Redlining and the Jewish Communities in Maine

A story by David Freidenreich from 1930

David Freidenreich

In the 1930s, Portland's bankers and real estate agents systematically discriminated against Catholics and Jews through the practice of "redlining." They defined neighborhoods with a significant "foreign-born, negro, or lower grade population" as "hazardous" and, in so doing, rendered homeowners in those neighborhoods ineligible for mortgages or other property-based loans. During the same period, Portland's political elites also revised the city’s charter to dilute the political power of residents in these neighborhoods. An insurance map, annotated in 1935, draws particular attention to the large number of Irish, Italian, Jewish, and Polish residents in the Bayside, East End, and Munjoy Hill neighborhoods.

Portland was home to over 600 Jewish households in 1930, all of whose heads were either immigrants (87%) or their children. These Jews, however, were more likely to own homes than other Portlanders, an indication of their relative affluence. In part due to the discrimination they experienced downtown, many Jewish families were prompted to move to other neighborhoods, particularly the rapidly growing Woodfords area. Some wealthy Jews sought to move to high-status towns like Cape Elizabeth, but real estate agents consistently prevented them from doing so. Jews built new synagogues in Woodfords in the 1940s and '50s, abandoning properties in their old neighborhoods like Anshe Sfard.

David Freidenreich
Pulver Family Associate Professor of Jewish Studies, Colby College

Redline map of Portland and South Portland, 1935

Redline map of Portland and South Portland, 1935

Item Contributed by
Maine Historical Society

Anshe Sfard synagogue being demolished, Portland, 1983

Anshe Sfard synagogue being demolished, Portland, 1983

Item Contributed by
Maine Historical Society

Anshe Sfard synagogue demolition, Portland, 1983

Anshe Sfard synagogue demolition, Portland, 1983

Item Contributed by
Maine Historical Society

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