Before it was the “Grand” it used to be the “Harlem Strand Theater.” The theater operated as the Strand from 1914-1917 when its owners were sued by Mitchel H. Mark Realty Corp (owners of the Strand Theater near Times Square) for trademark infringement.
The reason why this particular church calls itself “La Sinagoga” is because their original location was in the basement of a synagogue on 109th Street between Madison and Park Avenues. It was a lot easier to say La Sinagoga instead of “Latin American Pentecostal Church” and it stuck.
Before it was the “Grand” it used to be the “Harlem Strand Theater.” The theater operated as the Strand from 1914-1917 when its owners were sued by Mitchel H. Mark Realty Corp (owners of the Strand Theater near Times Square) for trademark infringement.
The reason why this particular church calls itself “La Sinagoga” is because their original location was in the basement of a synagogue on 109th Street between Madison and Park Avenues. It was a lot easier to say La Sinagoga instead of “Latin American Pentecostal Church” and it stuck.