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Cathedral of St. John the Divine

The Cathedral of St. John the Divine (sometimes referred to as St. John's and also nicknamed St. John the Unfinished) is the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of New York. It is at 1047 Amsterdam Avenue in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City, between West 110th Street (also known as Cathedral Parkway) and West 113th Street.

Cathedral of St. John the Divine
The western elevation of the facade, including the rose window
Religion
AffiliationEpiscopal Church
DistrictEpiscopal Diocese of New York
PatronJohn the Evangelist
Year consecrated1911
StatusActive
Location
LocationManhattan, New York City
StateNew York
Shown within Manhattan
Cathedral of St. John the Divine (New York City)
Cathedral of St. John the Divine (New York)
Cathedral of St. John the Divine (the United States)
Geographic coordinates40°48′13″N 73°57′41″W / 40.80361°N 73.96139°W / 40.80361; -73.96139
Architecture
Architect(s)Christopher Grant LaFarge and George Lewis Heins; Ralph Adams Cram
TypeCathedral
StyleRomanesque Revival and Gothic Revival
GroundbreakingDecember 27, 1892
Completed1911 (crossing, apse)
1941 (nave)
Incomplete (southern transept and towers)
MaterialsStone, granite, limestone
Official name: Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine and the Cathedral Close
TypeNew York City Landmark
DesignatedFebruary 21, 2017
Reference no.2585[1]
Website
StJohnDivine.org

The cathedral is an unfinished building, with only two-thirds of the proposed building completed, due to several major stylistic changes, work interruptions, and unstable ground on the site. The original design, in the Byzantine Revival and Romanesque Revival styles, began construction in 1892. After the opening of the crossing in 1909, the overall plan was changed to a Gothic Revival design. The completion of the nave was delayed until 1941 due to various funding shortfalls, and little progress has occurred since then, except for an addition to the tower at the nave's southwest corner. After a large fire damaged part of the cathedral in 2001, it was renovated and rededicated in 2008. The towers above the western elevation of the facade, as well as the southern transept and a proposed steeple above the crossing, have not been completed.

Despite being incomplete, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine is the world's sixth-largest church by area and either the largest or second-largest Anglican cathedral.[a] The floor area of St. John's is 121,000 sq ft (11,200 m2), spanning a length of 601 feet (183 m), while the roof height of the nave is 177 feet (54 m). Since the cathedral's interior is so large, it has been used for hundreds of events and art exhibitions. In addition, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine has been involved in various advocacy initiatives throughout its history.

The cathedral close includes numerous buildings: the Leake & Watts Orphan Asylum Building, the cathedral proper, the St. Faith's House, the Choir School, the Deanery, and the Bishop's House. The buildings are designed in several different styles and were built over prolonged periods of construction, with the Leake & Watts Orphan Asylum predating the cathedral itself. The cathedral close was collectively designated an official city landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 2017.

History edit

 
The Leake and Watts Orphanage, which is still located on the cathedral grounds

Context edit

Site edit

The neighborhood of Morningside Heights was thinly settled in the 17th century by the Dutch, then by the British.[2] It remained rural through the mid-19th century, with two exceptions. The first was the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum, no longer extant, which opened on the site of the Columbia University campus near 116th Street in 1821.[3][4] The other was Leake and Watts Orphan Asylum, bounded by 110th Street to the south and 113th Street to the north, which later became the current cathedral site.[3][5] The Leake and Watts asylum was incorporated in 1831 under act of the New York State Legislature, and three years later, 25 acres (10 ha) land at the corner of Bloomingdale Road (now Broadway) and 110th Street was purchased from the Bloomingdale Asylum.[6][7] The initial plans for the asylum were drawn up by Ithiel Town, but were revised several times to keep the costs within the asylum's budget.[3] The cornerstone of the asylum was laid in 1838, and it was completed in 1843.[8][7][9]

Need for a cathedral edit

Meanwhile, the Episcopal Diocese of New York started to grow in the early 19th century: there were 26 Episcopal parishes in the city by 1800, and a decade later, that number had nearly doubled to 50.[10][11][12][13] In 1828, the first proposal for a grand cathedral for the diocese was made by Bishop John Henry Hobart, who proposed a site near Washington Square Park.[14][15] The church would be called the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, or St. John's Cathedral for short, after the Revelation by John of Patmos (also called "John the Divine").[14] The plans were canceled because of objections over erecting such a large building for the diocese, a derivative of the Church of England, even as many New Yorkers still harbored resentment over the American Revolutionary War.[15]

In 1873, a cathedral board of trustees was established under Bishop Horatio Potter. The board decided on property just south of Central Park, bounded by 59th Street to the north and 57th Street to the south.[15][16][17][18] However, the purchase was canceled after the would-be donors lost their savings in the Panic of 1873.[15][16][19] Yet another plot of land, at Eighth Avenue and 74th Street, was offered to the church in 1882, but rejected due to the high cost of acquisition.[20] By 1890, there were 40,000 Episcopalians in Manhattan, and Episcopalians made up the largest bloc of Protestants in the borough.[11][12][13] Furthermore, many imposing institutions were being built in New York City, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Carnegie Hall, Metropolitan Opera House, and the American Museum of Natural History.[21]

Planning edit

Site selection edit

When Henry C. Potter, Horatio Potter's nephew, became the Diocese of New York's assistant bishop in 1883,[22] he convened the trustees to look for an alternate site.[15][17][18] On June 1, 1887, Henry Potter publicly announced his intention to build St. John's, though the exact location was still to be determined.[12] Potter described the planned cathedral as an "American Westminster Abbey"[15][18] that would rival the Catholic St. Patrick's Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan.[12][23] In his announcement, Potter called on New Yorkers to give funds toward the new cathedral, which was expected to cost $10 million.[21][23][24] The plans for the cathedral were well received by both Protestants and non-Protestants, as well as the media and other denominational leaders.[15][21][25] The donors included the wealthy Astor, Vanderbilt, and Belmont families.[15] Additionally, the Barberini family's tapestries were gifted to the cathedral in 1891.[26]

Numerous sites in Manhattan were examined for the new cathedral's location,[27] and by 1889, the Leake and Watts Asylum between 110th and 113th Streets had been chosen as the site for the future site of St. John's.[15][18][28] News media such as The New York Times and Uptown Visitor praised the decision, as the site was located on a high point overlooking Central and Morningside parks.[18][29] The committee had wanted to build slightly further north, on a more elevated plot between 116th Street to the south and 119th Street to the north. However, that plot would be too difficult to acquire, as ownership of that tract was divided among several entities; by contrast, the Leake and Watts Asylum had full control over their entire city block.[29][30] The 11.5-acre (4.7 ha) asylum site was deeded to the cathedral in October 1891, and the asylum moved to Westchester County, New York.[9][31] The asylum site was then acquired for $850,000.[32] At the time, Morningside Heights was quickly being developed as a residential neighborhood surrounded by numerous higher-education institutions.[3][5] The proposed cathedral's elevated location would have been visible from New Jersey, across the Hudson River to the west, as well as from the New York Bay to the south.[33]

Architecture competition edit

 
Architectural rendering of the cathedral's design for Heins & LaFarge, Architects (1891)
 
Cathedral of St. John the Divine in 1910

Simultaneously, there was also debate over the new cathedral's style; because of the larger plot and more remote location from Midtown Manhattan it was expected to be more elaborate than St. Patrick's.[18] The trustees had formed a Committee on Architecture in conjunction with William Robert Ware, a Columbia architecture professor, which held a design competition for St. John that involved several prominent architectural firms. Though everyone was free to enter the competition, fourteen firms and architects were paid $500 each to create designs for the cathedral.[30][34] The deadline for each plan was January 1889.[35][36]

That May, the board of trustees formed a committee to review the more than 60 designs that had been submitted.[30][33][b] Many of the competitors were American, though only four were experienced in cathedral construction.[37] The board members then discussed the designs privately; some architects expressed concerns about the secret consultations, since the trustees generally did not have knowledge of architectural design.[34] The competition was narrowed down to four finalists. Namely, these were "Gerona" by William A. Potter and R. H. Robertson; "Three Arabesque Scrolls within a Circle" by George L. Heins and Christopher Grant LaFarge with William Winthrop Kent; "AMDG" by George M. Huss and J. H. Buck; and "Jerusalem the Golden" by William Halsey Wood.[34][38][39][40] "Gerona" used the Gothic style based on Spanish cathedrals; "AMDG" and "Jerusalem the Golden" were in a regular Gothic style, and "Three Arabesque Scrolls" was mainly Byzantine.[40][41]

Potter and Robertson were the only one of the four finalists who had significant experience at the time, and the trustees had agreed not to release any designs without the consent of all competitors, although some contestants broke the agreement anyway by revealing their designs to the media.[33] The finalists were given more than a year to refine the details of their plans: the original deadline was set for February 1890,[42] but was later extended to November[43] after a failed proposal to host the World's Columbian Exposition in Morningside Park.[42] The submissions were placed in public view in April 1891.[30][42] By then, the public was losing interest in the competition, and the finalist designs mainly received negative criticism.[42]

Plan selected edit

In July 1891, the plan-selection committee chose Heins & LaFarge's plan as the winning proposal.[30][32][44][45] The design had been the trustees' second choice; although the trustees liked Potter and Robertson's plan more, W. A. Potter was the bishop's half-brother and the trustees did not want to be accused of nepotism.[45][46] To Kent's consternation, he was initially not recognized as a co-collaborator,[47] and would not be acknowledged as such until the following year.[48] The group's blueprints called for chapels and end sections with apses; a crossing containing four round arches as well as a dome topped by a massive tower; and transepts with round edges. The interior was based upon Boston's Trinity Church, and the crossing was based upon Istanbul's Hagia Sophia, Venice's St. Mark's Basilica, and the Périgueux Cathedral.[30][49][50] The "exotic" design was seen as an example of the unusual architecture that was prevalent at that time.[51][30][49] It was also Heins & LaFarge's first major commission: the firm later designed structures such as the Astor Court buildings at the Bronx Zoo, as well as the early stations of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, the first operator of the present-day New York City Subway.[52][53]

That October, the trustees directed the firm to revise their design further.[54] The following month, it was announced that work would begin in early 1892, provided that Heins & LaFarge submitted their revised plans that April.[55][56] The original plans were then substantially revised because the board of trustees wanted a Gothic-style appearance. The western towers were modified to remove the spires and enlarge the windows, and various Gothic details were placed on the facade. The nave was realigned from north–south to east–west so that the apse would face east, in the direction of the sunrise, to represent the resurrection of Jesus as per Episcopal tradition.[52][57][58] Heins & LaFarge objected to the realignment because it would result in the cathedral being hidden behind other buildings.[57] In the final plan, "Three Arabesque Scrolls" incorporated both Byzantine and Romanesque influences, with Gothic detailing on the exterior. Outwardly, the design resembled the AMDG plan from Huss & Buck.[37] By April 1892, the trustees had raised much of the $850,000 required for land acquisition, though there still remained a deficit of $175,000.[59]

Construction and early years edit

Construction on the Cathedral of St. John the Divine was begun with the cornerstone-laying ceremony on December 27, 1892, St. John's Day.[60][61] One thousand tickets for seats at the ceremony were distributed,[62] though the actual attendance was 1,100.[61] The cornerstone contained various objects such as a Bible and church papers.[61] Potter hit the stone three times with a mallet and said "Other foundation can no man lay, than that is laid which is Jesus Christ."[63] The following month, the remaining $175,000 for land acquisition had been secured,[64] and the trustees moved to take title to the land, including the cathedral close around the cathedral's main building, in April.[65] Unlike the main building, the cathedral close was not designed under a single master plan, and during the 1890s and 1900s, several proposals would be made for the site.[66]

Initial construction edit

 
Stonemason finishing an angel, 1909

Actual work on St. John's began in early 1893.[52] The trustees initially expected that work would proceed quickly because much of the Morningside Heights plateau was made of shallow bedrock. However, in September 1893, builders unexpectedly hit pockets of soft shale and an underground spring at several locations about 40 feet (12 m) below ground.[52][67][68][69] One of these pockets was located directly below the site for one of the four piers that were to support the cathedral's massive 445-foot (136 m) stone tower.[70][71] The trustees briefly considered moving the entire cathedral slightly southward.[52][72] They ultimately decided against moving the cathedral, believing it to be inauspicious if the cornerstone were to be moved.[70][71] Instead, builders drilled several deep shafts until they hit the bedrock, then poured concrete pits within each shaft. The pits would then accommodate the construction of the tower's piers.[52][67][70][71] The layer of bedrock was, in some cases, 72 feet (22 m) beneath ground level.[73][74] The pits were completed in late 1895 at a significantly higher cost than originally estimated.[52][67]

By 1898, St. John's had cost an estimated $750,000,[75] and as per an 1896 estimate, the cathedral was projected to cost at least $5 million when complete.[76] As a temporary measure, the Tiffany Chapel was purchased in mid-1898 so that services could be held there. The chapel was placed in the crypt, within the basement.[75][77] The first services were held in January 1899 within the Tiffany Chapel.[31][52][78] The crossing arches, located in the cathedral plot's eastern portion, were completed the following year,[52] though three of the arches were temporarily sealed off until the transepts and nave could be completed.[79] By then, some $2 million had already been spent, even though little appeared to have been completed.[80] Despite large donations from prominent figures such as financiers John Jacob Astor IV and William Waldorf Astor, governor Levi P. Morton, banker J. P. Morgan, and businessman Cornelius Vanderbilt, the trustees continued to raise funds.[81]

In March 1903, the trustees announced that the next stage of St. John's construction would require $500,000 for building the choir and $200,000 for completing the loft, and that eight massive granite columns would need to be procured to support the roof over the choir.[82] Furthermore, the trustees would build three arches to support the rest of the roof.[83] The choir columns, sourced from Vinalhaven, Maine, were each 54 feet (16 m) tall with a 6-foot (1.8 m) diameter.[80][81][84] At the time, they were the world's second-largest stone columns,[c] but because of their size, three of the columns were cracked while being turned.[81][87][86] The columns were then transported using a specially constructed barge towed by the large steam tug Clara Clarita.[88] When the columns arrived at Manhattan in July and August 1903, they were rolled onto flatbed trucks and brought to the cathedral's site.[86][89][90] Since the builders did not have a derrick that was strong enough to lift the column pieces, they placed another order for wood to build a strong-enough derrick. The columns were finally lifted in July 1904, more than a year after the initial announcement.[87][86] The walls could not be placed until after the columns had been installed.[81][87][86] Work also began in 1903 on the crossing ceiling, which was to contain "Guastavino tiles" designed by Spanish architect Rafael Guastavino.[81]

