John H. Talman was 88 years old when he died in 1865 “possessed
of great wealth acquired by successful Wall-street and real estate operations,”
as noted in The New York Times. When his
widow, Sarah Somarindyck Talman, died two years later that fortune passed to
the couple’s unmarried daughter, Caroline.
The newspaper would later remark “The great bulk of his property has
fallen into the worthy hands of Miss Caroline, his only surviving daughter, by
whom it is being mainly devoted to lasting works of piety and benevolence.”
Recognizing the wealthy woman’s “piety and benevolence,”
Episcopal minister Rev. Isaac Tuttle approached her with a proposal in 1870. Plans were underway to move St. Luke’s Home for
Aged Ladies from Greenwich Village to the sparsely-developed Upper East
Side. The elderly women, Rev. Tuttle
explained to Caroline Talman, would have no place in which to worship.
Caroline loosened her purse strings and in June 1870
construction began. A little over four
months later The Times reported that “The corner-stone of the Talman Memorial
Church of the Beloved Disciple and Home for Indigent Females was laid
yesterday, at the corner of Madison-avenue and Eighty-ninth-street, with all
the solemn impressiveness of the Episcopalian ritual.” Caroline intended the church to be a memorial
to her father.
Both the Home and the church were designed in Gothic Revival
style. The architectural firm of Hubert
& Pirsson was responsible for the church and, assumedly, the four-story Home
as well. The Home sat on the corner of
Madison Avenue and 89th Street with the church and rector’s
residence directly to its east.
While the Home could house 70 residents (including "all
the appliances necessary to the comfort of the inmates"); the church structure
was more ambitious. The completed
structure would, according to The Times, accommodate 5,500 persons.
The newspaper noted that “It was deemed unadvisable to erect
aisles and transept, but it will contain a clerestory and a chancel, and its
general interior will be fitted up with regard to the comfort and convenience
of the congregations.” Construction was
projected to take a year from the cornerstone laying at a cost of about $50 to
$75,000.
Although the church was consecrated on November 6, 1873,
finishing touches would go on for years.
Additional details like the memorial windows and tablets added to the cost
and on March 30, 1880, when the Church of the Beloved Disciple was
incorporated, the final cost to Caroline Talman had risen to $150,000—about $3
million today. The Times called it “a
magnificent ecclesiastical edifice…splendidly furnished.”
Despite its size (100 feet deep and 70 feet wide) the Church
of the Beloved Disciple managed to remain quaint; with all the charm of an
English country chapel. An impressive
square stone tower, 125 feet tall, vied with the church building for visual
appeal.
The final touch came on October 31, 1881. Caroline Talman, who oversaw every detail of
the decoration and design of the church, had commissioned the architectural sculpture
firm of Moffitt & Doyle to execute the reredos—“a most attractive ornament
to the chancel of this free church,” said a newspaper.A late 20th century restoration may be responsible for the distracting contrast in the tower and the church proper. |
The New York Times noted “The edifice, with all of its
appointments, inside as well as outside, together with the memorial windows and
tablets, and even the reredos, just completed, are from the original plans and
suggestions of Miss Talman. That lady’s
generosity and taste are everywhere manifested in the condition and work of
this church.”
Perhaps the most attention-getting sermon delivered in the
church was from a guest speaker. The
Rev. George F. Degen of Arkansas preached here on July 27, 1890 about, of all
things, baseball. The sports-loving
minister grabbed the congregation’s attention by endorsing healthful
activities. “The Puritan who
everlastingly sang psalms and who denounced healthful amusements as a trifling
with one’s eternal destiny contradicts every natural instinct of the heart of
man, and either drives men away from all religious teaching or makes unnatural
Christians of them. God tells us there
is a time to laugh and sing as well as a time to pray.”
He then compared the game of life to a game of
baseball. “In each case there is a race
to run, and it is to be made by stages and beset with difficulties at every
point. The goal for which players strive
is called the home plate. The goal to which
we battle our way through life his heaven.
Sometimes it happens that when a man takes his stand at the bat he
strikes out. But he does not give
up. By and by he makes a manly effort,
and perhaps he knocks a home run.”
