery and a cafe.
Following last night’s approval by the Council’s planning committee the proponent is now required to make an application to the Department of Racing, Gaming and Liquor for an appropriate liquor licence.

References and Links

Antonovsky, Wendy & Ari nd, Notes about the [[../jewish/heritage.html#synagogue|synagogue]] in their Heritage Walk.

Dowson, John 2005, Fremantle: The Future is in the Past: Appreciating the Synagogue Site and its Surrounds, privately published booklet, 22 pp. (PDF)

Silbert, Eric 1999, [[../fhs/fs/1/Silbert.html|'Jewish personalities of Fremantle']], Fremantle Studies, 1: 77-91.

Top photo, 2021, courtesy of Roel Loopers.


Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 23 May, 2016 and hosted at freotopia.org/buildings/synagogue.html (it was last updated on 31 August, 2023), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.