The board of trustees implemented a new charter in early 1904, which provided for greater representation of laypeople on the board.[91] By 1905, with $800,000 available for construction, the trustees anticipated that the cathedral would be completed within a decade.[92] The church's great organ was ordered from Skinner the following year at a cost of $50,000, following a gift by the Morton family.[93] It was almost completed by 1911 with nearly 7,000 pipes; the cost of the organ had risen to $70,000.[94] Work also continued on the exterior walls of the choir and the seven surrounding chapels in the apse, which required 100,000 short tons (91,000 t) of granite. Builders estimated that 300,000 short tons (270,000 t) of stone would have been used for the walls once work was completed.[95] Gutzon Borglum was commissioned for some of the initial sculptural elements on St. John's, though his relation with the trustees was strained: he destroyed two angels after criticism of his work[96] and threatened to quit in 1906.[97] Because of the delays in construction, members of the public began to question the necessity of constructing such a large cathedral.[86] With little progress to show for, public sentiment began to turn against the cathedral. Even the trustees started to have doubts about certain aspects of the plan, criticizing Heins & LaFarge's small staff, their simultaneous involvement in many other projects, slow construction, and cost overruns.[98]

Crossing opening and change in design edit

 
The consecration of the choir, April 19, 1911

Although Heins died in 1907,[58][99] LaFarge continued to design the crossing, choir, and apse of St. John's.[81] By then, the architectural preferences of the public were shifting away from the original design.[58][63] Additionally, communication between LaFarge and the trustees were deteriorating,[98][100] with several trustees calling for LaFarge's removal.[98] The choir was covered in 1908, and the crossing was installed the next year.[101] The choir was nearly complete by October 1909, but there were insufficient funds to complete its construction, delaying its opening by at least six months.[102][103] At that time, St. John's was earning about $24,000 per year and had a $500,000 endowment, while at least $1 million was needed to complete construction.[103][104] In March 1911, trustees finally confirmed an opening date of April 19, 1911.[105] The first service in the choir and crossing, the consecration of the choir, occurred as scheduled on that day.[31][106][107] The completed portions of the cathedral were widely praised, though few newspapers devoted extensive coverage to the event, except the New York Herald.[107]

A month after the choir's consecration, the trustees suddenly fired LaFarge, commissioning Ralph Adams Cram to take LaFarge's place as lead architect of St. John's.[108][109][110] The trustees had exercised a clause in their contract with Heins & LaFarge, enabling them to hire another architect if either partner were to die.[58] LaFarge was not made aware of the matter beforehand, and was only notified via a cable sent by his partner Benjamin Wistar Morris.[109][110] The original Byzantine-Romanesque design was changed to a Gothic design, and Cram was asked to convert many existing features to Gothic style.[111][112][113][114] The move was criticized in the local media,[109] who claimed that the trustees and Cram had been conspiring to eject LaFarge from the lead architect position.[81][115] However, The New York Sun reported that Cram had only reluctantly accepted the commission because the trustees had threatened to hire a foreign architect otherwise.[112]

Cram presented a master plan for the cathedral close's buildings in October 1911,[66][116] and his revised designs for the main structure were completed in 1913.[117][118][119] Regardless, there was still not enough money to complete the cathedral's construction, as the New York Episcopal Diocese Cathedral League had mentioned in 1912 that $5.5 million was still needed.[120] The diocese was able to construct several structures to the south of the main building (see § Cathedral close),[117] as part of a plan that had been approved by the trustees in late 1911.[66] These structures included the St. Faith's House (1909), Synod House (1911–1913), Cathedral School (1912–1913), and Cathedral House (1912–1914).[121]

Nave and north transept edit

 
Interior of St. John's nave, facing west toward Amsterdam Avenue entrance

By January 1916, Bishop David H. Greer announced that the diocese would construct St. John's nave and narthex, along with a pair of towers on the western elevation of the facade above the narthex. The project would cost $1.5 million, even though St, John's only had about $200,000 on hand as of June 1915.[122] A groundbreaking ceremony for the nave was held on May 8, 1916.[31][123][124] That November, construction stopped due to material and funding shortages during World War I,[108][125][126][127] and the trustees had decided against raising funds until after the war.[128] Cram edited his plans in the interim.[117] In February 1919, the trustees approved Cram's revised plan to incorporate a memorial for soldiers.[129] The new plans required $5–6 million, but would make St. John's the third- or fourth-largest worldwide.[128][130] The cathedral did not yet have the money to build the nave, and furthermore, in 1920 the trustees decided not to hold fundraising drives for said purpose.[131] Because of an unstable economy, work did not resume for another four years,[127] though both Greer and Bishop Charles Sumner Burch supported the project.[108]

In 1923, Burch's successor William T. Manning announced a $15 million capital campaign to raise money for this project.[132] The New York campaign committee, headed by then-governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, campaigned from 1923 to 1925 to raise $6 million (equivalent to $102,000,000 in 2022).[133][134][135] By May 1924, Manning announced that $2.5 million had been donated within the previous three months, and that work on the nave would soon begin if that rate of donation were to continue.[136] St. John's was seeking price estimates for the nave's construction by that November,[137] and the baptistery was donated the same year.[127] Some $7.7 million had been raised by February 1925,[138] and the laying of the nave's cornerstone occurred on November 9, 1925.[139][140] Manning wanted the cathedral to be an interdenominational place of worship, but was still reluctant to add other denominations' members to the board of trustees.[141] Notably, Manning rejected a request from John D. Rockefeller Jr., a Baptist,[142][143] despite the latter's $500,000 donation toward the cathedral's building fund.[142]

In January 1927, Manning announced that the trustees had approved Cram's proposal for a square tower above the crossing; the tower would replace the dome, which did not conform to the Gothic style. With sides of 60 feet (18 m), the tower would be half as wide as the arches below it.[144] Cram's blueprint revisions, published in 1929, entailed building the 300-foot-tall (91 m) square tower over the crossing, and adding two portals to the western elevation.[100][117] Additionally, St. John's northern transept began construction in December 1927.[135][145] Since the funds for that transept were donated solely by women, it was called the Women's Transept.[117] Work on the Women's Transept was halted in October 1930 due to a lack of funds.[146][147] Construction at St. John's was otherwise unaffected by the Great Depression.[141] During this duration, work was concentrated mainly on the western elevation.[148]

When construction of the Women's Transept resumed in 1934, the nave and the western elevation were nearly complete except for the two towers above the western facade, but work on the crossing tower and south transept had yet to commence.[149] By 1938, the nave was completed, but the temporary construction wall between the nave and crossing was still in place because the Byzantine-Romanesque crossing's design had yet to be harmonized with the Gothic nave.[150] As such, Cram subsequently replaced the portions of the ceiling above the choir and the apse's eastern section. Additionally, the nave started to be used for services, even though it had not yet been dedicated.[108] The 1939 WPA Guide to New York City stated that $20 million had been spent on the cathedral by then.[151]

Full-length opening and expansion edit

 
Southern elevation of the facade

The full 601-foot (183 m) length of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine was opened for the first time on November 30, 1941.[141][152][153][154] At that time, St. John's was only three-fifths completed, yet it was the second-largest Christian church in the world by area, behind only St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City.[100][153] The event was commemorated with a week-long celebration. The last day of the celebrations, Sunday December 7, 1941, coincided with Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor.[155] With the consequent entry of the United States into World War II, work on the cathedral stopped. The southern transept and tower had yet to start, while the northern transept remained one-third complete.[117][156][157] The western towers, planned to be 266 feet (81 m), reached only to the roof of the nave.[156] Cram revised his plans yet again just before his 1942 death, this time with shorter western towers and a slim spire in place of the square tower over the crossing.[117]

Halt in construction edit

 
Bishop Horace W. B. Donegan greets Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother on the steps of the cathedral on the day of the Columbia University Bicentennial, October 31, 1954.

Following the end of World War II, St. John's did not experience any more new construction for three decades.[154][158] In 1945, Manning had attempted to start a fundraising drive for $10 million so that the remaining funds could be raised for the cathedral's completion.[157][159] However, during the late 1940s, his successor Bishop Charles Kendall Gilbert turned efforts toward alleviating social issues in the vicinity of the cathedral.[157][158] Rather than being focused on expansion, the cathedral became more involved in the surrounding community.[154][158][160] By that time, a total of $19 million had been spent on construction (equivalent to $234 million in 2022).[156] By the 1950s, there was debate over whether to complete St. John's in the Gothic fashion of the nave; a more contemporary style; or the original Byzantine/Romanesque style.[161] Several plans were proposed through the early 1960s, but none were examined in depth.[158]

In 1966, it was announced that work at St. John's would resume.[162][163] The trustees had approved a smaller version of the western towers and the crossing,[158][164] with a modern multicolored dome to be built atop the crossing.[165][166] The project did not proceed, as Bishop Horace W. B. Donegan said that such work would not occur during his administration; rather, he wanted the construction money to instead go toward helping the poor.[163][167][168] In the 1970s, the cathedral's activities turned toward improving quality of life in Morningside Heights; helping the elderly, young, and the environment; and participating in the civil rights movement and the opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War.[169] However, when the Very Reverend James Parks Morton was installed as St. John's dean in 1973, he said that construction at St. John's would start again.[168][169][170] Morton said he wanted St. John's to become "a holy place for the whole city".[171] St. John's had become overcrowded because of its increasing focus on community activities, and even though the cathedral was losing $500,000 each year, Morton believed that an expansion would help make space for these extra activities.[172]

Resumption of work edit

 
The facade of the southern tower, which was expanded in the 1980s and 1990s

Morton announced in December 1978 that construction would soon begin on constructing the two western towers, extending their height by 150 feet (46 m) and bringing their total height to 291 feet (89 m).[173] The job was expected to cost $20 million and take five years.[174][175] However, by then, there was a shortage of qualified stone carvers in the area.[154] James R. Bambridge, who was hired as the stonemason,[169][174][176] planned to employ unskilled younger workers from the surrounding community.[174] Bambridge hired Nicholas G. Fairplay, an English stonemason, as master carver.[177][178] The architect was Hoyle, Doran and Berry, the successor to Cram's architecture firm.[169][174][179] The expansions would be based primarily on Cram's revised designs, published before his death.[157][170] The north transept would be completed, but would remain separate from the main building.[179]

Work on the western facade's towers was restarted with the opening of St. John's stone yard, the Cathedral Stoneworks, which received its first several Indiana limestone blocks in June 1979.[154][169][180] Construction started first on the south tower, named for Saint Paul,[181] which began to rise in 1982.[154][173] However, the project continued to be delayed due to a shortage of funds, and due to slow development of the towers' designs.[169] Work also progressed slowly because the stonemasons were carving a myriad of minute details on the south tower.[182] By 1984, St. John's was projected to be complete in 2000.[183] Under the leadership of master stone carvers Nicholas Fairplay, Simon Verity, and Jean Claude Marchionni, work on the statuary of the central portal of the cathedral's western elevation was started in 1988[169][184] and completed in 1997.[185] During this era, the cathedral expanded its cultural programming, hosting some 140 shows and performances in the 1987–1988 season, some of which drew up to 3,000 observers.[186]

By 1992, the construction budget had been depleted; work was halted, and the stone yard was closed.[187][188] By then, another 50 feet (15 m) of height had been added to the south tower.[63] While some of the scaffolding was removed,[187] other portions remained, rusting away for fifteen years.[189] The Very Reverend Harry H. Pritchett Jr., who succeeded Morton in 1997, decided against further expansion of St. John's, especially since the existing facilities needed $20–40 million in repairs.[63][188]

21st century edit

 
Seen from the north in 2005, with scaffolding still on the southern tower

On December 18, 2001, a fire swept through the unfinished north transept, destroying the gift shop and damaging tapestries.[190][191][192] Despite the damage sustained, St. John's reopened two weeks later.[193] Though the pipe organ was not damaged, all its pipes and other component parts were removed and restored.[194] Valuable tapestries and other items in the cathedral were damaged by the smoke.[195] In January 2005, the cathedral began a major restoration to not only remove smoke damage resulting from the 2001 fire, but also clean the 80 years of dirt accumulation in the nave.[196] The renovations temporarily depleted St. John's funds: the unaffected portions of the cathedral started to deteriorate, staff salary raises were deferred, and several staff positions were eliminated.[197] The scaffolding around the south tower was removed in 2007,[189] and the cathedral was rededicated on November 30, 2008.[195]

The cathedral's main building was made a city landmark in June 2003, but the designation was overturned that October, since it did not cover the entire cathedral close.[198] At the same time, St. John's officials wanted to lease out the lots at the northern and southern borders of the cathedral close for further development, a move that preservationists unsuccessfully attempted to prevent.[199] Ultimately, two residential buildings were erected on these lots: Avalon Morningside Park on the southern lot and the Enclave[200] on the northern lot.[201][202] In 2017, the cathedral close was re-designated a city landmark, except for the two new residential buildings.[203] The next year, the first phase of the north transept's renovation was finally completed,[78] and work began on a renovation of the crypt.[204]

On April 14, 2019, a small fire occurred in the crypt; except for smoke damage, the cathedral building was mostly unaffected.[205][206] Many artworks stored in the crypt were reportedly damaged or destroyed in the fire. An initial cleaning removed smoke damage from the bottom 10 feet of the interior of the cathedral.[207] A cleaning of the rest of the interior was also ongoing.[208] Ennead Architects proposed erecting a copper dome above the crossing so that the crossing's tiles could be rehabilitated.[209][210] The restoration of the dome was completed in 2022.[211]

2020 shooting edit

On December 13, 2020, following the end of a choir performance outside the cathedral, a man fired guns at the crowd and was fatally shot by police; nobody else was injured.[212][213]

Main structure edit

 
View of the western elevation from across Amsterdam Avenue to the west

The Cathedral of St. John the Divine is located at 1047 Amsterdam Avenue in Morningside Heights, Manhattan, between West 110th Street (also known as Cathedral Parkway) to the south and 113th Street to the north. The cathedral's main entrance on the west is along the same axis as 112th Street. Adjacent sites include Mount Sinai Morningside (formerly St. Luke's Hospital) to the north, Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus to the north and west, and Morningside Park to the east.[214] One of the key reasons for St. John's location is that the land under it was described as the "highest point in Manhattan".[17][100][d] One author wrote that "the view from outside tells much about St. John's inner spirit", saying that the southeastern elevation of the facade gives an impression of incompleteness, while the great western elevation was "vitalized by its incipience".[216]

St. John's is oriented west–east relative to the street grid[217][e] and was originally supposed to have a cruciform plan, with transepts extending to the north and south of the crossing near the eastern end of the cathedral.[181][219] The entire structure measures 601 feet (183 m) long.[174] From west to east, the cathedral contains a narthex measuring 50 feet (15 m) long by 207 feet (63 m) wide; a nave of 248 by 146 feet (76 by 45 m); a crossing of 100 by 100 feet (30 by 30 m); a choir of 145 by 56 feet (44 by 17 m); and the Chapel of St. Savior in the apse, measuring 58 feet (18 m) with an ambulatory 14 feet (4.3 m) wide. The cathedral's western elevation is 207 feet (63 m) wide;[181] if the transepts had been completed, they would have measured 330 feet (100 m) from end to end.[151][181] The cathedral has an interior floor area of 121,000 square feet (11,200 m2) and can host 8,600 people.[181][220] As of 2017, these dimensions make St. John's the sixth-largest Christian cathedral in the world,[f] and puts it in competition with Liverpool Cathedral as being the world's largest Anglican cathedral.[a]

