from King's Handbook of New York City, 1893 (copyright expired) |
In 1865 the Rev. Henry A. Neely, assistant minister of the
fashionable Trinity Chapel on West 25th Street considered the
neighborhood just to the northwest.
Described by The New York Times as “thickly-populated,” the area was
filled with crime and vice. It would
earn the unflattering nickname “Hell’s Kitchen.” Rev. Neely recognized a need to extend
religious outreach into the gritty neighborhood.
He was given permission to establish a mission and in the
fall of that year enlisted the assistance of Rev. Thomas H. Sill, then Rector
of Grace Church in Canton, New York. The
two began “pastoral visitations” of Hell’s Kitchen and on the first Sunday in
Advent on December 3, 1865, they held a service in a room above a lager beer
saloon on West 32nd Street near Seventh Avenue.
The priests moved quickly.
Within two months a Sunday School was established and services continued
there for almost a year. In the fall of
1866 a rented hall was taken on the northwest corner of Broadway and 34th
Street for church services.
The successful work of the humble mission did not go unnoticed. In 1868 the 100-square foot plot of land at
the northwest corner of Seventh Avenue and 39th Street was purchased
for a new “free chapel.” In June that year,
$66,000 was appropriated by the vestry of Trinity Church “to put the project
into effect,” according to the 1950 A
History of the Parish of Trinity Church in the City of New York.
The neighborhood may have been notorious and its residents
impoverished; but the vestrymen went to one of New York City’s most esteemed
architects for the design. Before long,
as noted in the History, “the plans
for St. Chrysostom’s Chapel and School House, as submitted by Richard M.
Upjohn, were approved.”
On October 28 the cornerstone was laid by Bishop Horatio
Potter and the now-Bishop Neely. At the
time only the foundation walls had been erected; nevertheless reporters were told “It
will be of the Gothic style of architecture, the material being brownstone with
Cleveland stone trimmings. The windows
will be of stained glass and the interior of the building will be decorated in
polychrome. It will probably cost
$60,000 and will be finished next summer.”
The prediction that the building would be “finished next
summer” was optimistic. Although the
first service was held in the new chapel on November 7, 1869; it would be a
full decade before construction was truly complete.
The almost perfectly square plot resulting in a boxier and
heavier structure than one would expect from Upjohn. The architect placed the front of the chapel
building on 39th Street, rather than the avenue. The corner section, between two hefty gables,
morphed into a pyramidal roof supporting a thin steeple and belfry. Upjohn reduced the visual density of the
blocky church by interrupting the brownstone with bandcourses of contrasting,
lighter colored stone.
The stained glass windows are often attributed to the
English firm of Heaton, Butler and Bayne; which had installed a window in
Westminster Abbey a year earlier. For
the indigent worshipers living in the lowest of housing, the Gothic
interiors of St. Chrysostom’s Chapel would have been uplifting.
photo by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult&VBID=24UAYWGP5CFI&SMLS=1&RW=1536&RH=770 |
Rev. Thomas H. Sill became pastor of the mission--now
chapel--that he had devoted his life to.
On December 26, 1874 The New York Times remarked on the Christmas Day
decorations. The newspaper noted “this
chapel is frequented by many of the humbler members of the community in whose
midst it is situated.”
“The floral and evergreen decorations were elaborate and
exhibited much care and good taste in their arrangement. The windows were transformed into miniature
groves of fir, and the galleries, lectern, pulpit, font, chancel rails, and
gas-fittings were tastefully decorated with laurel, cedar, and palm. Festoons of evergreens depended from the
pillars, and a rood screen of laurel divided the choir and nave. The altar was decorated with a beautiful
floral cross of white japonicas, entwined with smilax."
But the journalist did not totally approve. “While the elaborate decorations in evergreens
were executed with good taste, the same cannot be said of the other adornments.
For instance, the effect of the beautiful rood screen and cross—a beautiful and
unique feature in church ornamentation—was completely marred by the tawdry decorations
displayed over the altar and on the pillars in the body of the church.”
New York churches with wealthy congregations closed for the
summer months—their members all having left the city for summer estates and
resorts. Such was not the case for St.
Chrysostom’s Chapel whose indigent worshipers suffered through the hot months
in near-insufferable conditions. And so it
was, instead, repairs and final decoration that forced services out of the
chapel proper and into the school room next door in the summer of 1879.
“The walls of the church, which had become badly discolored,
have been renewed, and the plaster ceilings have been replaced by
wood-work. The new walls are to be
tastefully decorated in tints, new gas-fixtures are to be put up, and the
interior of the church will present a greatly improved and more cheerful
appearance,” reported The New York Times on August 3.
The repairs and improvements were completed just in time for
the consecration on October 30, 1879.
