photo by Alice Lum |
In 1886 she sent her close friend, Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson,
to New York to organize the first Christian Science movement in the city. Stetson was a tireless worker--authoritative,
charismatic, and convincing. The
New-York Tribune later wrote “Mrs. Stetson, after a labor of two years,
organized the First Church in this city in 1888.”
Augusta Stetson was the first minister of the church. As her New York church grew, so did her power
and influence. Stetson found both to be
addicting and exhilarating. The
congregation outgrew its first rented hall at the corner of 47th
Street and Fifth Avenue and moved to another hall at No. 138 Fifth Avenue. Continued growth prompted its move to Hardman
Hall at Fifth Avenue and 19th Street; then to the old Rutger
Presbyterian Church on Madison Avenue and 29th Street. Three years later the church moved
again. In January 1896 it acquired the
All Souls’ Church on 48th Street.
But under Augusta E. Stetson’s energetic ministry the
congregation continued to swell. In 1899
land was purchased on the corner of Central Park West and 96th
Street as the site of a new, permanent church structure. Augusta Stetson eyed the top of the heap in
choosing her architects. All of New York
City was watching Carrere and Hastings’ monumental white marble New York Public
Library take shape on Fifth Avenue. The
firm was now contracted to design the new First Church of Christ, Scientist.
The cornerstone was laid on November 30, 1899. In it was placed a letter from Mary Baker
Eddy to Augusta Stetson that read “Beneath this cornerstone, in this silent
sacred sanctuary of earth’s sweet songs, paeons of praise and records of omnipotence,
I leave my name with thine in unity and love.”
Later the Architectural Record would note “The building
finally produced has been to a remarkable degree a development rather than the fulfillment
of a formulated plan.” Indeed, the $300,000
budget initially laid out soon was left far in the dust.
“Not content with brick and Indiana stone, Concord granite
was ordered, though the cost of this material in itself, when set and under
roof would be $400,000,” said the Record.
The white stone, quarried in Concord, New Hampshire, was valued for its characteristic
of not discoloring when exposed to air; but rather to grow whiter. Because of its extreme hardness, it could not
be cut by saw or machinery and hand labor for cutting was necessary—adding to
the expense.
Then came the reading room, Sunday school rooms and offices
that were not included in the initial plans.
The cost rose to $550,000. But
Christian Science ideals did not approve of these rooms being housed in the
basement, so more changes were made and they were moved above the auditorium
and three elevators were added. The
estimates now had risen to $750,000.
Despite Christian Science’s censure of the material, “It was
then discovered that a tower of a more expensive design would add to the beauty
of the structure and this was also ordered,” reported Architectural
Record. “Finally, all limitations were
ignored, new features were added as they were required to make the church more
perfect in beauty and utility.”
photo The Architectural Record January, 1904 (copyright expired) |
When the church was dedicated in 1903, the cost had topped
out at $1.185 million. Through Augusta
Stetson’s unstinting fund raising the church was entirely paid for when its
doors were opened. The congregation
totaled 1,200 members; but it had no intentions of moving again soon. Carrere and Hastings had designed an
auditorium that would accommodate 2,200 worshipers.
The finished church was imposing and dignified. The granite steeple—which rose to a blunt
rather than pointed end--rose 200 feet above the sidewalk. The massive corner cornice stones were 12
feet long, 8 feet wide and 3 feet, 6 inches thick—each weighing 18 tons. Architectural Record called it New York’s “most
imposing church edifice;” a “beautiful picture in glistening silvery white
granite; stone, so uniform in color and quality, as at once to give one the
impression that the whole must have been cut from one huge perfect block.”
photo The Architectural Record January 1904 (copyright expired) |
The interior was decorated by Charles H. Cottrell who, too,
was unswayed by the church dogma regarding materialism. The auditorium was clad in marble and six
large chandeliers, each weighing over half a ton, illuminated the space with 78
electric bulbs each. The Architectural
Record said “These fixtures are probably the finest example of a public chandelier
in America.”
photo The Architectural Record, January 1904 (copyright expired) |
Even before construction started, the Boston Mother Church
was having issues with Augusta Stetson.
The New-York Tribune reported later “Mrs. Stetson’s preaching in the New
York church had naturally brought her reputation and power. In ‘The Christian Science Journal’ of April,
1895, therefore, Mrs. Eddy announced that preachers would no longer constitute
a part of the machinery of her Church, and that their place would be filled by
a first and second reader.” Augusta
Stetson obliged and became first reader.
“Her power, instead of decreasing with her curtailed
opportunities, increased in spite of the fact that she was bound to a rigidly
prescribed reading of the printed words from Mrs. Eddy’s book, ‘Science and
Health,’” noted the Tribune.
Then a bylaw was enacted, in 1902, limiting a reader’s term to
one year. Even now, with her post as
first reader taken away, Augusta Stetson wielded great sway and by the eve of
the church’s dedication, the tensions between her and Boston were being noticed.
