On August 1, 1859, when Catharine Vanderpool sold the five plots
of land at the southwest corner of Madison Avenue and 31st Street to
the Madison Avenue Baptist Church, Murray Hill had already supplanted the Bond
Street and St. James Park areas as a fashionable address. The congregation built an imposing brick
church on the plot which reflected the substantial wealth of its members.
The ivy-covered Madison Avenue Baptist Church at around the turn of the last century. The structure directly behind the church (left) would become the site of the new parish house -- photograph by Byron Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UP1GI4HYX2&SMLS=1&RW=1366&RH=579 |
Almost half a century later, on November 14, 1905, the
church announced plans for a new parish house.
The house directly behind the church, at No. 30 East 31st
Street, which was once the home of esteemed physician Joseph T. Evans, would be
razed for the new building. The New-York
Tribune reported “It is to cost $150,000, and work on the structure is to begin
this winter.”
The trustees remained arcane regarding the name of the
architect. “The trustees held a meeting
recently, at which the plans for the new building were revised and turned over
to expert draughtsmen,” said the New-York Tribune on November 14. “The new building will be of brick and stone,
conforming as nearly as possible to the design of the old church. An entire floor of the building will be given
up to a gymnasium and a hall for public entertainments. The other floors will have boys’ and young
men’s clubs, girls’ clubs, a library and reading room, besides all the features
incident to institutional work as carried out on the upper East Side.”
It was proposed that construction, scheduled to start in
December 1905, would be completed by the summer. That proved to be an optimistic timeline and
the building was not dedicated until January 6, 1907. It came in right on budget, with the
structure and its equipment costing about $150,000—or about $3.4 million today.
The promise that the parish house would conform “as nearly
as possible to the design of the old church” resulted in a near-copy of the unusual
entrance portico, a brick facade and arched openings. Other than that, the purely Edwardian
structure was a quaint asymmetrical five-story concoction of Romanesque Revival
with a touch of Mediterranean. Stained class filled the first floor openings,
including a spectacular radiant half-round overlight above the entrance
door. Carved limestone panels beneath
the three-story arched openings, intricately decorated spandrels, a deeply
overhanging cornice supported by remarkable cast brackets and a roof garden
with pergola gave the parish house an exotic air. Three small limestone balconies with iron
railings accentuated the fifth floor windows.
The entrance portico was a near-match to that of the church (the church building can be seen to the right). The extensive pergola on the roof is seen in this photograph taken shortly after the building's completion -- photograph by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/Collection/30-East-31st-Street.-Madison-Avenue-Baptist-Church.-2F3XC52X72.html |
Within the parish house was Saunder’s Hall where every
Sunday morning Dr. W. W. White taught “Everybody’s Bible Class.” Dr. White had no intentions of spoon feeding
his students the lessons. A week in
advance they received their assignments for the following Sunday. On January 12, 1908 the assignment read:
I.
Glance
through the Gospel by John with a view to anticipating the Outline to be given
by the Teacher. A diagram of the book
will be drawn while the Outline is being given.
II.
Taking John I:1-18, consider:
a.
What Progress in thought is apparent in this
passage as a whole?
b.
What Propositions does this passage contain?
c.
What Parallelisms in though are here?
d.
What Purpose does this Prologue serve?
e.
What Problems do these verses present?
The cost to attend Everybody’s Bible Class was $3.00 in
total—about double the average working man’s weekly wage.
Church women (and one man) pose inside the newly-completed parish house in 1907. The building boasts electric lighting and to the left a handsome and clever folding wall with stained glass panels can be seen. -- photograph by Byron Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UP1GI4HYX2&SMLS=1&RW=1366&RH=579 |
In 1914 the parish house became central to the newly formed
Vacation Bible School movement. That
year 40 schools opened after July 4. “The
growth of this line of Christian endeavor has been rapid,” said the New-York
Tribune on June 27, 1914, “and this city has been a leader in it.”
The newspaper noted “It has led in an important advance this year in having in the Madison Avenue Baptist Church parish house a training
school for teachers in these schools.
Practically all other schools in the city profit by this training
school, which has had forty scholars.”
Fabulous filigree brackets uphold the overhanging cornice |
Saunder’s Hall was not relegated mere to Sunday and Bible School classes. On February 23, 1916 The New York Times reported on Frederic Poole’s reading of “The Yellow Jacket” for the benefit of the missionary fund of the Woman’s Society of the Madison Avenue Baptist Church. A year later, with the country’s entrance into World War I just two months away, a heated debate was held concerning compulsory military training.
A year later, with the nation embroiled in the conflict,
Worth Marion Tippy published The Church and the Great War. He described the Madison Avenue Baptist
Church as “an example of a down-town congregation readjusting itself to changed
conditions, with a modern parish house, and extensive neighbourhood work.”
Tippy was taken with Dr. Eaton, the pastor, who had been
named Chairman of the National Service Section of the United States Shipping
Board. “Dr. Eaton was also influential
in forming public opinion in New York before entering this specialized field,
and was outspoken for the Allies before the Unit4ed States entered the war,” he
noted.
The congregation, he wrote, “is also active in war causes,
Liberty Loans, War Savings, Red Cross, etc.
Dinner is served to enlisted men on Tuesday evenings and the club rooms
of the parish house are thrown open to them.”
In addition, the women of the church met in the parish house on Tuesdays
and Wednesdays as a unit of the Red Cross auxiliary.
Somewhat surprisingly, the hall was also used by the
National Indian Association’s annual meetings.
The 14th such meeting was held here on December 4, 1919 and
The Indian’s Friend remarked that “The afternoon session was interspersed with
two vocal solos by Louise Maitland of the Royal Albert Hall and Queen’s Hall
Concerts, London. Mrs. Maitland rendered
most impressively and in a voice of remarkable range and sweetness Gounod’s ‘O
Divine Redeemer’ and ‘Ave Maria.’”
In December 1921 the Board of the American Baptist Home Mission Society held an all-day meeting at the church, following by a dinner in the parish house. One hundred and fifty guests were served dinner prepared by the church women. “In the evening stereopticon views were given of the Architectural Department and of the proposed boys’ camp work,” said the Convention report.
As more and more of the refined homes between Fifth and Park
Avenues were demolished, the Madison Avenue Baptist Church suffered. But in mid-century residents began returning—not
to private houses but to modern apartment buildings. On May 20, 1955 The New York Times noted “Older
churches have experienced a rebirth, such as the Madison Avenue Baptist Church,
30 East Thirty-first Street, New York City, which has been revived by a new
apartment building in its neighborhood.”
By now the grand church structure had been gone for nearly a
quarter of a century. The parish house
survived and in the 1950s began a “Friday Film Festival,” described in 1962 by
pastor Rev. John S. Bone as “an experiment in the use of prize-winning secular
art films and carefully chosen shorts to delineate basic human values.”
Among the films screened that year were “The Life and Death
of a Hollywood Extra," “Weegee’s New York,” and “On the Waterfront.”
The church’s focus towards the arts was evident when in 1971
the first performance of “Jesus Christ Superstar” was staged here and in 1978
when the Bel Canto Opera Company made the old parish house its home.
Then in July 2013 the Madison Avenue Baptist Church put its
architecturally-unique and consummately charming parish house on the
market. Trustee Faith Grill, in a letter
to parishioners, cited “exorbitant upkeep cost.” By now the New York Theatre Ballet leased the
fifth floor, and the Dokoudovsky New York Conservatory of Dance used the
second.