Christ Church Cathedral (Indianapolis)#First church building

{{short description|Historic church in Indiana, United States}}

{{Infobox church

| name = Christ Church Cathedral

| fullname = The Cathedral Church of Christ

| image = Catedral iglesia de Cristo, Indianápolis, Estados Unidos, 2012-10-22, DD 01.jpg

| caption = Christ Church Cathedral in 2016

| former_names =

| denomination = Episcopal Church

| location = {{flagicon|USA}} Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana

| country = United States

| bishop = Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows

| dean = Gray Lesesne

| rector = Gray Lesesne

| diocese = Indianapolis

| district =

| founder =

| founded date =1837

| years built =1857

| architect =William Tinsley

| style = English Gothic Revival

| website = [http://www.cccindy.org cccindy.org]

| embedded = {{Infobox NRHP

| embed = yes

| name = Christ Church Cathedral

| nrhp_type = cp

| nocat = yes

| coordinates = {{coord|39|46|9|N|86|9|27|W|region:US_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}

| locmapin = USA Indianapolis central#USA Indianapolis#Indiana#USA

| built = 1857

| architect = William Tinsley

| architecture = English Gothic Revival

| added = July 10, 1973

| area = {{convert|0.3|acre}}

| refnum = 73000035{{NRISref|2009a}}

}}

}}

Christ Church Cathedral is the cathedral for the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis. Christ Church parish was formally organized in 1837. The present-day church building was erected in 1857 on Monument Circle at the center of downtown Indianapolis to replace the parish's first church built on the same site. Designed by architect William Tinsley, the English Gothic Revival-style structure is the oldest church building in Indianapolis and Marion County, Indiana, that has remained in continuous use. It is also the oldest building on Monument Circle. Christ Church is known for its music, especially its pipe organs, one of which was donated by Ruth Lilly, and its professional Choir of Men and Boys and Girls' Choir. The parish is also known for its community service, including an annual strawberry festival fundraiser and other charitable work. Christ Church Cathedral was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 10, 1973. It is located in the Washington Street-Monument Circle Historic District.

History

Indianapolis's first Episcopalians were meeting in several locations during the 1820s and 1830s when Christ Church parish, the first Protestant Episcopal parish in Indianapolis, was formally organized on July 13, 1837.{{cite book | author =Carl R. Stockton | title =Christ Church in Indiananpolis: A Selected Chronology | publisher =C. R. Stockton | year =1987 | location =Indianapolis, IN | page=3 }}{{cite book | author =Eli Lilly | title =History of the Little Church on the Circle: Christ Church Parish, Indianapolis, 1837–1955 | publisher =Rector Wardens and Vestrymen of Christ Protestant Episcopal Church | year =1957 | location =Indianapolis, IN | page=[https://archive.org/details/historyoflittlec00lill/page/48 48] | url =https://archive.org/details/historyoflittlec00lill| url-access =limited }}

=First church building=

In 1838 Christ Church parishioners purchased a lot on Governor's Circle, which later became known as Monument Circle, and began construction on its first church building.{{cite book | author =Ignatius Brown | title =Logan's History of Indianapolis from 1818 | year =1868 | page =40 | publisher =[Indianapolis, Logan & Co. | url =https://archive.org/details/loganshistoryofi00brow}}{{cite book|author= B. R. Sulgrove| title=History of Indianapolis and Marion County Indiana | year = 1884| page=[https://archive.org/details/historyofindiana00sulgrich/page/122 122] | url=https://archive.org/details/historyofindiana00sulgrich}} Its cornerstone was laid on May 7, 1838. Designed in a Gothic Revival style, the small, wood-frame church was painted white and measured {{convert|29|ft|m}} by {{convert|43|ft|m}}. It included a simple portico and gallery that had a total seating capacity of 350 people. The first worship service in the new building was held on November 18, 1838. Episcopal Bishop Jackson Kemper consecrated the church on December 16, 1838. James B. Britton served as its first rector (1838–40).{{cite book | editor =David J. Bodenhamer and Robert G. Barrows|title =The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis | publisher =Indiana University Press | year =1994 | location =Bloomington and Indianapolis | pages =413| isbn =0-253-31222-1}}Stockton, pp. 3–5.Lilly, pp. 52–54.

Christ Church was one of five early churches located on the Circle in downtown Indianapolis, and it is the only church remaining on the Circle.By 1884 the other four churches had relocated to other sites in Indianapolis. See Bodenhamer and Barrows, p. 413. When the first Christ Church building became outdated in the mid-1850s, its parishioners decided to replace it with a new church.{{cite book| title =The History of Nine Urban Churches| publisher =The Riley-Lockerbie Ministerial Association of Downtown Indianapolis | location =Indianapolis, IN}} In 1857 the city's Bethel AME Church congregation purchased the first Christ Church building and relocated it to Georgia Street, where it remained in use until it was destroyed by a fire in 1862.Lilly, p. 127.Stockton, pp. 4–5.