On November 28, 1903, the day before the dedication The
Evening World reported “Christian Scientists, not only of the First Church, but
all over the city, are expressing indignation to-day over the anonymous and
groundless attack printed in most of the morning papers on Mrs. Augusta E.
Stetson…This attack said that there was great friction which threatened to
disrupt the First Church; that Mrs. Stetson posed as a dictator and arrogant
leader and condemned her policy in refusing to join with the other churches in
a downtown reading room.”
The day before the dedication The Evening World printed a photograph of both the new structure and Mrs. Stetson -- November 28, 1903 (copyright expired) |
A year after the dedication, Augusta Stetson purchased the
land immediately behind the church and commissioned architects Hunt & Hunt
to design a white marble mansion. On
December 22, 1904 The Evening World reported that “The plans show that the
house, which will be of marble…will cost $35,000. There will be a one-story portico entrance on
the side which will be ornamented with marble columns.” Mrs. Stetson’s new house would cost, in today’s
dollars, about $700,000. She signed a
contract with the church giving it first opportunity to buy should the house
come onto the market.
Despite her ability to draw members and increase the church’s
coffers; Augusta Stetson was heavy-handed and nearly tyrannical. While the Boston contingent tried to rein her
in, “She still remained the actual leader,” recalled the New-York Tribune in
1910, “and in 1908 she demonstrated the strength of her leadership when it
became known that she had formed elaborate plans for the erection of a church
on Riverside Drive, near 86th Street.” This would be the Second Church of Christ,
Scientist.
“The announcements of this undertaking disclosed that the
new church would be the most magnificent church edifice in the world.”
Stetson had, perhaps, dropped the last straw on the camel’s
back. A bylaw of the Mother Church
forbade a branch church, such as First Church, to establish its own branch,
such as Second Church. The Mother Church
officials condemned the project and the plans were dropped. The damage, however, had been done.
In September 1909 “Mrs. Stetson’s card as a healer, together
with those of her students who are also healers, was removed from one of the
official journals of the denomination,” reported the New-York Tribune.
Handsome carved urns surround the snub-nosed granite steeple -- photo by Alice Lum |
Then, on November 19, 1909 the New-York Tribune ran the
headline “Mrs. Stetson Out.” The Mother
Church excommunicated her, barring her from the church she had built. The Tribune said that “Excommunication is
rarely resorted to in the Christian Science Church, and in view of Mrs. Stetson’s
prominence today’s action was regarded in Church circles here as the most
drastic in the history of the denomination.”
She was charged with “malpractice” and with having put “personality
above principle.”
The Church of Christ, Scientist had not heard the last of
Augusta E. Stetson.
She continued to preach from her parlor to adherents whom
the newspapers deemed “Stetsonites.” In
July 1910 sixteen practitioners “who were identified with and supported Mrs.
Augusta Stetson in her controversy with the First Church of Christ, Scientist”
were also dropped from membership by the Boston directors. A month earlier fifteen other members had already had been dropped from the church’s membership.
Later that year Augusta Stetson must have enjoyed smug vengeance
upon the reading of Mary Baker Eddy’s will.
On December 19 The New York Times ran an article headlined “Mrs. Eddy’s
Jewels Go To Mrs. Stetson.” Eddy had left
Augusta Stetson her “crown of diamonds” breastpin; a token of friendship even
after all that had passed.
With Mary Baker Eddy gone, Stetson opened the debate as to
who should take her place at the head of the church. Stetson audaciously asserted that she was the
spiritual successor of Mary Baker Eddy.
She put forth her opinion in 1913 in a 1,200 page book.
“Temporarily, at least,” reported The Times, “the Trustees
of the local church and members of the Christian Science organization decided
to ignore Mrs. Stetson. Her opinion and
assertions were put forward in a volume which she has been writing in the four
years in which she has seen the throngs passing under her window to the
Christian Science Church, next door to her home, while she was forced to sing
her hymns and read her lessons to herself.”
photo by Alice Lum |
Augusta continued to be a thorn in the side of the
church. In December 1920 the memberships of the “Stetsonites”
who had been banished were ordered by the courts to be reinstated. The judgment said in part that they “were
dismissed on the flimsy pretext of non-attendance.”
In what could appear to be retaliation, the church laid
plans to build a wall between its property and Mrs. Stetson’s. Because her ornate cast iron fence
technically straddled the property lines, it would have to go. Augusta Stetson armed for war.
A series of heated letters were fired back and forth across
the property line and somehow were leaked to the press. Both parties cloaked their positions as
supporting what Mary Baker Eddy would have wanted. At least in the beginning.
Stetson wrote, for instance, “This proposed infringement
concerns those who, in love for the Cause and for their Leader, Mrs. Eddy, sacrificed their money and their time, and united with Mrs. Eddy and with me, in
erecting this Church. Therefore I feel
obliged scientifically to consider their protection, and shall appeal to
my God, whom I serve continually, to defend them and me, through avenues whom
He, God, may choose to execute his law of justice and equity.”
