Washington Square had transformed, by 1842, from a potter’s
field to an exclusive residential neighborhood bordering what was now an
elegant park. That year the congregation
of the Sullivan Street Methodist Protestant Church just to the
south decided to disband and sell its property.
Oliver Loveland, a young and prominent member of the Bedford Street
Church, admired the structure and convinced other members to purchase the old
church. Then, just as the papers were to be signed,
several of the major supporters backed out, fearing the project would fail.
Loveland was undeterred, however, and “Almost alone,
assisted only by Dr. S. A. Purdy, he purchased the property for the stipulated
price, the two becoming personally responsible for its payment,” reported The New
York Times. It was a risky move. Neither of the men was financially able to maintain
a new church organization, let along the mortgage. “Both of the new owners were at the time of
slender means,” said The New York Times.
Financial salvation came in the form of Sylvanus Gedney, a
member of the old Sullivan Street church whose “love of the old edifice was too
strong to part with it.” On December
12, 1842 the three men founded the Sullivan Street Methodist Episcopal Church
with just one other member, Richard P. Berrian.
Within two years the membership had grown to over 200. The New York Times later noted that by 1849 “The
prosperity of the society had now become assured, and during this year and the
following the increase in numbers and wealth was unprecedented.”
In 1859 a “more commodious edifice” was necessary to accommodate
the growing, upscale congregation. The pastor,
Dr. Shelling, purchased two lots at 133 and 135 West 4th
Street, just off Washington Square, and began plans for an elegant new church.
Although often mistakenly attributed to Charles Hadden, the
church was designed by architect Gamaliel King and was possibly his first
commission after dissolving his partnership with John Kellum. The
white marble building was completed two years later at a cost of $80,000—about $1.4
million today. A successful melding of
Gothic and Romanesque Revival styles, the façade was divided by four slender
buttresses, capped by marble finials.
photo by Alice Lum |
Inside, King installed the first galleries in New York to be
built with no visible means of support.
The innovative engineering caused nervousness among the congregants and
The New York Times later reported that “skeptics in the congregation said the galleries
would fall down in a couple of years.”
Happily, they did not.
With its new location the church was renamed the Washington
Square Methodist Episcopal Church. The
scattered congregation came from Jersey City, Greenpoint, Harlem, Elizabeth,
Hoboken, Williamsburg, and “from all parts of the City,” according to The New
York Times.
Graceful corbels, a carved balustrade and white marble Gothic finials adorn the building -- photo by Alice Lum |
Things went smoothly for the church. On April 31, 1874 The New York Times remarked on its quiet
existence. “Since its first inception
down to the present time it has been without the slightest event calculated to
mar the peace and happiness of its exemplary congregation. Never has there been a single church trial,
or a collision of any kind between Pastor and people—even the most insignificant.”
But that would change.
In October 1884 the church trustees started a thrust to eliminate
its $11,100 debt, including a $3,100 mortgage.
Subscriptions were raised and the money was paid to Treasurer Edward F.
Stewart. By December $5,000 had been
raised and in March 1885 Stewart noted in the ledgers that the mortgage had
been paid.
The problem was that the money went into Stewart’s pockets
and not to the mortgagor, James M. Anderson.
“The defaulting treasurer, however, was very careful to pay the interest
on the mortgage from his own pocket, so that his rascality would not be
revealed,” said The Evening World.
Stewart managed the deception until March 15, 1888 when a
notice that an interest payment was due fell into the hands of Pastor John Rhey
Thompson. “The information fell like a
dynamite bomb among the officials of the Washington Square Methodist Church,
who had looked upon their treasurer as a man of strictest integrity only to
find him an ingrate and a thief,” said the newspaper.
Stewart, whom The World said “is a fine-looking man,” was
arrested and held in The Tombs. Several days later, with his wife too
scandalized to leave their Brooklyn home, Stewart appeared in the Chambers
Street Supreme Court. The Evening World
surmised that “living beyond his income” drove him to embezzle, for it said “He
does not look like a man of thieving instincts.” The newspaper added “Stewart appeared to feel
his position keenly.”
Washington Square M. E. Church in 1895 -- Nickerson's Illustrated Church Musical and School Directory (copyright expired) |
Years before Stewart began his rascality, 20-year old Englishman Martin
George said good-bye to his girlfriend of four years and traveled to California’s gold
mines in 1877. He and Caroline Jenkyn
maintained a long-distance romance via mail for over 11 years. Finally they decided to meet half way, in New
York, to be married.
Nearby on Washington Square sat the noble Gothic revival Asbury Church. On October 9, 1893 the two churches merged and it was announced that the venerable stone structure on the park would be sold. The proceeds of the sale would help advance the charitable causes of that both churches supported. Within two years the church building was demolished.
George boarded a transcontinental train and his fiancé set
sail on the Gallia from Liverpool. On
May 30, 1889 the Gallia docked in New York and Martin George was there to meet
her.
“Miss Jenkyn stood on the deck among a crowd of passengers,
and Martin George gazed from face to face until his eye lit upon the form of
his ideal,” reported The Evening World. “Then
there was a waving of handkerchiefs and there was even a suggestion of a kiss
passing through the air.”
Shortly before 8:00 that evening the couple was brought to
the Washington Square Methodist Episcopal Church by John Stevens, an officer of
the Gallia. After almost 12 years and a joint 6,000 mile
trip, they left the church as Mr. and Mrs. George.
The Evening World explained that “the only reason why they
were separated all this time was that the bride was the pet of her family.”