The original design for the cathedral was created by Heins & LaFarge.[113] Despite being primarily Byzantine and Romanesque in influence, the last version of Heins & LaFarge's design contained a significantly Gothic-style appearance.[52][223] The original plan at St. John's called for tiled-arch domes and barrel vaults. The crossing was to be held up by four round arches under a dome, with a tower on top.[30] The completed cathedral was supposed to have been 520 feet (160 m) long and 290 feet (88 m) wide between transepts, while the tower would have been 450 feet (140 m) tall.[76]

The modern plan for the building, as it appeared upon its official opening in 1941, conforms primarily to the second design campaign from the prolific Gothic Revival architect Ralph Adams Cram. The plans are based on the French Gothic style, with English Gothic accents.[81][223][224][184] Cram had initially wanted to use English Gothic models, which typically placed less emphasis on vertical elements and height, and which contrasted with the extant parts of the cathedral.[81][224] Cram's plan originally called for three main entrances; two 500-foot (150 m) spires set back from the western facade; two smaller spires on the western facade. Inside were ten full-height aisles, with a triforium and clerestory rising to the ceiling, as well as large chapels along each side of the nave.[117][118][224] The design provides a transition between the nave and the crossing, because the nave was to be 50 feet (15 m) wide, about half the width of the crossing.[117][225] Cram, described as a "brilliant perfectionist", frequently revised his proposal and later spoke of Heins & LaFarge's plans as better than his own.[108] One major change, published in 1926, called for a 300-foot-tall (91 m), square tower above the crossing and five portals on the western elevation.[117] Another revision was published just before he died in 1942, and called for a spire above the crossing.[117][224] Cram's designs were not fully built, either.[226] The Cathedral of St. John the Divine remains only two-thirds complete[227] and is often nicknamed St. John the Unfinished.[187][226]

Narthex and western facade edit

Narthex edit

 
Wide angle view of the cathedral's western elevation

The narthex, in the westernmost portion of the cathedral facing Amsterdam Avenue, was designed by Cram.[181][228] His original plans did not include a narthex, instead showing the nave continuing as far as the western facade.[229] Inside the narthex is a large vestibule, which serves as an entrance to the nave on the east.[181] The vestibule measures 180 feet (55 m) along the north–south axis and 85 feet (26 m) along the west–east axis.[229] The southern part of the narthex contains the cathedral's gift shop.[78]

Above the narthex are two towers: one named for Saint Peter to the north and the other named for Saint Paul to the south.[181][228] The north tower reaches to the roof of the nave, which is 177 feet (54 m) above ground level;[181] the south tower is about 50 feet (15 m) taller, with the additional height having been built between 1982 and 1992.[63] If the towers had been completed, they would have been about 266 feet (81 m) tall.[151][156] The towers protrude slightly from the northern and southern elevations of the facade but are flush with the western elevation.[181] On the northern and southern facades of the narthex, at the base of the towers, are stained glass windows, one on each side.[230]

Western facade edit

The narthex abuts the unfinished western elevation of the facade facing Amsterdam Avenue; this facade is 207 feet (63 m) wide and consists of five architectural bays.[181][217] The bays are separated by large arched buttresses with finials at their tops, and they contain niches for the possible future installation of statues. The western elevation is divided into four vertical tiers. From bottom to top, they are the ground-level portals, on the first tier; the gallery level, on the second tier; the large rose window and several smaller grisaille and lancet windows, on the third tier; and the top of the south tower and the gable above the center bay, on the fourth tier.[181]

At ground level, there are five portals under arched openings.[100][181] The largest of those is the center portal, called the Portal of Paradise, which contains carvings of the transfiguration of Jesus as well as St. John and 32 biblical characters;[231] these were carved in 1988 under Simon Verity's leadership.[184] St. John is depicted on the trumeau, or vertical pier, between the two pairs of doors within the center portal.[232] The center portal also contains depictions of New York City skyscrapers being destroyed in an apocalypse.[233] The center, northernmost, and southernmost portals are set within large, gabled structures with several archivolts, or arched moldings, surrounding each portal under the gables; porches overhang the portals above the gables. The other two portals are located under simple rectangular canopy structures,[181][184] located underneath grisaille windows looking into the nave.[230] Lights salvaged from the former Pennsylvania Station illuminate the steps in front of the portals.[184]

Above the center portal, between the towers, is a rose window installed by stained glass artist Charles Connick and constructed out of 10,000 pieces of glass.[231][232][234] With a diameter of 40 feet (12 m),[232] the rose window is the largest rose window in the U.S.[235] Flanking the rose window on either side are two grisaille windows, each with two lancet windows under a smaller rose. The seven archangels are depicted in the north grisaille, while the seven churches of Asia are depicted in the south grisaille.[232] Connick had designed the grisailles as well.[37] On the gable above the large rose window, there are lancets as well as a medallion in the middle.[232]

 
The right-hand bronze doors in the center portal

The two pairs of great west doors on the western elevation, set beneath the elaborate center portal, were designed between 1927 and 1931 by the designer Henry Wilson.[236][237][238] The bronze doors include a sequence of 60 relief panels, which presents scenes from the Old and New Testaments and the Apocalypse.[184][237] The doors open three times per year: Easter; St. Francis's feast day in October; and the "blessing of the bicycles" in the spring.[231] They comprise one of four bronze-door commissions designed by Wilson before his death.[g] St. John's great west doors were the last of the four commissions, each pair measuring some 18 by 12 feet (5.5 m × 3.7 m).[184][232] The remaining doors on the western elevation are composed of Burmese teak with wrought iron decoration.[151][232]

Nave edit

 
Exterior of the nave. Two of the double bays can be seen here, with four columns of windows in total. At center is a large arched buttress, while smaller buttresses to the left and right separate each set of double bays.

The nave was designed by Cram, though the final plan is slightly modified from the original.[100] It is oriented from west to east,[52] measuring 248 feet (76 m) long by 146 feet (45 m) wide.[181] The ceiling is 124 feet (38 m) above ground level,[241][205][242] but the ridge of the roof is 174 feet (53 m) high.[181] These dimensions are about the same as in the original plans, which called for floor dimensions of 260 by 150 feet (79 by 46 m). a 175-foot (53 m) roof, and a 125-foot (38 m) ceiling.[243]

On the northern and southern elevations, there are four vertical "double bays", each with two columns of windows. Large arched buttresses, with two piers each, separate the different double bays; smaller buttresses, containing a single pier, divide each double bay into smaller "sub-bays".[232] This alternation of large and small buttresses gives the appearance of four double bays with two sub-bays each, rather than eight singular rectangular bays.[243] At the arcade level, each of the sub-bays contains an arrangement of stained glass with two lancet windows under a rose window.[244] The sub-bays also contain another stained-glass arrangement at clerestory level, each with two lancet windows and one rose window. The clerestory arrangements each measure 45 feet (14 m) long by 12 feet (3.7 m) wide.[244][245] Carved parapets, as well as gables with dormers, run along the copper roof.[244]

Inside, there are six north–south rows of piers, three to either side of the nave.[241][246] These piers divide the nave into five aisles running west to east, with the center aisle located on the same axis as 112th Street.[232][243][246] There are four smaller aisles, two to either side of the center aisle.[243] Additionally, the interior contains several flying buttresses, concealed by "bridges" that carry them over the outermost aisles.[241][246]

 
The Blessing of the Bicycles in the nave, looking toward the apse

There are sixteen sub-bays in the nave, eight on each side; the easternmost sub-bays on either side contain doorways. Each of the bays are named after some aspect of humanity.[237][244] From west to east, the sub-bays along the northern side of the nave are named the Sports, Arts, Crusaders, Education, Lawyers, Ecclesiastical Origins (Anglican), and Historical and Patriotic Societies' (American), and Fatherhood bays. The sub-bays on the southern side are named the All Souls', Missionary, Labor, Press (Communication), Medical, Religious Life (Earth), Armed Forces (Military), and Motherhood bays.[232][247] Each of the sub-bays contain carved parapets atop their mono-pitched roofs.[244] The sub-bays are used for various exhibits. The iconography of the stained-glass windows in the arcade and clerestory is related to the theme of each respective sub-bay.[h][246] In each sub-bay, between the lower windows and the clerestory windows, is the triforium level, which contains two west–east corridors with numerous windowless rooms and office spaces.[242]

Apse edit

The apse, located at St. John's eastern end, is made up of numerous components.[31][248] The center of the apse contains the choir, located below the great organ. Two ambulatory passages run adjacent to the choir, one to the north and the other to the south. Seven chapels, a baptistery, and a columbarium are also located in the northwestern part of the apse.[248] The apse contains two sets of clerestory windows: the large ambulatory clerestories with multiple panels, as well as a smaller sanctuary clerestory window above each of the ambulatory clerestories.[249][250] The apse's walls are supported by gabled buttresses, which are taller than the height of the walls, and contain niches with statues.[250]

Choir edit

 
Choir stalls

The choir was consecrated in 1911.[31] It consists of two sets of wooden stalls facing each other, with three rows in each stall. The stalls were made by the Philadelphia-based John Barber Company.[251] The westernmost unit in the southern row of choir stalls is called the "Dean's Stall".[252] The roof above the choir is supported by eight columns, each 54 feet (16 m) tall with a 6-foot (1.8 m) diameter and a weight of 130 short tons (120 long tons; 120 t).[80][81][84][253] The columns' foundations descend as much as 130 feet (40 m) into the bedrock below them.[253]

The parapets behind the two sections of the choir were originally installed in 1922 with twenty niches for statues of the spiritual heroes of the twenty centuries since the birth of Christ.[254] For example, the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries are respectively represented by statues of William Shakespeare, George Washington, and Abraham Lincoln. The niche for the 20th century was left blank through the end of that century.[255][256] In 2001 the choir parapet was completed with carvings of Martin Luther King Jr., Albert Einstein, Susan B. Anthony, and Mohandas Gandhi by stonecarver Christopher Pellettieri.[257] In addition, the finials on both rows of stalls were carved by Otto Jahnsen and depict church-music composers and performers.[241]

On the floor are tiles designed by the Grueby Faience Company, with geometric patterns and imagery reminiscent of the iconography in other cathedrals.[107] A compass rose, the official icon of the Anglican Communion (in which the Episcopal Church participates), is located on the floor between the two stalls, in the center of the choir.[252]

Great Organ edit

The Great Organ was built by Ernest M. Skinner in 1906–1910.[93][258][227] It is located above the choir on the north and south sides, and consists of four manual keyboards with several pedals.[252][227] The opening recital was given in 1911 by Clarence Dickinson.[259] In 1954, it was enlarged by the Aeolian-Skinner Organ Company, Opus 150-A, under the tonal direction of G. Donald Harrison.[258][227] The organ contains 8,514 pipes,[260][261] though it previously included 8,035.[252] While most of the pipes are located above the choir stalls, the Great Organ also controls the State Trumpet, located beneath the rose window about 500 feet (150 m) to the west.[258]

The 2001 fire in the north transept resulted in heavy smoke damage to the organ, and it was subsequently restored by Quimby Pipe Organs, Inc., of Warrensburg, Missouri.[262][261][263] After two years of extensive and detailed refurbishment work, including a reorganization of many pipes and a rebuilding of the console, the organ finally returned to service in 2008 as part of an overall $41-million cleaning and repair to the cathedral.[261] The Great Organ was damaged again in the April 2019 crypt fire, and was indefinitely placed out of service pending a thorough cleaning.[207] While the Great Organ was being restored, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine used an electric organ.[264]

The organists have included:

Sanctuary edit

 
Altar

Behind the choir, to its east, is the sanctuary (or chancel), a raised platform.[258] The chancel includes the high altar, which is made of white Vermont marble.[253] The Magna Carta Pedestal—named as such because it is located atop three stones from the Bury St Edmunds Abbey in England[277]—is located to the right, while the sedilia for the bishop and other clergy is to the left.[253] The sanctuary also contains the cathedra (or bishop's seat),[258] donated by Olivia Egleston Phelps Stokes in memory of her sister Caroline Phelps Stokes.[278] The bishop's pulpit is made of Tennessee marble, with five niches, each of which contain reliefs that depict scenes from the life of Christ.[241] A presbytery, which houses the officiating clergy of St. John's, is located between the chancel and the choir.[258] The reredos behind the sanctuary depicts four scenes from the Old Testament on the left (north), and four from the New Testament on the right (south).[241]

Behind the altar is a wrought iron enclosure. The space contains the English Gothic style tomb of the man who originally conceived and founded the cathedral, the Right Reverend Horatio Potter,[279] which was dedicated in 1921.[280]

Ambulatory and chapels edit

 
One of the chapels

An ambulatory, measuring 250 feet (76 m) long and 14 feet (4.3 m) wide, surrounds the choir to the north, east, and south, making a rough "U" shape with the two ends of the "U" facing west.[241][248] The floor is covered with red clay-colored tiles that contain green-serpentine borders.[248] There are 30-foot-tall (9.1 m) wrought-steel gates at either end of the ambulatory. Numerous plaques are present in the ambulatory, paying homage to large donors and other notable individuals in St. John's history. A "poetry wall" and several Madonna paintings are also located in the ambulatory, particularly in the southern part of the ambulatory.[281]

Extending outward from the ambulatory are seven chapels.[241][244][247][282] These chapels are known as the "Chapels of the Tongues",[231][248][282] and all were donated by prominent individuals and families.[282] The chapels were designed by four different architects and firms:[248] Heins & LaFarge designed two of the chapels,[67] while Cram designed a third.[108] The Chapels of the Tongues were devoted to seven of the city's largest immigrant groups when the apse was completed: the southernmost three chapels represent "Latin races" and the northernmost three chapels represent "Germanic races".[67][283] All of the chapels, except for St. Ansgar's, were donated by individuals or families.[248][j] Clockwise from north, they are devoted to:[247][283]

The northwest corner of the apse, adjacent to the St. Ansgar Chapel, includes the octagonal baptistery.[293][294] The baptistery was donated by three Stuyvesant family siblings in 1924.[127][73] The space measures 31 feet (9.4 m) in diameter with a ceiling 43 feet (13 m) tall.[294] The baptistery's iconography depicts the Stuyvesant family history; icons of New Amsterdam, New York, and Dutch history; and the 12 apostles.[135][294]

The columbarium, established in the 1970s, is in a room directly west of the baptistery. It contains marble vaults, which store the remains of people from all religions.[295]

Crossing edit

 
The crossing (dark stone ceiling), viewed from the nave. The apse is in the background.

