Update on a Jerusalem House --
My, How You've Grown
New Talbieh neighborhood (circa 1925) |
Last month we posted a feature on the "Newer Jerusalem suburbs. Talbieh. A Christian Arab community" along with a picture from the Library of Congress collection.
The Talbieh neighborhood is adjacent to the Jewish neighborhood of Rehavia. After World War I, the land was sold by the Greek Patriarch to Arab Christians who built homes. British Mandate maps from the 1940s show approximately 90 homes, some residences for foreign consuls. In the 1930s several Jewish families also moved into the neighborhood.
After the 1947 UN Partition vote, Arab and Jewish tensions grew. Residents in the Arab and Jewish enclaves in each other's areas left, many expecting to eventually return. Such was the case with the Arabs of Talbieh.
After the 1947 UN Partition vote, Arab and Jewish tensions grew. Residents in the Arab and Jewish enclaves in each other's areas left, many expecting to eventually return. Such was the case with the Arabs of Talbieh.
The one-story house grew a second story by 1941 when the building was converted to the Lady MacMichael British Red Cross Convalescent house for British officers |
We focused in our earlier feature on the one-story house and identified it as situated at the corner of what is today Jabotinsky and Yitzhak Elhanan Streets across from the InbalHotel .
We focused in our earlier feature on the one-story house and identified it as situated at the corner of what is today Jabotinsky and Yitzhak Elhanan Streets across from the Inbal
Entrance to the MacMichael House |
Aerial photo of Talbieh (circa 1935) The road going from the bottom left to the top right is Jabotinsky Street today. Note the two-story building on the corner |
We recently found more pictures of the building in the Library of Congress files, pictures taken at the beginning of World War II when the building was converted into a convalescent house for British officers.
After the British left Palestine in 1948 and the 1949 armistice agreement, the State of Israel became the guardian of the building and made it available for private residence.
Click on pictures to enlarge. Click on caption to view the original photo.
The 5-story house today on the the corner of Jabotinsky Street, once Emir Abdullah Street. (Credit: |
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Thanks for sharing. Blessings on your head from the Lord Jesus, Yeshua HaMashiach.
Steve Martin
Founder
Love For His People
Charlotte, NC USA