Places of Worship
Dorchester's Religious InstitutionsIn Good Old Dorchester, Orcutt provides a history of the early churches of the town. From 1630 until 1806, the town had only one church, first at Pleasant and Pond Streets and later at Meeting House Hill, The clash between conservative and liberal views at the Second Church resulted in the formation of the Third Church, a Unitarian group in 1813. The nineteenth century saw a great proliferation of churches that has continued to the present.
The following dates may not be official. Sometimes congregations met before becoming formal organizations.

21868 36 Lawrence Avenue, former home of Anshe Shepetovka
The word Shepetovka is the name of a town in ...

21877 170 Woodrow Avenue, former home of Beth Aknosis Paoli Anshe Sephardic
Founded in 1933 as a breakaway from ...

21878 393 Norfolk Street, former home of Beth Jacob Anshe Sfard
The name means House of Jacob with Sephardic ...

No. 21879 61 Columbia Road, former home of Congregation Beth Pinchas
The name means House of Pinchas. Pinchas ...

No. 10196 Greater Love Tabernacle, photograph November 27, 2008.
The congregation was originally formed in ...

21431 Former Congregation Chevra Shas, 65 Ashton Street from Google Street View 2021
The name means Society of ...

No. 6633 Synagogue Hadrath Israel. Scan of illustration in The Synagogues of Dorchester by Richard Heath, Sept. ...

8181 16 Fessenden Street, Mattapan, former home of Kehillath Jacob, photograph from Richard Heath
The name means ...

21871 20 Michigan Avenue, former home of Lins Hazedek
The name was sometimes spelled Hazdek, The name of the ...

No. 20301 137 Dakota Street from Google Street View April 2020.
137 Dakota ...

20301 137 Dakota Street, former home of Mishkan Israel
The congregation moved to 137 Dakota Street in 1930. ...

No. 329 Postcard. Congregation Michkan Teflia, postmarked November 5, 1940.
Located on ...