=Present-day church building=

In 1857 the Christ Church parish erected its second church, the present-day Christ Church Cathedral, on the site of its first church.

Located at 131 Monument Circle in the center of downtown Indianapolis, it is the oldest church building in Indianapolis and Marion County, Indiana, that has remained in continuous use. Christ Church is also the oldest building on Monument Circle.{{cite book|last=Caldwell|first=Howard|author2=Jones, Darryl|title=Indianapolis|editor=Goodall, Kenneth|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington|year=1990|pages=51|isbn=0-253-32998-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BKLMAAAACAAJ|access-date=2008-12-25}}

Designed by Irish-born architect William Tinsley in an English Gothic Revival style,{{cite book| title =The Art and Architecture of Nine Urban Churches| publisher =The Riley-Lockerbie Ministerial Association of Downtown Indianapolis | location =Indianapolis, IN }} the church cost between $32,438 and $37,750 to build.Lilly, p. 132. Its cornerstone was laid on June 24, 1857, and the first worship service was held on May 22, 1859. A spire was added to the church's tower in 1869 at a cost of $1,425.Stockton, p. 8.{{cite book | author=Jacob Piatt Dunn | title =Greater Indianapolis: The History, the Industries, the Institutions, and the People of a City of Homes | page=611 }} Electric lights were installed in 1886. A new Episcopal residence was completed on the Circle in 1871, and a brick Sunday School building was completed in 1876. The parish considered relocating north of downtown Indianapolis in 1889 and deliberated over several similar options on several subsequent occasions, but each time the parishioners decided to remain on the Circle.Stockton, pp. 8–10, 12.

Over the years Christ Church underwent several renovations and refurbishments. In 1900 W. and J. Lamb architects from New York, with Vonnegut and Bohn of Indianapolis acting as supervising architects, renovated and redecorated the church at an approximate cost of $32,294. The architects deepened the chancel, added an exterior porch (lychgate), and designed a new parish house on the west end of the church.Stockton, p. 13. Another renovation took place in 1927, when the church's basement was excavated at a cost of $75,000 to create additional space underneath the building for educational and recreational use. Additional renovations took place in 1936. The church's interior and its parish house were refurbished in 1954 at an estimated cost of $300,000 to replace the redecoration made in 1900 because it was incongruent with the church's English Gothic architecture. The church underwent additional renovations in 1973. The church's nave and parish hall were renovated in 1983.Stockton, pp. 13, 18–19, 21, 25.

Christ Church was consecrated as the pro-cathedral for the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis on October 10, 1954.Stockton, pp. 3–5, 21.Bodenhamer and Barrows, p. 414. In the 1960s the church struggled through its dual role as a community parish and cathedral for the diocese, as well as its changing surroundings in downtown Indianapolis, but resolved to remain an active church in the community.Stockton, p. 22. Christ Church was recognized for its urban ministry in the 1960s under the leadership of Cathedral Dean Paul Moore Jr. Christ Church Cathedral was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 10, 1973.

Description

=Exterior and plan=

William Tinley's early English Gothic-style design for Christ Church included a modified cruciform plan with the sanctuary in the east end and a main facade facing west. Its original red brick face was replaced with limestone. An octagonal spire capping the single tower on the southwest corner was added in 1869, ten years after the building's construction. The spire is crowned with a finial that included the letters Chi and Rho, the first two letters of the Greek word for Christ. The exterior also includes tall, Gothic Revival-style windows and a peaked roof. The main facade and both transept ends each have a set of three tall, narrow windows. Each of the gables on the front facade and transepts have bulls eye windows "with trefoil cusping."Lilly, p. 133. In 1900 the chancel was deepened to create a complete cruciform plan and an exterior porch (lychgate) was added to the church.

=Interior=

File:Christ Church Cathedral Indianapolis interior.png

Although the original color of the interior walls is unknown, the beamed ceiling was originally painted light blue. Two panels above the altar included text from "Sanctus." Central pews entered from the sides, but a middle aisle was added later. The church's choir loft was illuminated with leaded-glass windows to the north of the chancel.{{cite web| author=Jerry M. Burton | title =National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form: Christ Church Cathedral | publisher =U.S. Department of the Interior/National Park Service | date =May 1973 | url = https://secure.in.gov/apps/dnr/shaard/r/25cd1/N/Christ_Church_Cathedral_Marion_CO_Nom.pdf | access-date =2016-06-01}}Lilly, pp. 133-34.