Nearby on Washington Square sat the noble Gothic revival Asbury Church. On October 9, 1893 the two churches merged and it was announced that the venerable stone structure on the park would be sold. The proceeds of the sale would help advance the charitable causes of that both churches supported. Within two years the church building was demolished.
The handsome Asbury Church on Washington Square was demolished in 1895 -- NYPL Collection |
The Washington Square Methodist Episcopal Church, so long
recognized for its quiet existence, was about to change its reputation. The church entered the 20th
century by plunging headlong into political issues. It started with liquor.
In 1900 the church was the meeting place for the South
New-York Christian Temperance Union.
Two decades later the issue was still on the priority list with the Rev.
Andrew B. Wood serving as assistant superintendent of the Anti-Saloon
League. The minister declared that
prohibition would improve labor conditions, reduce unemployment and “end some
66,000 deaths annually traced in this country to the liquor traffic.”
photo by Alice Lum |
The reverend’s arguments were always impassioned, but not
always easy to follow. In a meeting at
the church on May 25, 1919 he asserted “The heart of the anti-prohibition
fight, of course, is that there are a lot of people who like to govern but who
are unwilling to be governed.”
On May 2, 1942 the church pledged its support of the country’s
entry into World War II. The announcement urged that while peace was
always preferable, submission to evil was not a consideration. Thirty years later the church would take an
equally solid stance against the Vietnam conflict, earning itself the
long-lasting nickname “The Peace Church.”
By now the Greenwich Village and Washington Square area had
drastically changed. In 1962 the membership
numbered only about 50 with nearly no young people. The population of Greenwich Village was now heavily Italian
Catholic, remainders of the great immigration wave at the turn of the century,
and it had become the center of New York's homosexual community. Yet the tiny congregation
still embraced its fervent interest in equal rights and political justice. In 1969 when the National Black Economic
Development Conference demanded “reparations” to atone for centuries of white
oppression of Negroes in America, the church withdrew $15,000 from its meager $40,000
bank account—the first predominantly white congregation to contribute.
Church members told the press there was little discussion
about it. “It wasn’t anything we had to
stew over,” Olga Burkitt told a Jet Magazine reporter. “We felt very strongly that we had to do it. There are no conditions attached to the
money.”
photo by Alice Lum |
The congregation would prove its forward thinking once again
when the Rev. Paul M. Abels took the pulpit as pastor in 1973. Four years later Abels openly declared his
homosexuality as he began conducting “covenant” ceremonies for gay couples who
were legally barred from marriage.
The admission created a firestorm within the Methodist
Church, but not within his congregation.
Fully 100 percent of the letters from church members to Bishop Ralph
Ward were in support of Abels; there was not one dissenting voice. But critics, ignoring Abels’s exemplary
service to the community and the church, turned instead to a biblical
admonishment against homosexuality. They called for his dismissal.
When the regional New
York Annual Conference voted in favor of the minister, the bishop appealed to
the national Judicial Council, the highest court in United Methodism. In 1979 it ruled that Abels was in “effective
relation” and “in good standing” and should remain as pastor.
Abel would take an early retirement in 1984, but not before
he began an aggressive $1.5 restoration fund raising campaign and saw the
inauguration of a parent-run day care center, the Harvey Milk School for gay teens, and planned the church’s 125th anniversary.
Abel’s restoration, which began in 1983, was done under the
supervision of Andrew Ladygo of the Boston-based Society for the Preservation
of New England Antiquities. Much of the
attention was focused on the interior. “The
ceiling is a canopy enclosing the space and the primary, most dramatic feature
of the structure,” explained supervising architect Ann Beha.
Not that it would matter much longer.
In the Fall of 2004 the struggling congregation gave up and
sold the church it that had been its home for nearly a century and a half. The developer was restricted from
demolishing the building because it sits within the Greenwich Village
Historical District. But within two
years the pre-Civil War interiors had been gutted and the church had been
renovated into apartments.
Behind the red paneled door, pre-Civil War interiors were wrenched out, replaced by modern apartments -- photo by Alice Lum |
Although landmark status preserved the magnificent white
marble façade, it could not stop the architectural and historic sacrilege
inside.
A truly sad story that such significant and historical works are now made into a façade for apartments. It reminds me of the door the monks cut in The Last Supper, but at least they preserved the bulk of the painting.It's reminiscent too, of churches in the USSR made into warehouses.
ReplyDeleteWhat will America do in a post-Christian world? It will wither. It's as if a whole culture decided to commit suicide so as to hide from it's enemies. Sacrilege is the right word.
Huh? What's this about a "post-Christian world?" Civilization was humming along for about 9,000 years before the alleged birth of Christ and will likely continue when Christianity has gone the way of Mayan & Aztec religions!
ReplyDeleteI have fond memories of this church when in the late 60s several youth groups that I led from West Virginia camped out for 6 days at a time in the church. I was attracted by the church's reputation as "The Peace Church," which we found was a deserved title. The people were welcoming, & though their number was small, their Sunday morning worship services were lively. At first the teenagers complained about the messiness of the area, teeming with people very different from any they had met in WV. T hey liked the neat cleanliness of mid-town Manhattan. However in a couple of days this changed as they experienced life in & around Washington Square, the friendliness & liveliness of the people contrasting with those scurrying back & forth in Mid-Manhattan. As one youth said, you could fall down "up there" & no on would notice as they walked over you. I am sorry to learn that the congregation has sold the building & that only the facade remains.
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather John Logan Davis was pastor of this church before World War II.
ReplyDelete