The synagogue is a one-story three-by-three-bay structure, with a newer wing to the west, sided in white vinyl, which replaced the original clapboard.
The front entrance has a slightly raised portico[1] The interior consists of a small vestibule leading into the auditorium, where the ark is on the rear and pews surround the bimah on three sides.
One of these areas was Ulster Heights, in the western highlands of the Town of Wawarsing, near the Sullivan County line.
They held prayer services in their homes at first, gradually settling on Samuel Tannenbaum's hotel/boarding house as more families arrived.
Samuel Kaufman, a lawyer who vacationed nearby, decided to help raise money and by the end of that summer had secured enough from resort owners for the congregation to start building again.
As the children of the early settlers began moving elsewhere in the years after World War II, it declined until a young couple, Morris and Celia Rudin, led an effort that not only reversed that trend but renovated the building, adding its ark, chandelier and other interior decor, and building the portico new wing and residing the structure.