Interior updates included the addition of a white marble altar in 1900. A wooden screen was installed to separate the chancel and the congregation. Memorials included a Resurrection stained-glass window in the west end of the nave, a church history window that included a series of three windows in the north transept, a white marble baptismal font, and a bronze statue of a young Saint John the Baptist by English sculptor John Angle. In 1954 the church's inner doors and chancel were painted red, a symbol of the Holy Spirit.Stockton, p. 21.

Mission

File:FontChristCCIndy.jpg

Christ Church parish retains a strong sense of stewardship and remains an active leader in the Indianapolis community. It is especially known for its community service and charitable work.

Due to Christ Church's central location in downtown Indianapolis, it became a hub of several charitable activities. During World War II and the Korean War it operated a canteen to feed and entertain thousands of military personnel.Lilly, p. 315. The parish is also the host of an annual strawberry festival. Christ Church parishioners held a strawberry festival as early as 1857 to raise funds for construction of the present-day church and held similar church benefits in 1863 and 1864, which marked the beginnings of the parish's successful annual fundraising event.Stockton, pp. 6–8. Christ Church Cathedral has hosted a strawberry festival every summer since 1965, raising funds for local, national, and international charities. The festival was featured on the Food Network in 2007.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

Christ Church was the mother church to several Episcopal missions and parishes in Indianapolis, including Saint Luke's, Grace, Saint Paul's Saint George's, and Saint Philip's Episcopal churches. In 1839 Christ Church founded an early seminary for young women that was the predecessor to Saint Mary's Seminary, chartered by the Indiana General Assembly in 1844.Lilly, p. 312.

Christ Church parish hosts mission trips to Ecuador on an annual basis, as well as trips to Haiti (after the earthquake in 2010), to Navajoland, and other locations. Locally, parishioners serve at nonprofits such as Dayspring, Damien Center, and Second Helpings, among others. It held a special service after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and hosts an annual memorial service with the Coalition for Homelessness Intervention and Prevention for homeless persons who have died.{{Cite news|url=http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2013/12/20/service-honors-citys-homeless-who-died-in-the-past-year/4144945/|title=Service honors city's homeless who died in the past year|last=McCleery|first=Bill|date=December 20, 2013|work=Indianapolis Star|access-date=January 29, 2017}}

Music

File:ChristCCIndy.jpg

Christ Church parish is known for its music. The church is home to the professional Choir of Men and Boys and the Girls' Choir, as well as the Christ church Singers, a volunteer group.

=Choral performances=

Each Sunday the Choir leads the 10:00 a.m. service and the Coro Latinamericano leads the 1:00 p.m.{{Cite web|url=https://www.cccindy.org/about/worship/|title = Worshipping at Christ Church Cathedral}} service. Every Thursday from September through May, the Choir performs a Choral Evensong.

=Choir of Men and Boys=

In 1883 Christ Church parishioners founded a boys' choir, the predecessor to the Choir of Men and Boys. The choir was organized into a professional choral group in 1954, when Christ Church became the pro-cathedral of the diocese. The Choir of Men and Boys achieved an international reputation for its choral excellence. In addition to performing with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, it has performed numerous commissioned works and frequently appeared on radio and television broadcasts. The choir has toured Great Britain and Europe, singing in London (Saint Paul's Cathedral and Westminster Abbey), Canterbury, Ely, Truro, Dublin (Christ Church Cathedral), Paris (Notre Dame), and in the cities of Chartres, Munich, Berlin, Leipzig, Venice (Saint Mark's), and Rome (Saint Peter's Basilica).{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

=Girls' Choir=

Christ Church Cathedral Girls' Choir, founded in 1945, is composed of girls ages eight through eighteen. It has appeared in concert with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and on overseas tours, including appearances in many of Europe's great cathedrals.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

=Christ Church Singers=

The Christ Church Singers, a voluntary choir formed in the 1990s, perform under the direction of the cathedral's assistant organist and choirmaster.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

=Cathedral Choir=

Recently, the Choir of Men & Boys and the Girl's Choir were dissolved and re-formed as the Cathedral Choir, which includes choristers and adults.{{Cite web|url=https://www.cccindy.org/about/music-arts/|title = Music & the Arts at Christ Church Cathedral}}

=Choirmasters=

Christ Church choirmasters have included Cheston L. Heath (1926–1947), Robert Hobbs (1947–1964), James Litton (1964–1967), David Koehring (1967–1977), Frederick Burgomaster (1977–2009), Dana Marsh (2010–2014), Michael Boney (2014–2019), Christopher Caruso-Lynch (2019–2024), and Stephen White (2024–present).

