The Lower East Side Tenement Museum, New York City Jewish educational projects in North America — the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience. Started in 1989 with a grant from the Plough Foundation of Memphis, the museum dis- plays its collections in two locations. Its main site is in Utica, near Jackson, the state capital. Its historic synagogue is in Natchez. The museum explores past and present chal- lenges of Jews living in the South, including long-range planning assistance to rural congregations. For informa- tion, call (601) 362-6357. Corned beef locator: Grits are everywhere; corned beef is hard to find. the first elected Jewish governor in the U.S. Governor Alexander's house and retail store are listed in the Idaho his- toric registry. Alexander House is located at 304 State St.; Alexander's Retail Store is at 820 Main. For information, call the synagogue at (208) 342C- 07 r2, e7d. beef locator: Save your cravings; these are wide open spaces. MIDDLE AMERICA: Chicago, Denver Chicago has the largest Jewish population in middle America at about 250,000 and the burly, crude and intolerant lot. The largest concentration of Jewish singles, about 70,000 between the ages town of Leadville had many successful Jewish prospectors, including the of 21 and 65. More than 6,000 Russian Jews have Guggenheims. Denver's Larimer Square had a settled in this vibrant, hard-working host of Jewish merchants in the early city in the last decade. Of special 20th century. A visit to interest is the Spertus Museum, Denver needs to housed in the Spertus Institute of t... include the spectacu- ............0,---..„0, Jewish Studies, 618 S. lar Rocky Mountains. Michigan Ave., which To follow a Jewish pathway _.......eyr has archaeological as v.,._,-- -- to the great outdoors, there well as ceremonial is the Million Dollar Jewish artifacts. There is a hands-on simula- --- ■■ , Highway in the San Juan Mountains, located in Mesa tion of an archaeological Verde National Park. The dig for children of all ages. scenic road stretches from For information on hours, Ouray to Silverton and includes the exhibits and fees, call (312) hip resort town of Telluride. This 922-9012. highway was built by "the Hebrew Two architectural gems in this city pathfinder," Otto Mears, a German noted for great architecture are North Jewish immigrant who was reputed to Shore Congregation Israel, 1185 speak Ute with a Yiddish accent. See Sheridan Road, Glencoe, designed by the stained glass windows in the Minoru Yamasaki; and North rotunda of the Colorado State Capitol Suburban Synagogue Beth El, at building honoring two Jewish 1175 Sheridan Road in Highland Coloradans, Mears and Francis Park, designed by Percival Goodman. Weisbart Jacobs, who was an organizer Corned beef locator: Jewish neigh- of the National Jewish Hospital for borhoods in the city limits are in the treatment of respiratory diseases. West Rogers Park section and the area Corned beef locator: The city's around Devon and Touhy avenues, Jewish population is very well inte- also the North Shore suburbs from grated but a Chasidic community Evanston to Highland Park and west exists on Colfax Avenue. from Skokie to Deerfield. Jews lived, worked and conducted services in practically every Colorado mining town during the boom days, even though miners tended to be a 7/9 1999 106 Detroit Jewish News An image from Birobidzhan, from the "Stalin's Forgotten Zion" exhibit at the ° Spertus Museum, Chicago NORTHWEST: San Francisco, Boise, Colma Boise's Jewish population dates back to 1861. Jews came as miners, mer- chants and federal officers protecting the wagon trains that streamed into this new territory. Temple Beth Israel, 1102 State St., built in 1895, is the oldest synagogue in continuous use west of the Mississippi. Its Romanesque-Moorish architecture, its beautiful stained glass windows and rough-hewn shake shin- gles, make a striking and unique blend of European tradition with the style of the American frontier. It is a short walk from the syna- gogue to see the house of its first pres- ident, Moses Alexander, who was also In 1860, when there were 150,000 Jews in the entire U.S., there were 5,000 in San Francisco, totaling 10 percent of the city's population. Many of the city's most successful retailers, with names like Magnin and Strauss, were ped- dlers who braved a difficult journey, either sailing around Cape Horn or crossing the Rockies, to service the needs of the miners during the gold rush. The city, then and now, is noted for its natural beauty, its low-key atmos- phere and its liberal attitudes. Because of this, San Francisco never had a designat- ed Jewish neighborhood like eastern cities. Yet there are plenty of sights that reflect the importance of Jews in this city's past and present. In the downtown financial area is a plaque marking the first Gold Rush, located on the eastern facade' of the old Transamerica Building on the cor- ner of Montgomery and Washington