Between the nave to the west and the apse to the east is the crossing, designed by Rafael Guastavino. The interior of the crossing includes four massive granite arches, which in the original Heins & LaFarge design were originally intended to support the massive 445-foot (136 m) tower above it.[100][223] When completed in 1900, the arches were described as the "crowning glory" of Morningside Heights.[52][296] During the time that the nave remained incomplete, temporary walls were placed within the arches so that services could be held in the crossing.[223]

Above the crossing is a domed roof, which was meant as a temporary covering until the tower above the crossing was built. It was completed within fifteen weeks between May and August 1909.[107] The dome is shaped like a saucer, and consists of several overlapping layers of Guastavino tile, which support themselves around the dome's center upon their own weight.[100][107][85] The pendentives, or triangular areas between the circular dome and the corners of the arches, are 1 inch (25 mm) thick; the thickness of the dome itself ranges from 4 inches (100 mm) on top to 7.5 inches (190 mm) at the bottom.[107] Compared to conventional ceilings, the tiles saved money because they did not require temporary supports when they were installed.[101] For added strength, metal rods were included in the dome's shell.[107]

The dome was originally intended to be temporary.[79][101] Cram had proposed three plans for the structure above the crossing: a steeple, a square tower rising 500 feet (150 m) above the crossing floor, and then a slim spire. None of these plans were realized.[100] A three-year renovation project from 2019 to 2022 repaired cracks in tiles, patched concrete, added new protective materials, and built a new copper dome over the crossing.[210][211]

Basements edit

Directly below the crossing is the basement, which contains the crypt, now used as a storage area. The items stored in the crypt include artifacts such as pieces of the destroyed Pennsylvania Station and World Trade Center, as well as wooden angels, plaster gargoyles, leadlights, antique furniture, and a single-file line of saints. The crypt also includes objects such as a large fossil and a massive crystal of quartz, both of which were relocated to the crypt after the 2001 fire. Along either side the basement are rooms, each named after the chapels that they are located under.[204] In the 1980s, the crypt was also home to the Cathedral Works Company, which sold textiles.[297]

The crypt also formerly contained the Tiffany Chapel, created by jewelry designer Louis Comfort Tiffany.[77][298] Originally exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, it was then acquired by Celia Whipple Wallace and moved to the cathedral in 1898.[75][298] Services at the cathedral were hosted at the Tiffany Chapel from 1899 to 1911, and the chapel was reacquired by Tiffany in 1916.[77] The chapel has been in the Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art in Winter Park, Florida, since 1999.[298]

A subbasement below the crypt is often flooded by groundwater, potentially from springs in the area.[73] The Leake and Watts Asylum had a well on the site of the present-day baptistery,[73][299] and there was a spring near the intersection of 110th Street and Morningside Drive.[73][300] As early as 1893, workers discovered that the ground under the cathedral was soft and prone to flooding.[68][69] As a result, the cathedral has a concrete foundation.[71] Sump pumps keep the area dry, and construction of the neighboring Enclave has reduced flooding. However, the spring still exists underneath the cathedral, and water from the spring may have contributed to the partial collapse of a retaining wall in 2006.[73]

Cathedral close edit

 
Cathedral Close of St. John the Divine
1
Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine
2
Ithiel Town Building
3
Biblical Garden
4
The Cathedral School of St. John the Divine
5
Pulpit Green
6
Cathedral House/Ogilvie House
7
Synod Hall
8
Diocesan House

The cathedral close, surrounding the main cathedral, consists of several buildings on a 11.5-acre (4.7 ha) site,[231][301] including the former Leake & Watts asylum building, which predates the land's acquisition by the Episcopal Diocese of New York.[66] The other structures were built later.[66]

The former asylum is located immediately south of the crossing. The Cathedral School of St. John the Divine is located on the eastern boundary of the site, just south of the apse. A Biblical garden is located between the school and the asylum building. To the southwest is a pulpit green, situated between the nave to the north and the Synod Hall and Diocesan House to the south. The Cathedral House is located south of the Biblical garden and east of the pulpit green. The Synod Hall and Diocesan House are located on the southern boundary.[302] Various paths, gardens, play areas, and furniture are located on the cathedral close, as are numerous artworks and several commemorative or religious objects.[66]

The initial plans for the cathedral close, put forth in the 1890s, varied widely. The included a 1892 plan for buildings on Morningside Drive and Cathedral Parkway; various proposals for an Episcopal residence somewhere along the close; and an 1898–1899 plan for a deaconesses' training school.[244] Two other plans were proposed in 1902 and 1903,[303] but after objections to the 1903 plan from St. Luke's Hospital, a new plan was presented in 1906.[66] The Training School for Deaconesses was completed in 1909, independently of the plan.[304] Cram presented to the trustees an extensive plan for all the structures on the grounds in October 1911,[116] and the trustees approved the choir school the same month.[66] The following month, the trustees certified plans for the Synod Hall, bishop's house, and deanery,[305][306] as well as the never-built diocesan offices and canons' residences.[66] A heating plant at the southwestern corner of the cathedral close (added to the plan in 1913), and two structures planned for the western boundary and approved in 1920, were not built.[66] A shelter was built in 2015 for the cathedral's three peacocks, Jim, Phil, and Harry,[307] who lived on the cathedral close from the early 2000s to 2023.[308]

Ithiel Town Building edit

The former Leake and Watts Asylum building, designed by Ithiel Town and completed in 1843,[9][309] is located south of the crossing, where the south transept would have been located.[302] The building, designed in the Greek Revival style, was originally composed of five parts. There was a central pavilion with Ionic-style porticos to the south and north.[309] The front entrance, located within the south portico, was approached by a wide granite staircase. The only decorative element was at the south portico's pediment, which was supported by six stucco-covered brick columns, topped by capitals made of wood.[9][309] Brick wings flanked the central pavilion to each side, and originally contained wooden porches along their facades, replaced with iron balconies in 1888.[309]

 
Ithiel Town Building (former orphanage) seen here in 1934

Originally, there were common areas and staff rooms within the central pavilion, and dormitories for 300 children in the wings.[9][309] When the Episcopal Diocese of New York acquired the site, the former asylum building served several functions for the cathedral. Between 1892 and 1899, it was used as an employee dormitory and construction offices,[3] while the parlor hosted worship services.[310] Afterward, the former asylum's west wing was used by the day school for the cathedral's choirboys between 1901 and 1913. Cathedral leaders had proposed demolishing parts of the asylum building, since it was in the way of the proposed southern transept, though these demolitions did not happen.[3] Subsequently, the west wing was used by the Diocese offices, and the east wing by Cathedral offices until 1949.[3][310] The building then became the "Exhibit Hall"[310] and the top stories were removed sometime afterward. The structure was renovated in 2004–2012, becoming the "Ithiel Town Building".[309]

The Ithiel Town Building houses a textile laboratory that conserves the cathedral's textiles, including the Barberini tapestries to cartoons by Raphael. The laboratory also conserves tapestries, needlepoint, upholstery, costumes, and other textiles for its clients.[311] The building has also housed the Museum of Religious Art, as well as offices, shops, choir rehearsal quarters, sacristies, and the Cathedral Community Cares program.[309]

Diocesan House edit

The Diocesan House, also known as St. Faith's House, is the only building on the cathedral close to be designed by Heins & LaFarge before they were fired.[304][310] The structure, designed in the Tudor Gothic style,[310][312] is located on the southern side of the cathedral close, close to Cathedral Parkway (110th Street).[313] It is a 3+12-story H-shaped building with a brick facade, a base of Indiana limestone, and gable roofs above the pavilions on the western end. The southern elevation also contains an additional basement story. Its main entrance, on the eastern portion of the northern elevation, is a recessed-arched portal with an oriel window on the third story.[304] As of 2017, the Diocesan House is used by the diocese's offices and archives; the cathedral's library; and apartments.[304][313]

The Diocesan House was originally built for the New York Training School for Deaconesses, which was established in 1890 and had been searching for new locations since 1898 or 1899.[304][313] Funds to build the structure were finally received in 1907 after Archdeacon Charles Comfort Tiffany included $125,000 for the deaconesses' school in his will.[304][314] The building was originally supposed to be on the northern side of the cathedral close, but was moved due to objections from St. Luke's Hospital.[304] Construction started in May 1910[315] and the school opened by that October.[304][316] All work was finished in February 1911, and the building was used as a deaconesses' school until May 1948, and it was converted to office use the following year.[304]

Synod Hall edit

 
Synod Hall main entrance

The Synod Hall (also known as the Synod House) houses the cathedral's synod or council, but is also used for various events and other functions. It was completed in 1913 and was the first of four structures on the cathedral close to be designed by Cram, and was designed to be "the most beautiful thing in New York".[313] It is located at the southwestern corner of the cathedral close.[317][250] The main entrance, an arched portal facing Amsterdam Avenue, contains carvings of Christian figures, which flank oak double-doors.[317] A carving of George Washington is located between the doors, and six smaller figures are located on the tympanum above the doors.[318] The exterior is made of pink Kingwood sandstone.[317][319][320] Inside is a hall that can seat over a thousand people,[k] with gallery seating above the main level. There are grisaille windows to the north and south, and wooden trusses on the ceiling, supporting the gable roof.[318][319] The Synod Hall also contains a three-manual Skinner pipe organ.[320]

Plans for a diocesan building were considered as early as 1903.[250] The current Synod Hall was announced in 1911, in preparation for the 1913 General Convention of the Episcopal Church.[320][321] Cram's firm submitted plans for Synod Hall in March 1912,[322] and it opened in October 1913 with the start of the convention.[323] However, the hall was not completed until early 1914.[250] After Bayard Cutting and J. P. Morgan made large donations toward the Synod Hall, the cathedral had to return some of the previous donations, as the two men had given more than enough funds to pay for the building.[320]

School edit

 
The Cathedral School of St. John the Divine

The choir school building, now the Cathedral School of St. John the Divine, is located on the cathedral close's eastern border.[302] The building is in the Collegiate Gothic style and is 4+12 stories tall.[310][324] The exterior contains gray schist cladding and limestone trim, with architectural features such as a gabled roof, dormers protruding from the roof, and Tudor-style arched openings. Inside, the building contained classrooms; gathering space for reception, dining; music rooms; a library; a gymnasium; a dormitory; and masters' and service rooms.[324]

The choir school was created in 1901 within the Town Building.[3] A separate structure was first proposed in Walter Cook & Winthrop A. Welch's 1906 plan for the campus.[324] In January 1910, Mary Eliza Blodgett (alternatively Mrs. J. Jarrett Blodgett) donated $25,000 toward the new school building's projected $150,000 cost, as a gift to honor her father John H. Sherwood.[324][325] Blodgett later covered the rest of the choir school building's cost after no one else donated, while former choirboy Frederick G. Bourne provided a $500,000 endowment in 1914.[310][324] Cram approved Cook & Welch's plan in January 1912 and filed construction plans that July, with work beginning that October.[324] The school building was finished in September 1913.[318][324] The choir school consisted of day school for 20 adult men and a boarding school for 40 choirboys who paid no tuition. It was turned into a boys' day school in 1964 and a coeducational day school for grades K-8 in 1972.[324]

Bishop's house and deanery edit

The Episcopal Residence, consisting of the bishop's house (also Cathedral House) and deanery (also Ogilvie House), were the final buildings that Cram designed within the cathedral close.[318] The structures were intentionally built close together to evoke a feeling of coziness.[319] According to Cram, the Chateauesque-style buildings were inspired by "later domestic" buildings in the French Gothic style.[326] The bishop's house is west of the deanery, on slightly higher ground; the deanery is thus hidden behind the bishop's house.[318] A small garden is located at the northeast corner of the buildings.[310]

As built, the two structures contained a myriad of living space inside. The bishop's house contained eight rooms with seven bathrooms, while the deanery contained 20 rooms with five bathrooms.[127] The deanery is three stories tall; like the choir school, it has gray schist cladding and limestone trim. It contains several pavilions with dormers and gabled roofs, as well as a loggia and an oriel window on the southern elevation.[327] The bishop's house is four stories tall and is largely in the same design, but part of the northern elevation is made of exposed brick, marking the location where it would have connected to the unbuilt southern transept.[158] The ornamentation of the bishop's house contains symbols of the diocesan offices, such as bishops; by contrast, the deanery has simpler decorations, such as depictions of flowers and cats. A private chapel between the two buildings was not built.[318]

An episcopal residence had been announced in 1897[327] and Heins & LaFarge drew up plans for such a structure in 1902.[303] The Deanery was donated by Helen Slade Ogilvie in 1911 in memory of her late husband Clinton,[310][319][328] while the bishop's house was funded partly by the sale of a previous bishop's house at Gramercy Park.[327] Initially, the site of the two structures was contested because the buildings would have blocked views of the main cathedral from the south.[318] Before the structures' construction started in 1912, the sites for the bishop's house and deanery were relocated eastward.[329] The two buildings' sites were given preliminary approval in May 1912 and were officially approved that October.[319] The bishop's house started in November 1912[330] and was finished in April 1914.[327] while the deanery was started in February 1913 and completed by that November.[319] Both structures were erected by Leonard Jacob and Frederick T. Youngs.[319] After the 1947 Diocesan Convention, the bishop moved into the upper two floors of the deanery, and the old bishop's house was turned into administration offices.[158][310][328]

Residential buildings edit

 
Avalon Morningside Park, built on a portion of the cathedral close in 2007

In 2008, the cathedral leased the southeast corner of its property, which contained the cathedral's playground and Rose Garden, to the AvalonBay Communities, which built a luxury apartment building called the Avalon Morningside Park. The project includes 295 apartments, of which 20% are affordable housing units, as well as replacement rose garden.[331] The cathedral leased the northeastern edge of its property, formerly a parking lot, in 2012.[332] The lessee was the Brodsky Organization, which built a residential building called the Enclave between 2014[333] and 2015.[202][334] The Enclave consists of 428 rental apartments in two 15-story buildings, separated by the passageway leading to the northern transept; an underground gallery connects the two buildings.[202]

Both developments leased the land from the cathedral for 99-year terms. The lease on the land under the Enclave pays the Cathedral about $3 million a year; the lease on the Avalon, about $2.5 million.[201][202]

Art, activities, and exhibitions edit

Concerts and special events edit

The cathedral's interior is frequently used for concerts, performances, and other special events.[335]

Recurring events edit

The cathedral has an annual New Year's Eve Concert for Peace. The Postlude to Act I of Leonard Bernstein's opera Quiet Place received its New York premiere at the 1985 concert.[335] The 1990 concert was a tribute to Bernstein himself, who helped found the event and had died two months earlier on October 14.[336]

Paul Winter has given many concerts at the cathedral, and the Paul Winter Consort are the artists in residence.[337] Among the major musical events that takes place every year is a celebration of the feast day of St. Francis, when the Paul Winter Consort participates in a liturgical performance of Winter's Missa Gaia (Earth Mass).[338][339] The musical group also performs at the annual Winter Solstice program.[340][341]

One-time events edit

The cathedral has also been used for several individual events:

  • Duke Ellington's Second Sacred Concert, of his original sacred music compositions, premiered at the cathedral on January 19, 1968.[78][342][343]
  • When construction on the south tower restarted in 1982, French high-wire artist Philippe Petit walked on a tightrope stretched across Amsterdam Avenue.[154][344] Petit was also the artist-in-residence at St. John's starting in 1982.[345]
  • In 1990, the avant-garde musician Diamanda Galas performed Plague Mass, a culmination of her work dedicated to the victims of the AIDS epidemic. Galas's performance consisted of covering her body in cattle blood and reinterpreting biblical texts and classic literature. She said it was a protest against what she saw as the ignorance and condemnation toward people with AIDS from religious and political groups.[346]
  • On December 8, 1994, Mariah Carey hosted a benefit concert for The Fresh Air Fund.[347] The concert helped raise $700,000 to support the Fresh Air Fund and Carey's own Camp Mariah, and an additional $1 million from Carey herself.[348]
  • The wedding of Ethan Hawke and Uma Thurman took place at the cathedral on May 1, 1998.[349]
  • In November 2017, Aretha Franklin held her last large public concert, a 25th-anniversary event for the Elton John AIDS Foundation being hosted at the cathedral.[350]

The Cathedral of St. John the Divine has also hosted events with spiritual leaders.[78] Among them are Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, who first visited the cathedral in 1979.[351] In addition, Bishop Desmond Tutu led a service in the cathedral in 1986.[352]

Temporary art exhibitions edit

The Cathedral of St. John the Divine is also used as an art exhibition space:[353]

  • In 1977, a sculpture dedicated to the 12 firemen who died in the 23rd Street Fire of 1966 was unveiled at St. John's.[354]
  • Edwina Sandys's Christa, a sculpture exhibited during Holy Week in 1984, was based upon the feminine divine. Though the sculpture generally received positive acclaim, several pieces of hate mail were addressed to the cathedral, accusing the cathedral of "blasphemy" with its depiction of Christ on the cross.[355] The statue was displayed again at The Christa Project: Manifesting Divine Bodies exhibition in 2016.[355][356]
  • The Value of Water, curated by artist activist Fredericka Foster, was exhibited at the cathedral in 2011. Featuring over forty artists, it was the largest-ever art exhibition to appear at the cathedral.[357][358][359]
  • In 2014, the cathedral housed Phoenix, a sculptural group by Chinese artist Xu Bing. The two sculptures that comprised Phoenix was one of the largest pieces of sculpture ever displayed in the United States, weighing 12 short tons (11 long tons; 11 t) with lengths of 90 and 100 feet (27 and 30 m).[360]

Poets' Corner edit

The Poets' Corner, inspired by a similar corner at Westminster Abbey, is located in the Arts Bay, on the nave's northern side.[361][362] It was dedicated in 1985, with Emily Dickinson, Washington Irving, and Walt Whitman being the first poets to be inducted as part of the tradition.[362][363][364] The Poets' Corner consists of a poet-in-residence, hired for a five-year term, who in turn appoints electors on staggered terms. The poets-in-residence and electors have included 17 United States Poet Laureates.[361] The electors then vote on choices for honorees, whose names are carved into blocks in the Poets' Corner; subsequent honorees have included Edgar Allan Poe, T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, and William Carlos Williams. The electors' choices can be overturned, as occurred in 1999, when the Very Reverend Harry Pritchett vetoed Ezra Pound's inclusion because of Pound's anti-Semitic statements during World War II.[365]

Permanent works edit

 
Closeup of the Peace Fountain

The pulpit green contains the Peace Fountain, a large bronze work of public art by the cathedral's sculptor-in-residence, Greg Wyatt. It was commissioned in 1985 and depicts the struggle of good and evil; a battle between the Archangel Michael and Satan; and images of the Sun, the Moon, and several animals.[366][367]

Advocacy edit

Throughout the years, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine has been involved in various initiatives and projects. These programs included youth initiatives, a soup kitchen, a homeless shelter, and AIDS outreach. During the Vietnam War, the cathedral was also part of the opposition to United States involvement in the war.[237][368] The Temple of Understanding, an interfaith organization, was housed at the cathedral for several decades in the late 20th century, moving to Midtown Manhattan in the 1990s.[369][370]

Several programs have been directed toward helping members of the surrounding community. In 1971, the cathedral founded ACT (Athletics, Creativity, and Trips), a program that provided after-school activities and summer camp to children in the neighborhood.[78][369] The program still runs as of 2018[371] under the name "Advancing the Community of Tomorrow".[372] In 1974, in response to a need for housing in New York City, St. John's created a program that became the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB);[179][373] by 1987, the program had helped residential tenants in over 500 buildings to renovate and take ownership of their houses.[374] Additionally, a homeless shelter, crisis center, clothes closet, and kitchen are run by in-house volunteers.[369]

Deans edit

Notable funerals and memorials edit

The following people are listed with the year of their funeral or memorial service in parentheses:

Visitor access edit

In addition to worship services, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine offers both self-guided and guided tours of the interior exhibits, the cathedral close, and the gardens. These tours require paid tickets; there are discounts for seniors and students, as well as for those in tour groups. Admission is also included within several New York City tourist passes. The cathedral is open for tourism between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Mondays through Saturdays, and between 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. on Sundays; it is open for worship between 7:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. on all days of the week.[403] Additionally, St. John's offers three types of "daily tours", specific tours of different aspects of the cathedral, which cost more than the regular tickets.[404]

Landmark status edit

The Cathedral of St. John the Divine complex had been considered for designation as an official landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1966. At the time, St. John's trustees had opposed the move because the structure was incomplete, and a landmark designation would have required the commission to review every proposed major expansion thereafter.[405] The church's trustees were able to prevent designation by claiming the church was not completed, using a stipulation in the landmark's law that stated that potential landmarks had to have been completed for at least 30 years. A subsequent landmark designation was precluded in 1979 for a similar reason.[9]