=Pipe organs=

File:OrganLoftChristCCIndy.jpg

The cathedral's Chancel organ was built in 1989 by Hellmuth Wolff. The Gallery organ, a gift of Ruth Lilly, was built in 1991 by Taylor and Boody Organbuilders of Staunton, Virginia. The church's continuo organ was built in 1996 by John Brombaugh.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

Membership

The parish organized with thirty individual members in 1837. By 1850 its membership rose to 153 adults and 108 children. In the mid-1860s, during the American Civil War years, its membership was approximately 250. By 1882 Christ Church was one of six Episcopal parishes in Indianapolis. In 1963 its communicants numbered 1,145, but membership declined to 572 by 1980.Stockton, pp. 10, 24.

=Notable members=

See also

Notes

{{reflist|30em}}

References

  • {{cite book| title =The Art and Architecture of Nine Urban Churches

| publisher =The Riley-Lockerbie Ministerial Association of Downtown Indianapolis | location =Indianapolis, IN }}

  • {{cite book | author =Bodenhamer, David J., and Robert G. Barrows, eds.|title =The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis | publisher =Indiana University Press | year =1994 | location =Bloomington and Indianapolis | pages =413–414| isbn =0-253-31222-1}}
  • {{cite book | author = Brown, Ignatius | title =Logan's History of Indianapolis from 1818 | year =1868 | publisher =[Indianapolis, Logan & Co. | url =https://archive.org/details/loganshistoryofi00brow}}
  • {{cite web| author= Burton, Jerry M. | title =National Register of Historic Places Inventory–Nomination Form: Christ Church Cathedral | publisher =U.S. Department of the Interior/National Park Service | date =May 1973 | url = https://secure.in.gov/apps/dnr/shaard/r/25cd1/N/Christ_Church_Cathedral_Marion_CO_Nom.pdf | access-date =2016-06-01}}
  • {{cite book|author1=Caldwell, Howard |author2=Darryl Jones |name-list-style=amp|title=Indianapolis |editor=Goodall, Kenneth |publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington|year=1990|pages=51|isbn=0-253-32998-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BKLMAAAACAAJ|access-date=2008-12-25}}
  • {{cite web | title =Christ Church Cathedral, Indianapolis | publisher =The Episcopal Diocese of Indiana | date =2015 | url =http://indydio.org/parish/indianapolis-christ-church-cathedral/ | access-date =2016-06-02 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20160414175738/http://indydio.org/parish/indianapolis-christ-church-cathedral/ | archive-date =2016-04-14 | url-status =dead }}
  • {{cite book | last =Dunn | first =Jacob Piatt | title =Greater Indianapolis: The History, the Industries, the Institutions, and the People of a City of Homes | year =1910 | url =https://archive.org/details/greaterindianapo02dunn}}
  • {{cite conference| author= Gleason, William Hooper | title = Vergers Guild of the Episcopal Church 2 th Anniversary Conference Founders Evening Address | page=4 | publisher =Vergers Guild of the Episcopal Church | date =2013-10-03 | location =Nashville, TN | url = https://e778025d-a-e8f75912-s-sites.googlegroups.com/a/vergers.org/vergers/conference/2013/2013-10-03-VGEC-Founders-Event-Bill-Gleason.pdf?attachauth=ANoY7cqtuPpcyLlEok21bzpdUdi5CEssLi4lCLgqO2DrJa3ykiddG3w9LesKH3lasFxp3YMLXX9fr0LEIMnFf14nhWFgXTM5Ec-pUT7v-lkx4b8cn1OtEnymB41UjXBtUBs9QSm2RyL9hheIMltCcZkwa5nQOD_XDPof9waFZhFPeMm5K2EjVoy3m33CMU0SjojJsPXVDeISQhCRocOaY8gYL26ZVZRLqZ6OiMw7y4BCEwKKa-SsF55smiSscGrQqGuGSE-ECPZYxljwB7zn-Ng7Ml7O6Pg-4A%3D%3D&attredirects=0 | access-date =2016-06-01}}
  • {{cite book| title =The History of Nine Urban Churches| publisher =The Riley-Lockerbie Ministerial Association of Downtown Indianapolis | location =Indianapolis, IN}}
  • {{cite book | author =Lilly, Eli | title =History of the Little Church on the Circle: Christ Church Parish, Indianapolis, 1837–1955 | publisher =Rector Wardens and Vestrymen of Christ Protestant Episcopal Church | year =1957 | location =Indianapolis, IN }}
  • {{NRISref|2009a}}
  • {{cite book | author =Stockton, Carl R. | title =Christ Church in Indianapolis: A Selected Chronology | publisher =C. R. Stockton | year =1987 | location =Indianapolis, IN }}
  • {{cite book|last=Sulgrove|first=B. R.|title=History of Indianapolis and Marion County Indiana | year = 1884| url=https://archive.org/details/historyofindiana00sulgrich}}