44 E. Broadway building. Upper floors occupied by Congregation Anshei Emes of Mariampol, where founding meeting of RIETS took place in January, 1897 and where classes were held for a brief time. Fo... Show more44 E. Broadway building. Upper floors occupied by Congregation Anshei Emes of Mariampol, where founding meeting of RIETS took place in January, 1897 and where classes were held for a brief time. Founding meeting of Yeshivat Etz Chaim in 1886 also held there. Show less
9-11 Montgomery Street , first home of combined Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary and Yeshivat Etz Chaim (renamed the Rabbinical College of America), between 1915-1921. The high school divi... Show more9-11 Montgomery Street , first home of combined Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary and Yeshivat Etz Chaim (renamed the Rabbinical College of America), between 1915-1921. The high school division, the Talmudical Academy, was also housed there upon its opening in 1916. Show less
301 E. Broadway building - site of Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, 1921-1929. Also housed its high school, the Talmudical Academy, and its Teacher's Institute, absorbed in 1921 from Mizr... Show more301 E. Broadway building - site of Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, 1921-1929. Also housed its high school, the Talmudical Academy, and its Teacher's Institute, absorbed in 1921 from Mizrachi Organization of America. Show less
Rabbis and other leaders of RIETS (Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary) celebrating moving Torah scrolls from 301 E. Broadway to Yeshiva's new main building in Washington Heights. Pictured in... Show moreRabbis and other leaders of RIETS (Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary) celebrating moving Torah scrolls from 301 E. Broadway to Yeshiva's new main building in Washington Heights. Pictured in front, center is President Bernard Revel, flanked by philanthropist Harry Fischel and Rabbi Moses S. Margolies (with Torah scroll). Show less