In 2003, the exterior of the cathedral was again considered for landmark status; the interior was ineligible because the commission was legally unable to recognize religious buildings' interiors as landmarks.[406] However, shortly after the commission conferred landmark status on the structure, the designation was unanimously overturned by the New York City Council, some of whose members favored landmark status for the entire cathedral close instead of just the main building. Councilman Bill Perkins proposed that the protective status should also be extended to the cathedral's grounds in order to control development there.[198][407] The lack of an official city landmark designation meant that the cathedral site could potentially be redeveloped,[408] and as such, two residential buildings were built on the same block as the cathedral.[201] In 2017, the cathedral and six other buildings on the grounds were re-designated a New York City Landmark; the designation excludes the two new structures.[203][409][410]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b This distinction depends on which dimensions are considered. For a discussion on the matter of size, see Quirk 1993, pp. 15–16.
  2. ^ Sources differ over how many plans were submitted. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission states that 68 plans were submitted,[30] but architectural writer Robert A. M. Stern writes that 66 plans were submitted.[33]
  3. ^ The largest stone columns were those at Saint Isaac's Cathedral in the Russian city of Saint Petersburg.[85][86]
  4. ^ However, St. John's is not literally at the highest point in Manhattan. That distinction belongs to Bennett Park in Hudson Heights, 265 feet (81 m) above sea level.[215]
  5. ^ The street grid, as laid out in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, is rotated about 29 degrees clockwise from true compass west and east.[218]
  6. ^ It was the fifth-largest cathedral in 2000,[195] but the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, which is larger,[221] was completed in 2017.[222]
  7. ^ The other three are at St Bartholomew's Church, Brighton; St Mary's Church, Nottingham; and Salada Tea Company, Boston.[239][240]
  8. ^ Quirk 1993, pp. 43–75, gives a detailed analysis of the stained glass at arcade level. Quirk 1993, pp. 76–83, describes the stained glass in the clerestory.
  9. ^ a b c d e f From 1910 to 1990, the organist for the cathedral was also the organist for the Cathedral School.[269]
  10. ^ The donors for each chapel were:[284]
    • St. Ansgar: built in memory of William Reed Huntington
    • St. Boniface: gift of George and Julia Bowdoin and their children
    • St. Columba: gift of Mary Augusta King
    • St. Savior: gift of August Belmont Jr.
    • St. Martin: gift of Clementina Furniss
    • St. Ambrose: gift of Sara Whiting Rives
    • St. James: gift of Elizabeth Scrivan Potter, wife of Henry Codman Potter
  11. ^ According to Dolkart 1998, p. 64, the space could fit 1,200 people. However, Quirk 1993, p. 147, says that the hall can only seat 1,000.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 1.
  2. ^ Hall, Edward Hagaman (1916). "A Brief History of Morningside Park and Vicinity". Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York. p. 554.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 4.
  4. ^ Dolkart 1998, p. 13.
  5. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, p. 1.
  6. ^ Richmond 1872, p. 326.
  7. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, pp. 19–21.
  8. ^ Richmond 1872, p. 327.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Gray, Christopher (June 24, 1990). "Streetscapes: The Leake & Watts Orphan Asylum; A Castoff in the Path of a Growing, Great Cathedral". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  10. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 6.
  11. ^ a b Burrows, Edwin G. and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 1087. ISBN 0-195-11634-8.
  12. ^ a b c d Dolkart 1998, p. 37.
  13. ^ a b Jackson 2010, pp. 416–418.
  14. ^ a b "St. John's Cathedral Mapped 113 Years Ago, Diary of Phil Hone, Mayor in 1820s, Shows". The New York Times. November 22, 1941. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 7.
  16. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, p. 38.
  17. ^ a b c "Memories of a Metropolitan Bishop, by George F. Nelson (1927)". Project Canterbury. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 396.
  19. ^ Quirk 1993, p. 19.
  20. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 25 (footnote 16).
  21. ^ a b c Dolkart 1998, p. 39.
  22. ^ Episcopal Church. Diocese of New York (1883). The Election and Consecration of the Rev. Henry Codman Potter, D.D., LL D.: As Assistant Bishop of the Diocese of New York. J. Pott. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
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  27. ^ Dolkart 1998, p. 40.
  28. ^ Hodges, George (1915). Henry Codman Potter, seventh bishop of New York. Macmillan. p. 206. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  29. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, p. 41.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 8.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Hall 1920, p. 25.
  32. ^ a b Quirk 1993, p. 20.
  33. ^ a b c d Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 398.
  34. ^ a b c Dolkart 1998, p. 42.
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  42. ^ a b c d Dolkart 1998, p. 43.
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  44. ^ "Architects of the New Cathedral". New York Sun. July 26, 1891. p. 18. Retrieved November 30, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  45. ^ a b Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 400.
  46. ^ Dolkart 1998, pp. 44–45.
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  48. ^ "Mr. W. W. Kent's Vindication". The Buffalo Commercial. November 30, 1892. p. 9. Retrieved November 30, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  49. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, pp. 46–47.
  50. ^ Stern, Robert A. M.; Mellins, Thomas; Fishman, David (1999). New York 1880: Architecture and Urbanism in the Gilded Age. Monacelli Press. p. 366. ISBN 978-1-58093-027-7. OCLC 40698653.
  51. ^ Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 17.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017, p. 9.
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  55. ^ "Plans for the New Cathedral". New York Sun. November 29, 1891. p. 8. Retrieved November 30, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  56. ^ "Will Begin Work Next Spring". The New York Times. November 29, 1891. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  57. ^ a b Dolkart 1998, p. 48.
  58. ^ a b c d Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 401.
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  60. ^ "The Cathedral of St. John the Divine". The New York Times. December 27, 1892. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  61. ^ a b c "St. John the Divine". New York Evening World. December 27, 1892. p. 2. Retrieved November 30, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  62. ^ "The Cathedral Cornerstone; Arrangements for the Ceremonies Are Rapidly Completing". The New York Times. December 8, 1892. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
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  64. ^ "Ready to Begin the Cathedral". New York Sun. January 25, 1893. p. 1. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
  65. ^ "Its Title Deed Secured; The First Step Toward Building the Cathedral of St. John the Divine Taken". The New York Times. May 23, 1893. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 30, 2019.
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  67. ^ a b c d e Dolkart 1998, p. 50.
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  69. ^ a b "Building in a Mud-Pocket". The World. September 9, 1893. p. 8. Retrieved December 24, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
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cathedral, john, divine, sometimes, referred, john, also, nicknamed, john, unfinished, cathedral, episcopal, diocese, york, 1047, amsterdam, avenue, morningside, heights, neighborhood, manhattan, york, city, between, west, 110th, street, also, known, cathedral. The Cathedral of St John the Divine sometimes referred to as St John s and also nicknamed St John the Unfinished is the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of New York It is at 1047 Amsterdam Avenue in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City between West 110th Street also known as Cathedral Parkway and West 113th Street Cathedral of St John the DivineThe western elevation of the facade including the rose windowReligionAffiliationEpiscopal ChurchDistrictEpiscopal Diocese of New YorkPatronJohn the EvangelistYear consecrated1911StatusActiveLocationLocationManhattan New York CityStateNew YorkShown within ManhattanShow map of ManhattanCathedral of St John the Divine New York City Show map of New York CityCathedral of St John the Divine New York Show map of New YorkCathedral of St John the Divine the United States Show map of the United StatesGeographic coordinates40 48 13 N 73 57 41 W 40 80361 N 73 96139 W 40 80361 73 96139ArchitectureArchitect s Christopher Grant LaFarge and George Lewis Heins Ralph Adams CramTypeCathedralStyleRomanesque Revival and Gothic RevivalGroundbreakingDecember 27 1892Completed1911 crossing apse 1941 nave Incomplete southern transept and towers MaterialsStone granite limestoneOfficial name Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine and the Cathedral CloseTypeNew York City LandmarkDesignatedFebruary 21 2017Reference no 2585 1 WebsiteStJohnDivine orgThe cathedral is an unfinished building with only two thirds of the proposed building completed due to several major stylistic changes work interruptions and unstable ground on the site The original design in the Byzantine Revival and Romanesque Revival styles began construction in 1892 After the opening of the crossing in 1909 the overall plan was changed to a Gothic Revival design The completion of the nave was delayed until 1941 due to various funding shortfalls and little progress has occurred since then except for an addition to the tower at the nave s southwest corner After a large fire damaged part of the cathedral in 2001 it was renovated and rededicated in 2008 The towers above the western elevation of the facade as well as the southern transept and a proposed steeple above the crossing have not been completed Despite being incomplete the Cathedral of St John the Divine is the world s sixth largest church by area and either the largest or second largest Anglican cathedral a The floor area of St John s is 121 000 sq ft 11 200 m2 spanning a length of 601 feet 183 m while the roof height of the nave is 177 feet 54 m Since the cathedral s interior is so large it has been used for hundreds of events and art exhibitions In addition the Cathedral of St John the Divine has been involved in various advocacy initiatives throughout its history The cathedral close includes numerous buildings the Leake amp Watts Orphan Asylum Building the cathedral proper the St Faith s House the Choir School the Deanery and the Bishop s House The buildings are designed in several different styles and were built over prolonged periods of construction with the Leake amp Watts Orphan Asylum predating the cathedral itself The cathedral close was collectively designated an official city landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 2017 Contents 1 History 1 1 Context 1 1 1 Site 1 1 2 Need for a cathedral 1 2 Planning 1 2 1 Site selection 1 2 2 Architecture competition 1 2 3 Plan selected 1 3 Construction and early years 1 3 1 Initial construction 1 3 2 Crossing opening and change in design 1 3 3 Nave and north transept 1 4 Full length opening and expansion 1 4 1 Halt in construction 1 4 2 Resumption of work 1 5 21st century 1 5 1 2020 shooting 2 Main structure 2 1 Narthex and western facade 2 1 1 Narthex 2 1 2 Western facade 2 2 Nave 2 3 Apse 2 3 1 Choir 2 3 2 Great Organ 2 3 3 Sanctuary 2 3 4 Ambulatory and chapels 2 4 Crossing 2 5 Basements 3 Cathedral close 3 1 Ithiel Town Building 3 2 Diocesan House 3 3 Synod Hall 3 4 School 3 5 Bishop s house and deanery 3 6 Residential buildings 4 Art activities and exhibitions 4 1 Concerts and special events 4 1 1 Recurring events 4 1 2 One time events 4 2 Temporary art exhibitions 4 3 Poets Corner 4 4 Permanent works 5 Advocacy 6 Deans 7 Notable funerals and memorials 8 Visitor access 9 Landmark status 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Leake and Watts Orphanage which is still located on the cathedral groundsContext edit Site edit The neighborhood of Morningside Heights was thinly settled in the 17th century by the Dutch then by the British 2 It remained rural through the mid 19th century with two exceptions The first was the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum no longer extant which opened on the site of the Columbia University campus near 116th Street in 1821 3 4 The other was Leake and Watts Orphan Asylum bounded by 110th Street to the south and 113th Street to the north which later became the current cathedral site 3 5 The Leake and Watts asylum was incorporated in 1831 under act of the New York State Legislature and three years later 25 acres 10 ha land at the corner of Bloomingdale Road now Broadway and 110th Street was purchased from the Bloomingdale Asylum 6 7 The initial plans for the asylum were drawn up by Ithiel Town but were revised several times to keep the costs within the asylum s budget 3 The cornerstone of the asylum was laid in 1838 and it was completed in 1843 8 7 9 Need for a cathedral edit Meanwhile the Episcopal Diocese of New York started to grow in the early 19th century there were 26 Episcopal parishes in the city by 1800 and a decade later that number had nearly doubled to 50 10 11 12 13 In 1828 the first proposal for a grand cathedral for the diocese was made by Bishop John Henry Hobart who proposed a site near Washington Square Park 14 15 The church would be called the Cathedral of St John the Divine or St John s Cathedral for short after the Revelation by John of Patmos also called John the Divine 14 The plans were canceled because of objections over erecting such a large building for the diocese a derivative of the Church of England even as many New Yorkers still harbored resentment over the American Revolutionary War 15 In 1873 a cathedral board of trustees was established under Bishop Horatio Potter The board decided on property just south of Central Park bounded by 59th Street to the north and 57th Street to the south 15 16 17 18 However the purchase was canceled after the would be donors lost their savings in the Panic of 1873 15 16 19 Yet another plot of land at Eighth Avenue and 74th Street was offered to the church in 1882 but rejected due to the high cost of acquisition 20 By 1890 there were 40 000 Episcopalians in Manhattan and Episcopalians made up the largest bloc of Protestants in the borough 11 12 13 Furthermore many imposing institutions were being built in New York City such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art Carnegie Hall Metropolitan Opera House and the American Museum of Natural History 21 Planning edit Site selection edit When Henry C Potter Horatio Potter s nephew became the Diocese of New York s assistant bishop in 1883 22 he convened the trustees to look for an alternate site 15 17 18 On June 1 1887 Henry Potter publicly announced his intention to build St John s though the exact location was still to be determined 12 Potter described the planned cathedral as an American Westminster Abbey 15 18 that would rival the Catholic St Patrick s Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan 12 23 In his announcement Potter called on New Yorkers to give funds toward the new cathedral which was expected to cost 10 million 21 23 24 The plans for the cathedral were well received by both Protestants and non Protestants as well as the media and other denominational leaders 15 21 25 The donors included the wealthy Astor Vanderbilt and Belmont families 15 Additionally the Barberini family s tapestries were gifted to the cathedral in 1891 26 Numerous sites in Manhattan were examined for the new cathedral s location 27 and by 1889 the Leake and Watts Asylum between 110th and 113th Streets had been chosen as the site for the future site of St John s 15 18 28 News media such as The New York Times and Uptown Visitor praised the decision as the site was located on a high point overlooking Central and Morningside parks 18 29 The committee had wanted to build slightly further north on a more elevated plot between 116th Street to the south and 119th Street to the north However that plot would be too difficult to acquire as ownership of that tract was divided among several entities by contrast the Leake and Watts Asylum had full control over their entire city block 29 30 The 11 5 acre 4 7 ha asylum site was deeded to the cathedral in October 1891 and the asylum moved to Westchester County New York 9 31 The asylum site was then acquired for 850 000 32 At the time Morningside Heights was quickly being developed as a residential neighborhood surrounded by numerous higher education institutions 3 5 The proposed cathedral s elevated location would have been visible from New Jersey across the Hudson River to the west as well as from the New York Bay to the south 33 Architecture competition edit nbsp Architectural rendering of the cathedral s design for Heins amp LaFarge Architects 1891 nbsp Cathedral of St John the Divine in 1910Simultaneously there was also debate over the new cathedral s style because of the larger plot and more remote location from Midtown Manhattan it was expected to be more elaborate than St Patrick s 18 The trustees had formed a Committee on Architecture in conjunction with William Robert Ware a Columbia architecture professor which held a design competition for St John that involved several prominent architectural firms Though everyone was free to enter the competition fourteen firms and architects were paid 500 each to create designs for the cathedral 30 34 The deadline for each plan was January 1889 35 36 That May the board of trustees formed a committee to review the more than 60 designs that had been submitted 30 33 b Many of the competitors were American though only four were experienced in cathedral construction 37 The board members then discussed the designs privately some architects expressed concerns about the secret consultations since the trustees generally did not have knowledge of architectural design 34 The competition was narrowed down to four finalists Namely these were Gerona by William A Potter and R H Robertson Three Arabesque Scrolls within a Circle by George L Heins and Christopher Grant LaFarge with William Winthrop Kent AMDG by George M Huss and J H Buck and Jerusalem the Golden by William Halsey Wood 34 38 39 40 Gerona used the Gothic style based on Spanish cathedrals AMDG and Jerusalem the Golden were in a regular Gothic style and Three Arabesque Scrolls was mainly Byzantine 40 41 Potter and Robertson were the only one of the four finalists who had significant experience at the time and the trustees had agreed not to release any designs without the consent of all competitors although some contestants broke the agreement anyway by revealing their designs to the media 33 The finalists were given more than a year to refine the details of their plans the original deadline was set for February 1890 42 but was later extended to November 43 after a failed proposal to host the World s Columbian Exposition in Morningside Park 42 The submissions were placed in public view in April 1891 30 42 By then the public was losing interest in the competition and the finalist designs mainly received negative criticism 42 Plan selected edit In July 1891 the plan selection committee chose Heins amp LaFarge s plan as the winning proposal 30 32 44 45 The design had been the trustees second choice although the trustees liked Potter and Robertson s plan more W A Potter was the bishop s half brother and the trustees did not want to be accused of nepotism 45 46 To Kent s consternation he was initially not recognized as a co collaborator 47 and would not be acknowledged as such until the following year 48 The group s blueprints called for chapels and end sections with apses a crossing containing four round arches as well as a dome topped by a massive tower and transepts with round edges The interior was based upon Boston s Trinity Church and the crossing was based upon Istanbul s Hagia Sophia Venice s St Mark s Basilica and the Perigueux Cathedral 30 49 50 The exotic design was seen as an example of the unusual architecture that was prevalent at that time 51 30 49 It was also Heins amp LaFarge s first major commission the firm later designed structures such as the Astor Court buildings at the Bronx Zoo as well as the early stations of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company the first operator of the present day New York City Subway 52 53 That October the trustees directed the firm to revise their design further 54 The following month it was announced that work would begin in early 1892 provided that Heins amp LaFarge submitted their revised plans that April 55 56 The original plans were then substantially revised because the board of trustees wanted a Gothic style appearance The western towers were modified to remove the spires and enlarge the windows and various Gothic details were placed on the facade The nave was realigned from north south to east west so that the apse would face east in the direction of the sunrise to represent the resurrection of Jesus as per Episcopal tradition 52 57 58 Heins amp LaFarge objected to the realignment because it would result in the cathedral being hidden behind other buildings 57 In the final plan Three Arabesque Scrolls incorporated both Byzantine and Romanesque influences with Gothic detailing on the exterior Outwardly the design resembled the AMDG plan from Huss amp Buck 37 By April 1892 the trustees had raised much of the 850 000 required for land acquisition though there still remained a deficit of 175 000 59 Construction and early years edit Construction on the Cathedral of St John the Divine was begun with the cornerstone laying ceremony on December 27 1892 St John s Day 60 61 One thousand