photo by Alice Lum |
The first Lutherans arrived in America around 1620, settling
along the Hudson River. For two
centuries they would be a religious minority in New York, overshadowed by, mostly, the
Episcopalians. But by the middle of the
19th century, with the German population in New York quadrupled, the
Lutherans were firmly established.
Among the handful of non-German speaking Lutheran churches was
St. James. Founded in 1824, its first
building was on Orange Street—a gift to the church from Pierre
Lorillard. Later the congregation moved
to a new church building on Second Avenue at 15th Street.
In the first years following the Civil War an irreparable
rift occurred among the congregants. In 1868 a group splintered off, forming the
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church on January 27.
The new congregation purchased the former St. Paul’s Reformed Dutch Church
at No. 47 West 21st Street for $60,000 where it would remain for more
than three decades.
As the turn of the century neared, Holy Trinity sought both
a new building and new location. At the corner of Central Park West and 65th
Street stood the home of minister Rev. C. Armand Miller.
The Lutheran minister’s wife,
interestingly, was Vice President of the New York City Indian Association. The Association was formed that same year to “create
and sustain a public sentiment…concerning the condition of the Indian tribes
and the need of prompt action in their behalf.”
Before long the Millers’ house would be gone. In June 1902 Holy Trinity began construction
of a new church edifice at No. 3 West 65th Street. The last services in the 21st
Street church were held in February of that year. It was sold for $200,000 and while the new
building was under construction the congregation worshiped in the auditorium
of the Young Men’s Christian Association on West 57th Street.
The architectural firm of Schickel & Ditmars had been
given the commission to design the new structure. Bavarian-born William Schickel and Isaac E.
Ditmars were responsible for many of the buildings of the New York Roman
Catholic Diocese, beginning in 1879 with the Church of St. Vincent Ferrer.
Streetcar tracks run down Central Park West in 1904 as the new church is completed -- photo http://www.holytrinitynyc.org/ |
Completed two years later at a cost of $350,000 including
the land (about $7 million in today’s dollars), the new Holy Trinity Lutheran pretended
to be of stone construction. But, as The
New York Times reported, “the structure is almost entirely of steel, including
its two towers and steeple.”
Schickel & Ditmars drew on 13th century
Gothic churches for inspiration. The
Times compared it to La Sainte Chapelle in Paris; and although the comparison
was rather grand, the central fleche and overall form shared the same pedigree.
Gargoyles stretch from the copper-clad fleche -- photo by Alice Lum |
Inside Schickel used colorful stenciling and mosaics in the
soaring sanctuary. The New York Times
noted that “The roof is supported by graceful arches resting on columns of
green marble.”
Sunlight floods the sanctuary through windows awaiting stained glass -- photo http://www.holytrinitynyc.org/ |
The church was consecrated on the afternoon of May 15, 1904
in the first of a four-day celebration.
It was stressed to the press, however, that services would be “of the
most simple character.” Appropriately
Rev. C. A. Miller delivered the first sermon in the new building that stood on
the site of his former home. The Times
reported on the over-flow crowd. “The
church was crowded even to the organ loft with the 690 members, their friends,
and well-wishers, and many who sought admission were turned away. Among those who had seats of honor were the
eleven survivors of the eighty original members.”
Sunlight flooded through the windows, most of which awaited
dedicatory stained glass. One of the
first of these, installed in 1904, was The Second Coming of Christ window
executed by Tiffany Studios. Over the
next few years magnificent stained glass windows would be installed one-by-one.
Tiffany Studio's Second Coming window was among the first to be installed -- photo http://www.holytrinitynyc.org/ |
A year after the United States entered World War I, Rev.
Charles J. Smith left for France as a member of the National Lutheran
Commission for Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Welfare, New York. The New York Times reported that he “is
pastor of one of the most influential Lutheran churches in New York City.”
The Lutheran churches of France had arranged to take care of
the nearly 200,000 American Lutheran soldiers in France. “In essence it aims to bring the Church to
the boys wherever they may be, not only to give them the comfort and
encouragement of their faith, but to give them a welcome and make them feel at
home on foreign soil.”
The purpose of Smith’s journey with the Commission was “by fellowship
and counsel to hearten the Lutheran Church in France, and to assist this church
both in ministering to its own people and to the United States soldiers, whom
it may have opportunity to serve.”
One of those soldiers was Gerold Dieterlen. The young man never returned from the war and
his grief-filled mother commissioned a mosaic reredos behind the alter in his
memory. The panel was designed and
executed by Charles R. Lamb, in conjunction with Talbot Hamlin of the
department of architecture at Columbia University. Reverend Dr. Smith gave the sermon at the
dedication on January 9, 1927.
The memorial was in the form of a triptych with Christ in
the center flanked by two angels symbolizing the church militant and the church
triumphant. The exquisite work was
called at the time “one of the most important contributions to the art of
ecclesiastical mosaic of recent years.”
In a somewhat ironic twist, in May 1938, St. James Lutheran
Church—from which Holy Trinity had spun off—was in serious financial
trouble. On May 27 The Times reported
that “The 111-year-old congregation of St. James Lutheran Church, the oldest of
the denomination holding worship in English, will abandon its present edifice
at the southwest corner of Madison Avenue and Seventy-third Street after 11
A.M. worship on Sunday, June 5.”
Unable to make its mortgage payments, the congregation voted
to worship “temporarily” with Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. Newspapers reported that “St. James will keep
its charter in the hope that it may some day establish a place of worship again
on the East Side.” The friction of
nearly a century earlier was forgotten and the two congregations worshiped
together once again.
After a process spanning four decades, the final of the
eight stained glass windows was installed on June 1, 1941. The Last Supper window was dedicated to the
memory of Carl Pickhardt, one of the original founders. Based on a painting by Zimmerman, the
thirty-foot window was executed by Julius C. Koechig & Sons of French and
English glass with French mineral colors.
In the 1950s Charles Lamb Studios created six more mosaics
to complete the 1927 reredos. The pastor
at this time was Rev. Robert D. Hershey who made Holy Trinity a household name
nationally with his broadcasts of Sunday musical vespers, mostly by Bach. Hershey’s broadcasts would continue for
several decades; and the Bach programs continue to the present.
photo by Alice Lum |
As the neighborhood developed, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
became somewhat dwarfed. Yet Schickel
& Ditmars’ classic 13th century Gothic structure with its
beautifully patinaed copper fleche is a welcomed oasis among the soaring apartment
towers of Central Park West.
It seems a stretch, based on my research, that Lutherans were on Manhattan Island by 1620. It's possible but it's the Dutch Reformed that would have held them to task - at least for several decades until the British settled in in 1664.
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