The services were conducted by Bishop Potter, “in an impressive manner,”
according to The New York Times, assisted by about 25 clergymen. The
work of Rev. Sill and the Chapel’s guilds, school and the “corps of lay visitors
of both sexes [who] now assist the clergy in their ministrations from house to
house” was noted. Since the mission was
founded there had been 1,314 baptisms, and 345 marriages. The membership of just 375 was, perhaps,
understandable given the crime- and vice-ridden neighborhood.
The funerals and weddings of the lower classes here went
largely unnoticed by New York newspapers.
But that would not be the case on May 8, 1881. Poet William Ross Wallace was widely-popular
and his most famous poem “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is the Hand That Rules
The World,” which praised motherhood, touched the heartstrings of Victorian
literary taste. His funeral at St. Chrysostom’s
Chapel drew reporters; and the journalist from The New York Times reported on
the event in terms worthy of the poet himself.
“A few minutes before 1 o’clock P. M. yesterday, a hearse,
followed by two carriages, drew up at the Gothic entrance of St. Chrysostom’s
Chapel…and a coffin was lifted upon the shoulders of four stalwart men in black
and borne down the aisle…A lady in deep black, leaning upon he arm of her son,
and a young girl, supported by an elderly gentleman, followed the coffin to the
altar, convulsed at intervals with subdued sobs.”
The description dripped with 19th century sentiment. “The Rev. Mr. Sill conducted the services,
and at their expiration the casket was opened that friends might take a
fare-well of the strongly-marked and well-remembered features. The face was emaciated by suffering.”
In Victorian New York, church leaders often looked with
derision on actors and some banned their congregations from attending the
theater. Rev. Thomas Sill, however, was
an ardent supporter of the art and St. Chrysostom’s Chapel frequently was the
spot for the marriages and funerals of thespians.
Weddings here, in general, drew the suspicion of the
New-York Tribune in 1884, which sent an investigative reporter on the
case. On September 8 it reported “Some
comment has recently been passed upon the fact that St. Chrysostom’s Chapel, in
this city, is apparently much sought after by runaway couples and others
desirous of entering the matrimonial state as expeditiously as possible. Two
cases in particular happening within a few days of each other seem to have
intensified the feeling to such an extent that a Tribune reporter a day or two
ago made some inquiries at the chapel.”
The reporter was concerned, specifically, about “an actress,
who married a man who already had a wife, and a Brooklyn organist who eloped
with a young member of his choir.”
The assistant rector was undaunted by the suggestive
questioning. “I regret both these cases
extremely, but were I to be placed again in the same circumstances, I should
act in precisely the same manner.” He
told the reporter that he had been assured that the wife of the first man was
dead. And, he stressed, if he were to
deny the rites of matrimony to these couples, they would go to a Justice of the
Peace, “to be united without the blessing of the Church, or to something worse.” (“Something worse,” of course, alluded to
living in sin.)
On November 29, 1885 Rev. Thomas H. Sill celebrated the 20th
anniversary of the chapel’s founding.
Sill recounted to the crowded church the work being done by its 13
guilds—groups which worked within the community. The Times commented at the time, “A
considerable proportion of the congregation is colored.”
Yet another guild was added in 1894—the Guild of St. Agnes. On March 29 that year The Evening World
described the “admirable organization.” It
was organized “for women and girls who cannot or should not go out at night. It meets every Friday at 3 o’clock. The members are entertained in various ways
and taught sewing, housewifely ways, good humor and good manners.”
The cost of running St. Chrysostom’s Chapel and its related
school and organizations could not be, obviously, supported by its needy
congregation. Trinity Church provided
the funds and a sermon in May 1897 Rev. Sill gave his appreciation.
“Notwithstanding the tendency of parishes to follow fashion
and wealthy uptown, Trinity has remained to minister to the wants and needs of
the population that also must remain…For thirty years St. Chrysostom’s has
ministered to this section of the city, crowded as it is with tenements and
poorer dwellings. For my own part, I am
profoundly grateful that for nearly thirty years I have been permitted to have
my part in the work here that has ever kept me busy.”
That work included a long list of organizations and
groups. Among these were St. Chrysostom’s
Chapel Dispensary with an attending physician who visited the sick poor at their
homes; the Guild for Intercessory Prayer (a Trinity Church pamphlet said “Its
name implies its object”); the St. Chrysostom District Visiting Society; The
Guild of St. Margaret which assisted he sick and assisted in their burials; and
The Guild of St. Cyprian, “a mutual benefit society for colored men and women,
providing for its sick and burying its dead;” and others.
In 1899 the Actors’ Church Alliance began meeting here. The group was founded in 1892 by Walter Bentley,
a priest who had been a Shakespearean actor.
The announcement that services would be held in St. Chrysostom’s Chapel
on the evening of October 15, 1899 noted “All members of the dramatic
profession are invited.”