tickets for seats at the ceremony were distributed 62 though the actual attendance was 1 100 61 The cornerstone contained various objects such as a Bible and church papers 61 Potter hit the stone three times with a mallet and said Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ 63 The following month the remaining 175 000 for land acquisition had been secured 64 and the trustees moved to take title to the land including the cathedral close around the cathedral s main building in April 65 Unlike the main building the cathedral close was not designed under a single master plan and during the 1890s and 1900s several proposals would be made for the site 66 Initial construction edit nbsp Stonemason finishing an angel 1909Actual work on St John s began in early 1893 52 The trustees initially expected that work would proceed quickly because much of the Morningside Heights plateau was made of shallow bedrock However in September 1893 builders unexpectedly hit pockets of soft shale and an underground spring at several locations about 40 feet 12 m below ground 52 67 68 69 One of these pockets was located directly below the site for one of the four piers that were to support the cathedral s massive 445 foot 136 m stone tower 70 71 The trustees briefly considered moving the entire cathedral slightly southward 52 72 They ultimately decided against moving the cathedral believing it to be inauspicious if the cornerstone were to be moved 70 71 Instead builders drilled several deep shafts until they hit the bedrock then poured concrete pits within each shaft The pits would then accommodate the construction of the tower s piers 52 67 70 71 The layer of bedrock was in some cases 72 feet 22 m beneath ground level 73 74 The pits were completed in late 1895 at a significantly higher cost than originally estimated 52 67 By 1898 St John s had cost an estimated 750 000 75 and as per an 1896 estimate the cathedral was projected to cost at least 5 million when complete 76 As a temporary measure the Tiffany Chapel was purchased in mid 1898 so that services could be held there The chapel was placed in the crypt within the basement 75 77 The first services were held in January 1899 within the Tiffany Chapel 31 52 78 The crossing arches located in the cathedral plot s eastern portion were completed the following year 52 though three of the arches were temporarily sealed off until the transepts and nave could be completed 79 By then some 2 million had already been spent even though little appeared to have been completed 80 Despite large donations from prominent figures such as financiers John Jacob Astor IV and William Waldorf Astor governor Levi P Morton banker J P Morgan and businessman Cornelius Vanderbilt the trustees continued to raise funds 81 In March 1903 the trustees announced that the next stage of St John s construction would require 500 000 for building the choir and 200 000 for completing the loft and that eight massive granite columns would need to be procured to support the roof over the choir 82 Furthermore the trustees would build three arches to support the rest of the roof 83 The choir columns sourced from Vinalhaven Maine were each 54 feet 16 m tall with a 6 foot 1 8 m diameter 80 81 84 At the time they were the world s second largest stone columns c but because of their size three of the columns were cracked while being turned 81 87 86 The columns were then transported using a specially constructed barge towed by the large steam tug Clara Clarita 88 When the columns arrived at Manhattan in July and August 1903 they were rolled onto flatbed trucks and brought to the cathedral s site 86 89 90 Since the builders did not have a derrick that was strong enough to lift the column pieces they placed another order for wood to build a strong enough derrick The columns were finally lifted in July 1904 more than a year after the initial announcement 87 86 The walls could not be placed until after the columns had been installed 81 87 86 Work also began in 1903 on the crossing ceiling which was to contain Guastavino tiles designed by Spanish architect Rafael Guastavino 81 The board of trustees implemented a new charter in early 1904 which provided for greater representation of laypeople on the board 91 By 1905 with 800 000 available for construction the trustees anticipated that the cathedral would be completed within a decade 92 The church s great organ was ordered from Skinner the following year at a cost of 50 000 following a gift by the Morton family 93 It was almost completed by 1911 with nearly 7 000 pipes the cost of the organ had risen to 70 000 94 Work also continued on the exterior walls of the choir and the seven surrounding chapels in the apse which required 100 000 short tons 91 000 t of granite Builders estimated that 300 000 short tons 270 000 t of stone would have been used for the walls once work was completed 95 Gutzon Borglum was commissioned for some of the initial sculptural elements on St John s though his relation with the trustees was strained he destroyed two angels after criticism of his work 96 and threatened to quit in 1906 97 Because of the delays in construction members of the public began to question the necessity of constructing such a large cathedral 86 With little progress to show for public sentiment began to turn against the cathedral Even the trustees started to have doubts about certain aspects of the plan criticizing Heins amp LaFarge s small staff their simultaneous involvement in many other projects slow construction and cost overruns 98 Crossing opening and change in design edit nbsp The consecration of the choir April 19 1911Although Heins died in 1907 58 99 LaFarge continued to design the crossing choir and apse of St John s 81 By then the architectural preferences of the public were shifting away from the original design 58 63 Additionally communication between LaFarge and the trustees were deteriorating 98 100 with several trustees calling for LaFarge s removal 98 The choir was covered in 1908 and the crossing was installed the next year 101 The choir was nearly complete by October 1909 but there were insufficient funds to complete its construction delaying its opening by at least six months 102 103 At that time St John s was earning about 24 000 per year and had a 500 000 endowment while at least 1 million was needed to complete construction 103 104 In March 1911 trustees finally confirmed an opening date of April 19 1911 105 The first service in the choir and crossing the consecration of the choir occurred as scheduled on that day 31 106 107 The completed portions of the cathedral were widely praised though few newspapers devoted extensive coverage to the event except the New York Herald 107 A month after the choir s consecration the trustees suddenly fired LaFarge commissioning Ralph Adams Cram to take LaFarge s place as lead architect of St John s 108 109 110 The trustees had exercised a clause in their contract with Heins amp LaFarge enabling them to hire another architect if either partner were to die 58 LaFarge was not made aware of the matter beforehand and was only notified via a cable sent by his partner Benjamin Wistar Morris 109 110 The original Byzantine Romanesque design was changed to a Gothic design and Cram was asked to convert many existing features to Gothic style 111 112 113 114 The move was criticized in the local media 109 who claimed that the trustees and Cram had been conspiring to eject LaFarge from the lead architect position 81 115 However The New York Sun reported that Cram had only reluctantly accepted the commission because the trustees had threatened to hire a foreign architect otherwise 112 Cram presented a master plan for the cathedral close s buildings in October 1911 66 116 and his revised designs for the main structure were completed in 1913 117 118 119 Regardless there was still not enough money to complete the cathedral s construction as the New York Episcopal Diocese Cathedral League had mentioned in 1912 that 5 5 million was still needed 120 The diocese was able to construct several structures to the south of the main building see Cathedral close 117 as part of a plan that had been approved by the trustees in late 1911 66 These structures included the St Faith s House 1909 Synod House 1911 1913 Cathedral School 1912 1913 and Cathedral House 1912 1914 121 Nave and north transept edit nbsp Interior of St John s nave facing west toward Amsterdam Avenue entranceBy January 1916 Bishop David H Greer announced that the diocese would construct St John s nave and narthex along with a pair of towers on the western elevation of the facade above the narthex The project would cost 1 5 million even though St John s only had about 200 000 on hand as of June 1915 122 A groundbreaking ceremony for the nave was held on May 8 1916 31 123 124 That November construction stopped due to material and funding shortages during World War I 108 125 126 127 and the trustees had decided against raising funds until after the war 128 Cram edited his plans in the interim 117 In February 1919 the trustees approved Cram s revised plan to incorporate a memorial for soldiers 129 The new plans required 5 6 million but would make St John s the third or fourth largest worldwide 128 130 The cathedral did not yet have the money to build the nave and furthermore in 1920 the trustees decided not to hold fundraising drives for said purpose 131 Because of an unstable economy work did not resume for another four years 127 though both Greer and Bishop Charles Sumner Burch supported the project 108 In 1923 Burch s successor William T Manning announced a 15 million capital campaign to raise money for this project 132 The New York campaign committee headed by then governor Franklin D Roosevelt campaigned from 1923 to 1925 to raise 6 million equivalent to 102 000 000 in 2022 133 134 135 By May 1924 Manning announced that 2 5 million had been donated within the previous three months and that work on the nave would soon begin if that rate of donation were to continue 136 St John s was seeking price estimates for the nave s construction by that November 137 and the baptistery was donated the same year 127 Some 7 7 million had been raised by February 1925 138 and the laying of the nave s cornerstone occurred on November 9 1925 139 140 Manning wanted the cathedral to be an interdenominational place of worship but was still reluctant to add other denominations members to the board of trustees 141 Notably Manning rejected a request from John D Rockefeller Jr a Baptist 142 143 despite the latter s 500 000 donation toward the cathedral s building fund 142 In January 1927 Manning announced that the trustees had approved Cram s proposal for a square tower above the crossing the tower would replace the dome which did not conform to the Gothic style With sides of 60 feet 18 m the tower would be half as wide as the arches below it 144 Cram s blueprint revisions published in 1929 entailed building the 300 foot tall 91 m square tower over the crossing and adding two portals to the western elevation 100 117 Additionally St John s northern transept began construction in December 1927 135 145 Since the funds for that transept were donated solely by women it was called the Women s Transept 117 Work on the Women s Transept was halted in October 1930 due to a lack of funds 146 147 Construction at St John s was otherwise unaffected by the Great Depression 141 During this duration work was concentrated mainly on the western elevation 148 When construction of the Women s Transept resumed in 1934 the nave and the western elevation were nearly complete except for the two towers above the western facade but work on the crossing tower and south transept had yet to commence 149 By 1938 the nave was completed but the temporary construction wall between the nave and crossing was still in place because the Byzantine Romanesque crossing s design had yet to be harmonized with the Gothic nave 150 As such Cram subsequently replaced the portions of the ceiling above the choir and the apse s eastern section Additionally the nave started to be used for services even though it had not yet been dedicated 108 The 1939 WPA Guide to New York City stated that 20 million had been spent on the cathedral by then 151 Full length opening and expansion edit nbsp Southern elevation of the facadeThe full 601 foot 183 m length of the Cathedral of St John the Divine was opened for the first time on November 30 1941 141 152 153 154 At that time St John s was only three fifths completed yet it was the second largest Christian church in the world by area behind only St Peter s Basilica in Vatican City 100 153 The event was commemorated with a week long celebration The last day of the celebrations Sunday December 7 1941 coincided with Japan s attack on Pearl Harbor 155 With the consequent entry of the United States into World War II work on the cathedral stopped The southern transept and tower had yet to start while the northern transept remained one third complete 117 156 157 The western towers planned to be 266 feet 81 m reached only to the roof of the nave 156 Cram revised his plans yet again just before his 1942 death this time with shorter western towers and a slim spire in place of the square tower over the crossing 117 Halt in construction edit nbsp Bishop Horace W B Donegan greets Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother on the steps of the cathedral on the day of the Columbia University Bicentennial October 31 1954 Following the end of World War II St John s did not experience any more new construction for three decades 154 158 In 1945 Manning had attempted to start a fundraising drive for 10 million so that the remaining funds could be raised for the cathedral s completion 157 159 However during the late 1940s his successor Bishop Charles Kendall Gilbert turned efforts toward alleviating social issues in the vicinity of the cathedral 157 158 Rather than being focused on expansion the cathedral became more involved in the surrounding community 154 158 160 By that time a total of 19 million had been spent on construction equivalent to 234 million in 2022 156 By the 1950s there was debate over whether to complete St John s in the Gothic fashion of the nave a more contemporary style or the original Byzantine Romanesque style 161 Several plans were proposed through the early 1960s but none were examined in depth 158 In 1966 it was announced that work at St John s would resume 162 163 The trustees had approved a smaller version of the western towers and the crossing 158 164 with a modern multicolored dome to be built atop the crossing 165 166 The project did not proceed as Bishop Horace W B Donegan said that such work would not occur during his administration rather he wanted the construction money to instead go toward helping the poor 163 167 168 In the 1970s the cathedral s activities turned toward improving quality of life in Morningside Heights helping the elderly young and the environment and participating in the civil rights movement and the opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War 169 However when the Very Reverend James Parks Morton was installed as St John s dean in 1973 he said that construction at St John s would start again 168 169 170 Morton said he wanted St John s to become a holy place for the whole city 171 St John s had become overcrowded because of its increasing focus on community activities and even though the cathedral was losing 500 000 each year Morton believed that an expansion would help make space for these extra activities 172 Resumption of work edit nbsp The facade of the southern tower which was expanded in the 1980s and 1990sMorton announced in December 1978 that construction would soon begin on constructing the two western towers extending their height by 150 feet 46 m and bringing their total height to 291 feet 89 m 173 The job was expected to cost 20 million and take five years 174 175 However by then there was a shortage of qualified stone carvers in the area 154 James R Bambridge who was hired as the stonemason 169 174 176 planned to employ unskilled younger workers from the surrounding community 174 Bambridge hired Nicholas G Fairplay an English stonemason as master carver 177 178 The architect was Hoyle Doran and Berry the successor to Cram s architecture firm 169 174 179 The expansions would be based primarily on Cram s revised designs published before his death 157 170 The north transept would be completed but would remain separate from the main building 179 Work on the western facade s towers was restarted with the opening of St John s stone yard the Cathedral Stoneworks which received its first several Indiana limestone blocks in June 1979 154 169 180 Construction started first on the south tower named for Saint Paul 181 which began to rise in 1982 154 173 However the project continued to be delayed due to a shortage of funds and due to slow development of the towers designs 169 Work also progressed slowly because the stonemasons were carving a myriad of minute details on the south tower 182 By 1984 St John s was projected to be complete in 2000 183 Under the leadership of master stone carvers Nicholas Fairplay Simon Verity and Jean Claude Marchionni work on the statuary of the central portal of the cathedral s western elevation was started in 1988 169 184 and completed in 1997 185 During this era the cathedral expanded its cultural programming hosting some 140 shows and performances in the 1987 1988 season some of which drew up to 3 000 observers 186 By 1992 the construction budget had been depleted work was halted and the stone yard was closed 187 188 By then another 50 feet 15 m of height had been added to the south tower 63 While some of the scaffolding was removed 187 other portions remained rusting away for fifteen years 189 The Very Reverend Harry H Pritchett Jr who succeeded Morton in 1997 decided against further expansion of St John s especially since the existing facilities needed 20 40 million in repairs 63 188 21st century edit nbsp Seen from the north in 2005 with scaffolding still on the southern towerOn December 18 2001 a fire swept through the unfinished north transept destroying the gift shop and damaging tapestries 190 191 192 Despite the damage sustained St John s reopened two weeks later 193 Though the pipe organ was not damaged all its pipes and other component parts were removed and restored 194 Valuable tapestries and other items in the cathedral were damaged by the smoke 195 In January 2005 the cathedral began a major restoration to not only remove smoke damage resulting from the 2001 fire but also clean the 80 years of dirt accumulation in the nave 196 The renovations temporarily depleted St John s funds the unaffected portions of the cathedral started to deteriorate staff salary raises were deferred and several staff positions were eliminated 197 The scaffolding around the south tower was removed in 2007 189 and the cathedral was rededicated on November 30 2008 195 The cathedral s main building was made a city landmark in June 2003 but the designation was overturned that October since it did not cover the entire cathedral close 198 At the same time St John s officials wanted to lease out the lots at the northern and southern borders of the cathedral close for further development a move that preservationists unsuccessfully attempted to prevent 199 Ultimately two residential buildings were erected on these lots Avalon Morningside Park on the southern lot and the Enclave 200 on the northern lot 201 202 In 2017 the cathedral close was re designated a city landmark except for the two new residential buildings 203 The next year the first phase of the north transept s renovation was finally completed 78 and work began on a renovation of the crypt 204 On April 14 2019 a small fire occurred in the crypt except for smoke damage the cathedral building was mostly unaffected 205 206 Many artworks stored in the crypt were reportedly damaged or destroyed in the fire An initial cleaning removed smoke damage from the bottom 10 feet of the interior of the cathedral 207 A cleaning of the rest of the interior was also ongoing 208 Ennead Architects proposed erecting a copper dome above the crossing so that the crossing s tiles could be rehabilitated 209 210 The restoration of the dome was completed in 2022 211 2020 shooting edit On December 13 2020 following the end of a choir performance outside the cathedral a man fired guns at the crowd and was fatally shot by police nobody else was injured 212 213 Main structure edit nbsp View of the western elevation from across Amsterdam Avenue to the westThe Cathedral of St John the Divine is located at 1047 Amsterdam Avenue in Morningside Heights Manhattan between West 110th Street also known as Cathedral Parkway to the south and 113th Street to the north The cathedral s main entrance on the west is along the same axis as 112th Street Adjacent sites include Mount Sinai Morningside formerly St Luke s Hospital to the north Columbia University s Morningside Heights campus to the north and west and Morningside Park to the east 214 One of the key reasons for St John s location is that the land under it was described as the highest point in Manhattan 17 100 d One author wrote that the view from outside tells much about St John s inner spirit saying that the southeastern elevation of the facade gives an impression of incompleteness while the great western elevation was vitalized by its incipience 216 St John s is oriented west east relative to the street grid 217 e and was originally supposed to have a cruciform plan with transepts extending to the north and south of the crossing near the eastern end of the cathedral 181 219 The entire structure measures 601 feet 183 m long 174 From west to east the cathedral contains a narthex measuring 50 feet 15 m long by 207 feet 63 m wide a nave of 248 by 146 feet 76 by 45 m a crossing of 100 by 100 feet 30 by 30 m a choir of 145 by 56 feet 44 by 17 m and the Chapel of St Savior in the apse measuring 58 feet 18 m with an ambulatory 14 feet 4 3 m wide The cathedral s western elevation is 207 feet 63 m wide 181 if the transepts had been completed they would have measured 330 feet 100 m from end to end 151 181 The cathedral has an interior floor area of 121 000 square feet 11 200 m2 and can host 8 600 people 181 220 As of 2017 update these dimensions make St John s the sixth largest Christian cathedral in the world f and puts it in competition with Liverpool Cathedral as being the world s largest Anglican cathedral a The original design for