In 1887 development of the Upper West Side was picking up
speed after the Panic of 1873 had brought construction nearly to a standstill. Now, lured by improved transportation, new
sewer lines, and street paving, developers rapidly filled blocks with rows of
upscale and middle-class homes.
But not all of the Upper West Side was so comfortable. The neighborhood that somehow acquired the
nickname San Juan Hill stretched roughly from 59th Street to 65th,
and from Amsterdam Avenue to 11th Avenue. While New York’s other
grittiest neighborhoods--Hell’s Kitchen immediately to the south, Mulberry Bend
and Five Points—were made up of a mix of ethnicities, San Juan Hill’s residents
were almost exclusively black. It was a district of gang
violence, bloodshed, poverty and hopelessness.
With development came the need for stores, schools and
churches. The West Presbyterian Church
on 42nd Street took a page from its Episcopalian and Roman Catholic
counterparts and laid plans for a mission church.
On January 6, 1884 a meeting was held in the church, led by
its well-known pastor the Rev. Dr. John R. Paxton. Frank Leslie’s Sunday Magazine described it
as “a meeting in the interest of church extension in this city.” The magazine noted that “The need of new churches
on the east and west sides…was spoken of in detail.”
For the West Side the church chose the plot of land at No.
152 West 66th Street; on the eastern fringe of San Juan Hill. And for its architect it selected J. C. Cady
& Company. Josiah Cleaveland Cady,
who was known professionally as J. Cleaveland Cady, designed a wide variety of
structures—from hotels and libraries to churches and synagogues. In 1887 he put pencil to paper for the design
of what would become the Church of the Good Shepherd.
It would be another six years before the church became a
reality. On February 4, 1893 The Evening
World reported “The new Church of the Good Shepherd, on Sixty-sixth street,
west of the Boulevard, will be dedicated at 11 o’clock to-morrow morning.” It added “The church is a branch of Dr.
Paxton’s West Presbyterian Church on Forty-second street.”
Costing $90,000 (in the neighborhood of $2.5 million today),
it was capable of seating 750 worshipers.
Cady had produced a charming Italian Romanesque structure of
light-colored brick. The New-York
Tribune called it “characteristic of many old Italian churches.” Indeed, it shared many elements of country
churches of the Southern Sicilian Romanesque style.
Within its first years the mission church seems to have done
what it was intended to do—serve the underprivileged residents of San Juan
Hill. But that success came with a
cost. On May 16, 1900 the annual meeting
of the congregation of the West Presbyterian Church was held. Reports were read concerning the activities
of the church’s various organizations.
The New-York Tribune reported on the following morning that “Mrs.
Hannah’s report of the work in the Church of the Good Shepherd, a mission of
the West Presbyterian Church was very gratifying.” But, it admitted, in a not-so-Christian
response to African American worshipers, many congregants had left. “In reading a report of the pastor of the
Church of the Good Shepherd, Dr. Evans said that the flood of colored population
in the neighborhood of the church caused a falling off, and that 129 names had
been stricken from the rolls. Still, the
church was prosperous.”
In 1926 pastor Rev. Dr. F. R. Clee was called upon to lead
an unusual funeral service. William
Henry Johnson had died of pneumonia at the age of 84 in Bellevue Hospital. His funeral was held at the Campbell’s
Funeral Church nearby at 66th Street and Broadway, on April 28.
Better known as “Zip—What Is It?,” he was called by The New York Times “the famous freak, one of the first to be exhibited by P. T. Barnum back in
the ‘60s.” The newspaper’s account of
the funeral was less reverential than sarcastic.
“Circus sideshow folk, giants, fat girls, sword swallowers, tattooed
men and rubber-neck men filled the chapel, and their faces showed their sorrow.” The article listed performers who had come
from as far away as Chicago. “Then there was Alfonso, the human ostrich, who
ate glass and other things for thirty-five years alongside of Zip at the
sideshows of the circus and at Coney Island…Other circus freaks who attended
were Lillian Maloney, the Albino girl; Carrie Holt, fat girl; Gus Birchman, the
iron claw man; Frank Graef, tattooed man; Ajax, sword swallower; Joe Kramer,
the rubber neck man, and Maharajah, the ‘This way, laydees and gentl-el-men’
lecturer of the Seaside circus sideshow of Coney Island, where Zip spent his
Summers.”