Around his time St. Chrysostom’s received a new member. Unlike the majority of the congregants, the
unmarried Charlotte Fitch was, as described by the New-York Tribune, “wealthy
and of good family.” The middle-aged
spinster had lived in the family mansion in Coxsackle, New York until 1899 where
“her eccentricity kept her alone. He servants
would not stay,” according to the Tribune.
She moved to New York City and began attending St Chrysostom’s
Chapel. A bizarre obsession with Canon
John Harris Knowles quickly followed.
She began with writing letters to Knowles, asking him obscure points of
theology. He later said “then they became
more personal, until finally she was actually proposing to me.”
He said “She would sit in the congregation and glare at me
until I could hardly preach. She has
followed me in the street. I have actually
been afraid at times.” Knowles was not
the only person afraid of Charlotte Fitch.
“All the sextons knew her, and were usually afraid of her.”
After nearly five years of this behavior, Charlotte was
convinced that Canon Knowles proposed marriage to her in a veiled sermon. She tried to force her way into the vestry
rooms, and then on January 17, 1904 the New-York Tribune reported that she “pursued
him everywhere, has tried to force her way into his apartments, and lately
brought a Broadway policeman there, hoping to force an entrance.”
Canon Knowles tried to endure the woman’s delusions
privately, not wanting publicity for her family. But it was the family who
finally took action, after they were alerted to Charlotte’s mental condition
when she accused both Knowles and her brother-in-law of trying to poison her.
Charlotte’s sister, the wife of the Rev. Edwin S. De. Groat
Tompkins, filed a formal complaint and led police to St. Chrysostom’s Chapel on
January 16, 1904. “Miss Fitch struggled
and screamed when the policeman took her to the courtroom,” reported the
Tribune.
Canon Knowles told reporters that her family had “hoped to
have her taken to some private sanatorium without any fuss, but she slipped
away and came to the church this morning.
Then she tried to see me, and her sister had to send for a policeman.”
Charlotte Fitch was committed to Bellevue Hospital for “an
examination as to her sanity.” Peace was
restored to St. Chrysostom’s Chapel.
Even more press-worthy than the funeral of William Ross
Wallace was that of nine-year old Princess Isabella, daughter of King Andrew of
the Miskito Indians of Nicaragua on February 17, 1906. She had been sent from South American two
years earlier to attend the school on Amsterdam Avenue at 129th
Street. “Four children were selected from among the Miskito tribe to be
educated in this country and return to teach their fellows,” explained The New
York Times.
Little Isabella died in St. Mary’s Hospital from an attack
of appendicitis. Strangely, following
the St. Chrysostom’s Chapel funeral, her body was not returned to Nicaragua, but buried
in Brooklyn’s Mount Olivet Cemetery.
It was not only Father Thomas Sill who actively supported
the Actors’ Church Alliance. Somewhat
surprisingly, so did Bishop Potter. When
an entertainment was held by the group in the chapel’s parish hall on April 25,
1907 (attended by “more than a hundred persons,” according to The Times), the
bishop showed up personally. “Bishop
Potter, who has been working in co-operation with the organization to make the
fair a success, presented the alliance with an oil painting of himself. This will be raffled off at the fair to be
held at the Metropolitan Operation, beginning May 6,” said the newspaper.
Having served St. Chrysostom’s Chapel for 45 years, Rev.
Thomas Henry Sill died in St. Luke’s Hospital on April 6, 1910 at the age of
72. The New York Times remarked “No
clergyman in this city has been so long connected with the same church as Mr.
Sill was.”
Grateful congregants contributed what they could to erect a
monument to the beloved vicar. Two years
later, on November 10, 1912, a new altar, reredos and credence were dedicated
in Sills’ memory. But the memorial would
not last long.
While Hell’s Kitchen district to the west continued to be a
gritty and sordid neighborhood; the Seventh Avenue area surrounding St.
Chrysostom’s Chapel was becoming engulfed by the expanding Garment
District. In 1924 demolition began on
the Renwick-designed church.
The New York Times explained “St. Chrysostom’s Chapel…was
abandoned by Trinity Parish because of increasing commercial invasions of the
neighborhood. The officials of Trinity
Parish entered into an agreement with Mr. Sparks [of St. Clement’s Episcopal
Church on West 46th Street] to provide a church home for the members
of St. Chrysostom’s." In return, Trinity
paid for much-needed structural repairs of St. Clement’s.
On April 30, 1924 workmen broke open the old cornerstone and
pulled out the lead box placed there by Bishop Potter in 1868. Inside were “a Bible, a prayer book, a
convention journal of the diocese, canons of the church and copies of The New
York Times and The New York World, dated Oct. 28, 1868.” The box was taken to the Trinity Parish house
at No. 187 Fulton Street and placed in a vault.
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