Finally, in September 1921, Augusta Stetson took the gloves
off. When workmen appeared on the
grounds of the church, she went to court.
Her attorney called the proposed wall “a spite fence” and succeeded in obtaining
a restraining order, stopping construction of the 15-foot high wall.
The judge said in part that the wall ”would be violative of
the rights of Mrs. Stetson, that it would serve no useful purpose and would
constitute an architectural monstrosity.”
As years passed, Augusta Stetson clung on to her aspirations
of succeeding Mary Baker Eddy. Unable to espouse
her views within the church, she turned to a campaign of advertising. According to The New York Times “Between 1920
and 1925 she is said on good authority to have spent more than $750,000 in
newspaper advertising alone. These announcements
were in the form of sermons, comments on letters or articles in which she
defended her teaching of Christian Science and sought to prove that she was
following in Mrs. Eddy’s footsteps and had been delegated by the founder as the
Church’s leader.”
In 1909 Augusta Stetson was barred from entering the heavy doors of the church she had led for years -- photo by Alice Lum |
But in her later
years her ideas grew strange. In 1927
she announced the coming of the millennium and “likewise, that she herself was
immortal.”
Her belief that “her body as well as her soul would never
die” proved inaccurate on October 12, 1928 when she died after ten weeks of
illness. The Times said in her obituary “Around
her centered a great internal quarrel which at one time threatened to disrupt
the Church, although she always insisted she was merely preserving Mrs. Eddy’s
teachings and had no intention of creating a schism.”
The First Church of Christ, Scientist wasted no time in taking
advantage of its option to buy Stetson’s marble mansion. It quickly resold the property to the
Sprevbel Realty Corporation for $180,000.
All ties between the church and Augusta E. Stetson were finally severed.
The First Church of Christ, Scientist settled into decades,
finally, of no undo publicity. It
appeared in the newspapers once again in 1989 when Larry Hogue, a homeless man
of the neighborhood, descended into a drug-induced rage. Residents had noticed his mental illness
worsen over a period of years. More than a dozen times police had taken him
to psychiatric emergency rooms or to jail following violent outbursts; but he always
returned to the neighborhood.
Delirious on alcohol, cocaine or some other drug, he began
smashing rocks through the stained glass windows of First Church
of Christ, Scientist. Before he could be
stopped he had caused between $10,000 and $20,000 in damages.
In 1993 the congregation was still in the process of
repairing the windows as well as correcting problems with the granite steeple. The problem was money. The congregation that Augusta Stetson had
grown to 1,200 now had about 30 or 40 people at Sunday services. The New York Landmarks Conservancy awarded
the church an $80,000 grant to determine the extent of damage and recommend
repairs.
photo by Alice Lum |
In May 2001 the First Church of Christ, Scientist building
became home to the Crenshaw Christian Center East. The
Center is a branch of the ministry founded by Pastor Frederick K. C. Price in
South Los Angeles on the site of the former Pepperdine University campus.
UPDATE: In 2014 the Crenshaw Christian Center sold the historic church for $26 million; a tidy $12 million more than the California-based center had paid for it. Because the building is protected by landmark status, it could not be destroyed. But its century-old interiors could be.
The purchasing developer announced plans to convert the historic structure into between 20 and 30 luxury residences. The only restrictions, since the interiors are not landmarked, were that the facade must remain intact and intrinsic details like the stained glass windows be preserved.
The massacre of this beautiful and important structure represents just the latest in a string of ungodly transformations of historic religious buildings into posh residential projects.
UPDATE: A preservation movement spearheaded by LandmarkWest! blocked the conversion to apartments. In 2018 the building was purchased by the Children's Museum of Manhattan as its new home.
UPDATE: In 2014 the Crenshaw Christian Center sold the historic church for $26 million; a tidy $12 million more than the California-based center had paid for it. Because the building is protected by landmark status, it could not be destroyed. But its century-old interiors could be.
The purchasing developer announced plans to convert the historic structure into between 20 and 30 luxury residences. The only restrictions, since the interiors are not landmarked, were that the facade must remain intact and intrinsic details like the stained glass windows be preserved.
In June 2014 salvage workers scurry to dismantle the pipe organ as demolition of the magnificent interiors looms -- photo courtesy of Jim Lewis |
UPDATE: A preservation movement spearheaded by LandmarkWest! blocked the conversion to apartments. In 2018 the building was purchased by the Children's Museum of Manhattan as its new home.
Sad to see the gutted interiors and destruction of the pipe organ in 2020. Looks like the Children's Museum obtained permission to remove the historic stained glass windows (including the main facade's John LaFarge stained glass window) which were supposed to be preserved according to agreements with the Landmarks Preservation Commission. Sadly the landmarks Commission has fallen asleep pn the job and allowed many an historic structure to be demolished over the past 10 plus years when the construction boom in Manhattan went unchecked.
ReplyDeletehttps://untappedcities.com/2018/08/02/inside-the-abandoned-first-church-of-christ-scientist-to-be-converted-into-childrens-museum-of-manhattan/