Unitarian Church of All Souls
Unitarian Church of All Souls | |
---|---|
Religion | |
Affiliation | Unitarian Universalist Association |
Year consecrated | 1819 |
Location | |
Location | Upper East Side, New York, NY, USA |
Geographic coordinates | 40°46′32″N 73°57′30″W / 40.7755°N 73.9584°W |
Specifications | |
Direction of façade | west |
Materials | Brick, wood, stone |
The Unitarian Church of All Souls at 1157 Lexington Avenue at East 80th Street in the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City was built in 1932 and was designed by Hobart Upjohn – Richard Upjohn's grandson – in the Neo-colonial style[1] with a Regency-influenced brick base.[2] It is the congregation's fourth sanctuary.[1] The congregation, dating back to 1819, was the first Unitarian Universalist congregation in the city.[3] It has provided a pulpit for some of the movement's leading theologians and has also recorded many eminent persons in its membership.
History
[edit]All Souls was the first Unitarian congregation to be organized in New York and originated in 1819 when Lucy Channing Russell invited forty friends and neighbors into her Lower Manhattan home, to listen to an address by her brother, William Ellery Channing, the minister of the Federal Street Church in Boston. Channing was making a stop in New York while traveling to Baltimore to preach the famous sermon in which he would articulate the distinctive tenets of Unitarian Christianity, the most salient of which were the rejection of the Trinity in favor of absolute Monotheism, and the imperative to interpret the Bible through reason. In New York, the enthusiasm aroused by Channing culminated in the formation of the First Congregational Church (Unitarian), which proceeded to erect its first building in 1820–21, on Chambers Street between Church Street and Chapel Street,[1] before it had even found a minister. The task of recruitment was difficult since few ministers could be persuaded to venture away from the stability of the Unitarian heartland in New England and risk their careers in new congregations beyond. Finally, on December 18, 1821, William Ware was installed as the first minister.
In 1845, the congregation moved to a new building at 548 Broadway[1] and renamed itself the Church of the Divine Unity the following year. In 1855, the present name, All Souls, was taken by an American church for the first time when the congregation dedicated its third building, at 249 Fourth Avenue (now Park Avenue South) at 20th Street. The new church was designed by Jacob Wrey Mould and featured bands of red and white bricks and Caen stone, which led to the colloquial names of "The Holy Zebra" and "The Beefsteak Church."[1]
In partnership with minister Henry Whitney Bellows, who served for over four decades from 1839 to 1882, All Souls grew to include some of the leading social reformers and cultural figures of the city, such as Peter Cooper, Herman Melville, and others. One noted member was the novelist Catharine Sedgwick, who remarked upon the diverse backgrounds of the people who were attracted to the freedom of ethical inquiry which All Souls offered: "strangers from inland and outland, English radicals and daughters of Erin, Germans and Hollanders, philosophic gentiles and unbelieving Jews . . . In this, our ass'n, there is at least one of every sort." In evolving from its roots in Unitarian Christianity, All Souls has embraced an enlarging religious pluralism that continues to this day.
All Souls relocated to its current building on the Upper East Side at 1157 Lexington Avenue at 80th Street in 1932, designed by Richard Upjohn's grandson, Hobart Upjohn, in the Colonial Revival style[1] with a Regency-influenced base.[2] Forrest Church, the prolific author and theologian, then served as Senior Minister for almost thirty years until the beginning of 2007, when, due to terminal cancer, he was succeeded by Galen Guengerich and assumed the less strenuous duties of Minister of Public Theology. Church's charismatic style has been credited with the revitalization of the congregation.[1]
Notable members
[edit]- George Fisher Baker, financier, philanthropist
- William Cullen Bryant, poet, journalist[1]
- Peter Cooper industrialist, philanthropist (founder of Cooper Union)[1]
- Nathaniel Currier, lithographer, co-founder of Currier and Ives[1]
- Dorman Bridgman Eaton, lawyer, civil service reformer
- Caroline Kirkland, writer
- Herman Melville, writer[1]
- Laura Pedersen, author, journalist, playwright, humorist
- Louisa Lee Schuyler, Sanitary Commission organizer, founder of America's first nursing school at Bellevue Hospital
- Catharine Sedgwick, writer
- Samuel Prowse Warren; organist at Unitarian Church of All Souls from 1865 to 1868[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Dunlap, David W. (2004). From Abyssinian to Zion: A Guide to Manhattan's Houses of Worship. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 12. ISBN 0-231-12543-7.
- ^ a b White, Norval; Willensky, Elliot; Leadon, Fran (2010). AIA Guide to New York City (5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 451. ISBN 978-0-19538-386-7.
- ^ "All Souls' Church Animates One With the Spirit of the Boston 'Liberals.'". New York Times. September 14, 1924. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
First Unitarian Church Here. All Souls' was the first Unitarian Church foundation in New York. The Unitarian Society was incorporated in 1818 ...
- ^ Karl J. Raudsepp (December 16, 2013). "Samuel Prowse Warren". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
Further reading
- "Unitarian Church of All Souls," The New York City Organ Project, The New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists
- Kring, Walter Donald. History of the Unitarian Church of All Souls in New York City in 3 vols.
- Liberals Among the Orthodox: Unitarian Beginnings in New York City, 1819-1839 (Boston: Beacon Press, 1974)
- Henry Whitney Bellows (Boston: Skinner House, 1979)
- Safely Onward (New York: Unitarian Church of All Souls, 1991)