Reverend Degen ended what a newspaper deemed “a unique
sermon” saying “Happy may he be who, after many trials and struggles…hears the
blessed word of the Divine umpire – ‘Safe.’”
By the time of Degen’s baseball-inspired sermon the Upper
West Side around the church was developing with high-end residences. No longer simply a church of convenience for
the aged women of the Home, the Church of the Beloved Disciple served many moneyed
families. Episcopal rectors often
enjoyed an enviable social status and such was the case of the Rev. Dr. Henry
Merlin Barbour.
The Gothic Revival parish house and rectory were added two decades later. |
In January 1898 Rev. Barbour’s daughter, Elizabeth, married
Hutchinson Southgate, the son of Horace Southgate, the Episcopal Bishop of
Constantinople. It was what The New York
Times deemed “an elaborate church wedding,” followed by a wedding breakfast in
the rectory next door. The newspaper
noted that the newlyweds “will make their home at the rectory after their
wedding trip until April 1, and will receive their friends on Tuesdays.”
Also living in the commodious rectory were the rector’s
sons, 25-year old Henry Grosvenor Barbour and M. Wallace Barbour. A tangled web of family ties ended in tragedy
two years later when young Henry visited Elizabeth and Hutchinson in Good
Ground, Long Island, where they had moved.
Hutchinson Southgate had previously adopted a young woman,
Helen Forbes. She later told officials
that she used the name Southgate “while with him,” but “Subsequently, owing to
a private difference, I left the family and, the adoption having been annulled,
resumed my own name, Forbes.”
While visiting the Southgates, Henry Barbour and Helen
Forbes became acquainted. “We became
good friends and boated and fished and rode and walked together,” she
said. Their friendship seems to have
gone further than was appropriate for the son of a well-respected rector; for
on September 14, 1900 he was found dead in a New York hotel with a gunshot to
his head. He and Helen had registered as
“G. N. Bartlett and wife, New York.”
An investigation would discover that the couple had planned
a mutual suicide; but after Henry ineffectively shot Helen in the chest, then
shot himself; she fled the scene. The
Rev. Dr. Barbour said of the tragedy “He was a severe sufferer from neuralgia,
and this, combined with a mad infatuation for a woman, led him to his
death. It would have been a great relief
to my soul if this had been a murder instead of a suicide.”
On November 3, 1924 it was announced that the Church of the
Heavenly Rest and the Church of the Beloved Disciple would merge. “Each will sell its present property
eventually and the churches will jointly build a great new Episcopal edifice costing
about $3,000,000 at Fifth Avenue and Ninetieth Street,” reported The Times.
During the last service of the Church of the Beloved
Disciple on February 10, 1929 the Rev. Henry Darlington, rector of the combined
parishes, recalled the day when the building had been consecrated. “There were but few houses within a mile of
it, and all streets leading to its site were imperfectly paved.”
The church building would not be vacant long. On October 6, 1929 dedication services were
held as the edifice became the new home of the Reformed Church of Harlem—the sixth building of
the congregation since it was organized in 1660. During the six months since the congregation
of the Church of the Beloved Disciple left, renovations had been done. Among those was the installation of Dutch
tiled flooring in the sanctuary.
Shortly after the Reformed Church completed its renovations, the photographer made special note of the "Dutch tile floor." -- photograph by Wurts Bros., from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWL9EEDD&SMLS=1&RW=1366&RH=579 |
More than a century after its completion, a restoration
project was begun in 1989 to address repointing of the masonry and restoration
of other elements. The decade-long
process eventually included major work on the tower, restoration of the stained
glass, and refurbishing of the choir and chancel areas.
Among the well-dressed worshipers filing in and out of the
stone church in the decades just before had been Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and her
children. In July 1999 Senator Edward M.
Kennedy stood before the mass of about 350 mourners here to eulogize John F.
Kennedy, Jr. The “simple stone church,”
as N. R. Kleinfield described it in his report on the funeral, became the
center of attention for the nation for a day.
Since that day, the charming Gothic church has returned to
its quiet existence on a side street of the Upper East Side—a little known
treasure awaiting discovery by urban adventurers.
photographs taken by the author
photographs taken by the author
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