Johnson’s funeral was, despite the description, conducted
with dignity. Organist and tenor
Alexander Blander sang “Lead Kindly Light” and “Going Home,” from Anton Dvorak’s New World Symphony.
On November 13, 1932 the 45th anniversary of the
Church of the Good Shepherd was celebrated.
In his sermon that morning, the Rev. William F. Wefer questioned whether
things had really changed much in nearly half a century.
“A striking sameness may be noticed in the years 1887 and
1932. About forty-five years ago we had
sweeping Democratic victories just as we had this past week. Charges of political corruption were hurled
about then.
“The problems of that day were much the same as our own. Fashions may change, but there is still the
clamor over women’s dress. Today we have
gangsters, then we had gangs. Today we
have speakeasies, then we had ‘blind pigs.’
The ‘by-cycle-scorchers’ have given way to the reckless automobile
drivers.”
Certainly one thing that had not changed was San Juan
Hill. The 1940 census indicated that the
neighborhood was still exclusively black.
Residents still struggled and families were confronted with
the problems of violence, gangs and crime.
Twelve-year old Martha Punt was one of the local girls who
tried to better herself. She regularly
attended Sunday School at the Church of the Good Shepherd. Martha lived with her mother, Elizabeth
James, who was separated from her second husband. The girl tried her best to survive in the
squalid neighborhood. In December 1943 a
63-year old street cleaner was accused of “trying to impair the child’s morals,”
according to The New York Times. The
charge was dismissed on December 19.
Martha Punt would never make it to her teen years.
A month later, on the morning of January 20, 1943, her brutally
battered body was found in the “poorly furnished” fourth floor apartment of two
kitchen workers, at No. 513 West 59th Street. She had been beaten about the head with a
claw hammer and her throat cut.
The tragedy brought together at least some of the
locals. Three days later The New York
Times reported “Martha Punt will not be buried in potter’s field, for the
people of San Juan Hill yesterday were able to raise $138 to give the slain
12-year old schoolgirl a fitting funeral service and burial.
“Even strangers strolled into Abe Sable’s bar and grill at 2
Amsterdam Avenue to deposit dollar bills and coins in a beer container to help
the family of the girl, who was brutally beaten to death in an apartment at 513
West Fifty-ninth Street Wednesday morning.”
The pastor of Good Shepherd, the Rev. Charles E. Souter,
officiated at Martha’s funeral.
By now the name of the church had become Good Shepherd-Faith
Presbyterian Church. When Faith Chapel, another
of West Presbyterian Church’s missions, gave up its building at No. 423 West 46th
Street, the two congregations merged.
Around 1953 the Comic Opera Guild began giving presentations
at Good Shepherd. It was the beginning
of a tradition of musical concerts and plays here. But both concerts and religious services
nearly came to an end when Robert Moses laid plans for his ambitious Lincoln
Center project.
Moses had been approached by Fordham University and the New
York Philharmonic which were seeking venues in Mid-Manhattan. His solution was to eradicate a slum and
replace it with a fine arts complex. He
faced opposition by some groups—including the Lincoln Square Chamber of
Commerce and the Good Shepherd-Faith Presbyterian Church.
On May 9, 1957 400 people attended at rally at the church to
protest the redevelopment project. While
the envisioned Lincoln Center would replace urban blight; it would also put
more than 40,000 residents on the street.
The local groups were defeated and the city began demolition
of 16.3 acres of buildings—all except the Good Shepherd-Faith Presbyterian
Church. The stubborn little building
managed to hold out as everything around it was bulldozed to rubble.
The church continues its role as a performance center—in the
1990s productions by the Seventh Sign Theater Company were staged here. Ever changing with the neighborhood, it
became home as well to the Korean Central Church and the Catholic Apostolic Parroquia
del Espirit Santo y de Nuestra Senora de la Caridad. The three Sunday services are performed--one each in
English, Korean and Spanish.
The church is dwarfed by the 1980s structures that surround it. |
The last vestige of San Juan Hill in the immediate Lincoln
Center area, J. Cleaveland Cady’s remarkable Italian Romanesque mission church
is a miraculous and stunning survivor.
photographs taken by the author
Actually, the Good Shepherd Church remains an active performing arts theater. For years, in the 80's and 90's, it was also a home for the marvelous Jupiter Symphony - founded and directed by maverick American musician Jens Nygaard. It continues to host chamber orchestra performances and recitals, all separate from its religious schedule.
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