[citation needed] The modest Moorish Revival building at 32 Prince Street in the Springfield/Belmont neighborhood was built in 1884.
[6][7] Documentation records[citation needed] note Prince Street in Newark as a being one of the earliest, relatively clandestine places of Jewish settlement and worship (primarily Sephardic Jews of Spanish, Portuguese, or Italian descent) in the colonial and early American eras.
[citation needed] In 1911, the congregation moved to High Street (later renamed Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
In 1990 it was slated for destruction as part of land clearance to enable the construction of Newark's Society Hill housing development.
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