Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House

Summary

The Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House is a historic church building at 5751 North Kenmore Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. The Gothic Revival building was constructed in 1889 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.

Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House, The
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House is located in Chicago metropolitan area
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House is located in Illinois
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House is located in the United States
Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House
Location5751 N. Kenmore Ave., Chicago, Illinois
Coordinates41°59′13″N 87°39′23″W / 41.98694°N 87.65639°W / 41.98694; -87.65639
Arealess than one acre
Built1889
ArchitectHenry Ives Cobb
Architectural styleGothic Revival
NRHP reference No.09000590[1]
Added to NRHPJuly 30, 2009

Congregational history edit

In 1886 several Episcopalian families met in the Guild Hall at Bryn Mawr and Winthrop Avenues (the first commercial building in the Edgewater neighborhood then on the outskirts of Chicago), and decided that a Church should be built. By June 17, 1888, then-lawyer Frederick W. Keator held a service in the hall, and by November 1888 the group had become a mission congregation within the diocese, taking as the name of Church of the Atonement. The original Church's cornerstone was laid on November 30, 1889 at the present site (the intersection of Kenmore and Ardmore Avenues), and consecrated in June 1890. By then, Keator had left his legal practice and had become a minister, as well as the first-priest-in-charge of the new mission. He remained at the parish until 1896, when he accepted a call from a church in Iowa, near his childhood home, and soon become the first Bishop of the Missionary diocese of Olympia, Washington.[2]

In May 1898 the Mission became a self-supporting Parish and had 120 members, and construction of the Parish House began south of the church. The Parish House was finished in 1901.

By the early 20th century, the parish had become one of the leading Anglo-Catholic parishes in the country. Beginning under Rector Charles E. Deuel (1903-1914) in 1910, the original church building was enlarged to twice its capacity, since by then the parish had more than 500 members. This expansion and the 1919 expansion were under the guidance of British born parishioner J.E.O. Pridmore, who carefully maintained the English Gothic church style.[3] The first service after the last expansion was on Easter in 1920. The parish then had 650 members, and Rector Frederick Fleming (who served from 1915-1927) would represent the Diocese of Chicago at several Anglo-Catholic conferences. Rev. Fleming would leave this parish to accept a call as rector of St. Stephen's Church in Providence, Rhode Island in 1927, and finished his career as rector of historic Holy Trinity Church in Manhattan, New York City. Meanwhile, in 1922 a new Parish House was begun and completed in 1924. Stained glass windows were added beginning in 1929, under Rector Alfred Newberry (1927-1937; who would ultimately leave to accept a call from the Church of the Advent in Boston) and finished in 1946.

Under Rector Dean Paxton Rice, the church received a donation of an Elizabethan-era paneled room (installed in the Parish House), and also expanded its outreach to the diverse and changing neighborhood. It established St. Augustine's Mission to the Native American community in the nearby Uptown neighborhood. In the 1970s, the church established a ministry to Spanish-speaking neighbors. The parish also developed a distinguished music program, including a choir which expanded under Rev. Thomas Harris to include women, and a custom-built organ.

Architecture edit

Parishioner Henry Ives Cobb designed the original church building, including a stone tower on the northwest corner and constructing the east wall of wood to facilitate future expansion. Cobb was known for his English Gothic and Richardson Romanesque buildings, including the Potter Palmer Mansion, the Newberry Library and the Old Chicago Historical Society on Dearborn and Ontario Streets (now a nightclub). He also designed the Fisher Building.

Pridmore's expansion, finished during World War I, created the current church. The roof was raised and extended 16 feet, to Kenmore Avenue, and side aisles added. Stained glass windows were added, with the final one installed at the end of World War II, and after Pridmore's death.

The best example of the stained glass is the Christ the King window in the North Chapel. It has been recognized in books on stained glass in Chicago as one of the best.

On the second level of the Parish House, is the Elizabethan Room. It was brought to the United States from England in 1620. The paneling is registered with The Art Institute of Chicago and is the only authentic example of its kind in the Midwest.

Rectors edit

Source:[4]

  • Frederic William Keator (1855-1925), Lay reader/Priest-in-Charge 1888-1896
  • J. M. D. Davidson (1854-1931), Priest-in-Charge 1896-1898, Rector 1898-1903
  • Charles E. Deuel (1864-1932), Rector 1903-1914
  • Frederic Sydney Fleming (1886-1956), Rector 1915-1927
  • Alfred Newbery (1889-1937), Rector 1927-1937
  • Calvert Buck (1895-1969), Rector 1937-1943
  • James Murchison Duncan (1902-1968), Rector 1943-1950
  • Robert Leonard Miller (1914-1992), Rector 1950-1958, Canon to the Ordinary, Diocese of Chicago 1961-1978
  • Dean Paxton Rice (1932-2003), Rector 1958-2003, Dean, Chicago-North Deanery 1969-1991
  • John David van Dooren, Rector 2005-2017
  • Erika Lee Takacs, Rector 2018-2022

Current status edit

Reverend Daniel Puchalla has been Interim Rector since the summer of 2022.

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "History of Atonement | atonement". Archived from the original on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  3. ^ J.E.O. Pridmore, Edgewater Architect Vol. IV No. 3 - FALL/WINTER 1992 by LeRoy Blommaert
  4. ^ "History of Atonement | atonement". Archived from the original on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-11-04.

External links edit

  • Official website
  •   Media related to Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House at Wikimedia Commons