the cathedral was created by Heins amp LaFarge 113 Despite being primarily Byzantine and Romanesque in influence the last version of Heins amp LaFarge s design contained a significantly Gothic style appearance 52 223 The original plan at St John s called for tiled arch domes and barrel vaults The crossing was to be held up by four round arches under a dome with a tower on top 30 The completed cathedral was supposed to have been 520 feet 160 m long and 290 feet 88 m wide between transepts while the tower would have been 450 feet 140 m tall 76 The modern plan for the building as it appeared upon its official opening in 1941 conforms primarily to the second design campaign from the prolific Gothic Revival architect Ralph Adams Cram The plans are based on the French Gothic style with English Gothic accents 81 223 224 184 Cram had initially wanted to use English Gothic models which typically placed less emphasis on vertical elements and height and which contrasted with the extant parts of the cathedral 81 224 Cram s plan originally called for three main entrances two 500 foot 150 m spires set back from the western facade two smaller spires on the western facade Inside were ten full height aisles with a triforium and clerestory rising to the ceiling as well as large chapels along each side of the nave 117 118 224 The design provides a transition between the nave and the crossing because the nave was to be 50 feet 15 m wide about half the width of the crossing 117 225 Cram described as a brilliant perfectionist frequently revised his proposal and later spoke of Heins amp LaFarge s plans as better than his own 108 One major change published in 1926 called for a 300 foot tall 91 m square tower above the crossing and five portals on the western elevation 117 Another revision was published just before he died in 1942 and called for a spire above the crossing 117 224 Cram s designs were not fully built either 226 The Cathedral of St John the Divine remains only two thirds complete 227 and is often nicknamed St John the Unfinished 187 226 Narthex and western facade edit Narthex edit nbsp Wide angle view of the cathedral s western elevationThe narthex in the westernmost portion of the cathedral facing Amsterdam Avenue was designed by Cram 181 228 His original plans did not include a narthex instead showing the nave continuing as far as the western facade 229 Inside the narthex is a large vestibule which serves as an entrance to the nave on the east 181 The vestibule measures 180 feet 55 m along the north south axis and 85 feet 26 m along the west east axis 229 The southern part of the narthex contains the cathedral s gift shop 78 Above the narthex are two towers one named for Saint Peter to the north and the other named for Saint Paul to the south 181 228 The north tower reaches to the roof of the nave which is 177 feet 54 m above ground level 181 the south tower is about 50 feet 15 m taller with the additional height having been built between 1982 and 1992 63 If the towers had been completed they would have been about 266 feet 81 m tall 151 156 The towers protrude slightly from the northern and southern elevations of the facade but are flush with the western elevation 181 On the northern and southern facades of the narthex at the base of the towers are stained glass windows one on each side 230 Western facade edit The narthex abuts the unfinished western elevation of the facade facing Amsterdam Avenue this facade is 207 feet 63 m wide and consists of five architectural bays 181 217 The bays are separated by large arched buttresses with finials at their tops and they contain niches for the possible future installation of statues The western elevation is divided into four vertical tiers From bottom to top they are the ground level portals on the first tier the gallery level on the second tier the large rose window and several smaller grisaille and lancet windows on the third tier and the top of the south tower and the gable above the center bay on the fourth tier 181 At ground level there are five portals under arched openings 100 181 The largest of those is the center portal called the Portal of Paradise which contains carvings of the transfiguration of Jesus as well as St John and 32 biblical characters 231 these were carved in 1988 under Simon Verity s leadership 184 St John is depicted on the trumeau or vertical pier between the two pairs of doors within the center portal 232 The center portal also contains depictions of New York City skyscrapers being destroyed in an apocalypse 233 The center northernmost and southernmost portals are set within large gabled structures with several archivolts or arched moldings surrounding each portal under the gables porches overhang the portals above the gables The other two portals are located under simple rectangular canopy structures 181 184 located underneath grisaille windows looking into the nave 230 Lights salvaged from the former Pennsylvania Station illuminate the steps in front of the portals 184 Above the center portal between the towers is a rose window installed by stained glass artist Charles Connick and constructed out of 10 000 pieces of glass 231 232 234 With a diameter of 40 feet 12 m 232 the rose window is the largest rose window in the U S 235 Flanking the rose window on either side are two grisaille windows each with two lancet windows under a smaller rose The seven archangels are depicted in the north grisaille while the seven churches of Asia are depicted in the south grisaille 232 Connick had designed the grisailles as well 37 On the gable above the large rose window there are lancets as well as a medallion in the middle 232 nbsp The right hand bronze doors in the center portalThe two pairs of great west doors on the western elevation set beneath the elaborate center portal were designed between 1927 and 1931 by the designer Henry Wilson 236 237 238 The bronze doors include a sequence of 60 relief panels which presents scenes from the Old and New Testaments and the Apocalypse 184 237 The doors open three times per year Easter St Francis s feast day in October and the blessing of the bicycles in the spring 231 They comprise one of four bronze door commissions designed by Wilson before his death g St John s great west doors were the last of the four commissions each pair measuring some 18 by 12 feet 5 5 m 3 7 m 184 232 The remaining doors on the western elevation are composed of Burmese teak with wrought iron decoration 151 232 Nave edit nbsp Exterior of the nave Two of the double bays can be seen here with four columns of windows in total At center is a large arched buttress while smaller buttresses to the left and right separate each set of double bays The nave was designed by Cram though the final plan is slightly modified from the original 100 It is oriented from west to east 52 measuring 248 feet 76 m long by 146 feet 45 m wide 181 The ceiling is 124 feet 38 m above ground level 241 205 242 but the ridge of the roof is 174 feet 53 m high 181 These dimensions are about the same as in the original plans which called for floor dimensions of 260 by 150 feet 79 by 46 m a 175 foot 53 m roof and a 125 foot 38 m ceiling 243 On the northern and southern elevations there are four vertical double bays each with two columns of windows Large arched buttresses with two piers each separate the different double bays smaller buttresses containing a single pier divide each double bay into smaller sub bays 232 This alternation of large and small buttresses gives the appearance of four double bays with two sub bays each rather than eight singular rectangular bays 243 At the arcade level each of the sub bays contains an arrangement of stained glass with two lancet windows under a rose window 244 The sub bays also contain another stained glass arrangement at clerestory level each with two lancet windows and one rose window The clerestory arrangements each measure 45 feet 14 m long by 12 feet 3 7 m wide 244 245 Carved parapets as well as gables with dormers run along the copper roof 244 Inside there are six north south rows of piers three to either side of the nave 241 246 These piers divide the nave into five aisles running west to east with the center aisle located on the same axis as 112th Street 232 243 246 There are four smaller aisles two to either side of the center aisle 243 Additionally the interior contains several flying buttresses concealed by bridges that carry them over the outermost aisles 241 246 nbsp The Blessing of the Bicycles in the nave looking toward the apseThere are sixteen sub bays in the nave eight on each side the easternmost sub bays on either side contain doorways Each of the bays are named after some aspect of humanity 237 244 From west to east the sub bays along the northern side of the nave are named the Sports Arts Crusaders Education Lawyers Ecclesiastical Origins Anglican and Historical and Patriotic Societies American and Fatherhood bays The sub bays on the southern side are named the All Souls Missionary Labor Press Communication Medical Religious Life Earth Armed Forces Military and Motherhood bays 232 247 Each of the sub bays contain carved parapets atop their mono pitched roofs 244 The sub bays are used for various exhibits The iconography of the stained glass windows in the arcade and clerestory is related to the theme of each respective sub bay h 246 In each sub bay between the lower windows and the clerestory windows is the triforium level which contains two west east corridors with numerous windowless rooms and office spaces 242 Apse edit The apse located at St John s eastern end is made up of numerous components 31 248 The center of the apse contains the choir located below the great organ Two ambulatory passages run adjacent to the choir one to the north and the other to the south Seven chapels a baptistery and a columbarium are also located in the northwestern part of the apse 248 The apse contains two sets of clerestory windows the large ambulatory clerestories with multiple panels as well as a smaller sanctuary clerestory window above each of the ambulatory clerestories 249 250 The apse s walls are supported by gabled buttresses which are taller than the height of the walls and contain niches with statues 250 Choir edit nbsp Choir stallsThe choir was consecrated in 1911 31 It consists of two sets of wooden stalls facing each other with three rows in each stall The stalls were made by the Philadelphia based John Barber Company 251 The westernmost unit in the southern row of choir stalls is called the Dean s Stall 252 The roof above the choir is supported by eight columns each 54 feet 16 m tall with a 6 foot 1 8 m diameter and a weight of 130 short tons 120 long tons 120 t 80 81 84 253 The columns foundations descend as much as 130 feet 40 m into the bedrock below them 253 The parapets behind the two sections of the choir were originally installed in 1922 with twenty niches for statues of the spiritual heroes of the twenty centuries since the birth of Christ 254 For example the 17th 18th and 19th centuries are respectively represented by statues of William Shakespeare George Washington and Abraham Lincoln The niche for the 20th century was left blank through the end of that century 255 256 In 2001 the choir parapet was completed with carvings of Martin Luther King Jr Albert Einstein Susan B Anthony and Mohandas Gandhi by stonecarver Christopher Pellettieri 257 In addition the finials on both rows of stalls were carved by Otto Jahnsen and depict church music composers and performers 241 On the floor are tiles designed by the Grueby Faience Company with geometric patterns and imagery reminiscent of the iconography in other cathedrals 107 A compass rose the official icon of the Anglican Communion in which the Episcopal Church participates is located on the floor between the two stalls in the center of the choir 252 Great Organ edit The Great Organ was built by Ernest M Skinner in 1906 1910 93 258 227 It is located above the choir on the north and south sides and consists of four manual keyboards with several pedals 252 227 The opening recital was given in 1911 by Clarence Dickinson 259 In 1954 it was enlarged by the Aeolian Skinner Organ Company Opus 150 A under the tonal direction of G Donald Harrison 258 227 The organ contains 8 514 pipes 260 261 though it previously included 8 035 252 While most of the pipes are located above the choir stalls the Great Organ also controls the State Trumpet located beneath the rose window about 500 feet 150 m to the west 258 The 2001 fire in the north transept resulted in heavy smoke damage to the organ and it was subsequently restored by Quimby Pipe Organs Inc of Warrensburg Missouri 262 261 263 After two years of extensive and detailed refurbishment work including a reorganization of many pipes and a rebuilding of the console the organ finally returned to service in 2008 as part of an overall 41 million cleaning and repair to the cathedral 261 The Great Organ was damaged again in the April 2019 crypt fire and was indefinitely placed out of service pending a thorough cleaning 207 While the Great Organ was being restored the Cathedral of St John the Divine used an electric organ 264 The organists have included Walter Henry Hall 1905 265 1909 266 Miles Farrow 1910 266 267 1931 268 i Norman Coke Jephcott 1932 1953 270 i John Upham interim 1953 1954 i Alec Wyton 1954 1974 271 i David Pizzaro 1974 1977 i Paul Halley 1977 1990 i Dorothy Papadakos 1990 2003 272 Timothy Brumfield 2003 2009 273 Bruce Neswick 2009 2011 274 Kent Tritle 2011 274 275 present 276 Sanctuary edit nbsp AltarBehind the choir to its east is the sanctuary or chancel a raised platform 258 The chancel includes the high altar which is made of white Vermont marble 253 The Magna Carta Pedestal named as such because it is located atop three stones from the Bury St Edmunds Abbey in England 277 is located to the right while the sedilia for the bishop and other clergy is to the left 253 The sanctuary also contains the cathedra or bishop s seat 258 donated by Olivia Egleston Phelps Stokes in memory of her sister Caroline Phelps Stokes 278 The bishop s pulpit is made of Tennessee marble with five niches each of which contain reliefs that depict scenes from the life of Christ 241 A presbytery which houses the officiating clergy of St John s is located between the chancel and the choir 258 The reredos behind the sanctuary depicts four scenes from the Old Testament on the left north and four from the New Testament on the right south 241 Behind the altar is a wrought iron enclosure The space contains the English Gothic style tomb of the man who originally conceived and founded the cathedral the Right Reverend Horatio Potter 279 which was dedicated in 1921 280 Ambulatory and chapels edit nbsp One of the chapelsAn ambulatory measuring 250 feet 76 m long and 14 feet 4 3 m wide surrounds the choir to the north east and south making a rough U shape with the two ends of the U facing west 241 248 The floor is covered with red clay colored tiles that contain green serpentine borders 248 There are 30 foot tall 9 1 m wrought steel gates at either end of the ambulatory Numerous plaques are present in the ambulatory paying homage to large donors and other notable individuals in St John s history A poetry wall and several Madonna paintings are also located in the ambulatory particularly in the southern part of the ambulatory 281 Extending outward from the ambulatory are seven chapels 241 244 247 282 These chapels are known as the Chapels of the Tongues 231 248 282 and all were donated by prominent individuals and families 282 The chapels were designed by four different architects and firms 248 Heins amp LaFarge designed two of the chapels 67 while Cram designed a third 108 The Chapels of the Tongues were devoted to seven of the city s largest immigrant groups when the apse was completed the southernmost three chapels represent Latin races and the northernmost three chapels represent Germanic races 67 283 All of the chapels except for St Ansgar s were donated by individuals or families 248 j Clockwise from north they are devoted to 247 283 St Ansgar patron of Denmark 283 designed by Henry Vaughan dedicated 1918 285 286 St Ansgar Chapel has its own organ 286 264 St Boniface apostle of the Germans 283 designed by Henry Vaughan dedicated 1916 285 287 St Columba patron of Ireland and Scotland 283 designed by Heins amp LaFarge dedicated 1911 285 288 St Savior Holy Savior devoted to immigrants from Africa and Asia 283 designed by Heins amp LaFarge dedicated 1911 285 289 St Savior was the first chapel to be complete hosting its first services in 1904 284 It contains a bronze three paneled altar with gold leaf decoration designed by Keith Haring just before his death 231 St Martin of Tours patron of the French 283 designed by Cram amp Ferguson dedicated 1918 285 290 St Ambrose patron of Milan 283 designed by Carrere and Hastings dedicated 1914 285 291 St James patron of Spain 283 292 designed by Henry Vaughan dedicated 1916 285 292 St James Chapel is the largest apsidal chapel with a seating capacity of 25 people and is frequently utilized for small funerals weddings or worship services 292 The chapel has its own choir and 857 pipe organ 282 292 264 The northwest corner of the apse adjacent to the St Ansgar Chapel includes the octagonal baptistery 293 294 The baptistery was donated by three Stuyvesant family siblings in 1924 127 73 The space measures 31 feet 9 4 m in diameter with a ceiling 43 feet 13 m tall 294 The baptistery s iconography depicts the Stuyvesant family history icons of New Amsterdam New York and Dutch history and the 12 apostles 135 294 The columbarium established in the 1970s is in a room directly west of the baptistery It contains marble vaults which store the remains of people from all religions 295 Crossing edit nbsp The crossing dark stone ceiling viewed from the nave The apse is in the background Between the nave to the west and the apse to the east is the crossing designed by Rafael Guastavino The interior of the crossing includes four massive granite arches which in the original Heins amp LaFarge design were originally intended to support the massive 445 foot 136 m tower above it 100 223 When completed in 1900 the arches were described as the crowning glory of Morningside Heights 52 296 During the time that the nave remained incomplete temporary walls were placed within the arches so that services could be held in the crossing 223 Above the crossing is a domed roof which was meant as a temporary covering until the tower above the crossing was built It was completed within fifteen weeks between May and August 1909 107 The dome is shaped like a saucer and consists of several overlapping layers of Guastavino tile which support themselves around the dome s center upon their own weight 100 107 85 The pendentives or triangular areas between the circular dome and the corners of the arches are 1 inch 25 mm thick the thickness of the dome itself ranges from 4 inches 100 mm on top to 7 5 inches 190 mm at the bottom 107 Compared to conventional ceilings the tiles saved money because they did not require temporary supports when they were installed 101 For added strength metal rods were included in the dome s shell 107 The dome was originally intended to be temporary 79 101 Cram had proposed three plans for the structure above the crossing a steeple a square tower rising 500 feet 150 m above the crossing floor and then a slim spire None of these plans were realized 100 A three year renovation project from 2019 to 2022 repaired cracks in tiles patched concrete added new protective materials and built a new copper dome over the crossing 210 211 Basements edit Directly below the crossing is the basement which contains the crypt now used as a storage area The items stored in the crypt include artifacts such as pieces of the destroyed Pennsylvania Station and World Trade Center as well as wooden angels plaster gargoyles leadlights antique furniture and a single file line of saints The crypt also includes objects such as a large fossil and a massive crystal of quartz both of which were relocated to the crypt after the 2001 fire Along either side the basement are rooms each named after the chapels that they are located under 204 In the 1980s the crypt was also home to the Cathedral Works Company which sold textiles 297 The crypt also formerly contained the Tiffany Chapel created by jewelry designer Louis Comfort Tiffany 77 298 Originally exhibited at the World s Columbian Exposition in 1893 it was then acquired by Celia Whipple Wallace and moved to the cathedral in 1898 75 298 Services at the cathedral were hosted at the Tiffany Chapel from 1899 to 1911 and the chapel was reacquired by Tiffany in 1916 77 The chapel has been in the Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art in Winter Park Florida since 1999 298 A subbasement below the crypt is often flooded by groundwater potentially from springs in the area 73 The Leake and Watts Asylum had a well on the site of the present day baptistery 73 299 and there was a spring near the intersection of 110th Street and Morningside Drive 73 300 As early as 1893 workers discovered that the ground under the cathedral was soft and prone to flooding 68 69 As a result the cathedral has a concrete foundation 71 Sump pumps keep the area dry and construction of the neighboring Enclave has reduced flooding However the spring still exists underneath the cathedral and water from the spring may have contributed to the partial collapse of a retaining wall in 2006 73 Cathedral close edit nbsp fullscreen map Cathedral Close of St John the Divine1 Cathedral Church of St John the Divine2 Ithiel Town Building3 Biblical Garden4 The Cathedral School of St John the Divine5 Pulpit Green6 Cathedral House Ogilvie House7 Synod Hall8 Diocesan House The cathedral close surrounding the main cathedral consists of several buildings on a 11 5 acre 4 7 ha site 231 301 including the former Leake amp Watts asylum building which predates the land s acquisition by the Episcopal Diocese of New York 66 The other structures were built later 66 The former asylum is located immediately south of the crossing The Cathedral School of St John the Divine is located on the eastern boundary of the site just south of the apse A Biblical garden is located between the school and the asylum building To the southwest is a pulpit green situated between the nave to the north and the Synod Hall and Diocesan House to the south The Cathedral House is located south of the Biblical garden and east of the pulpit green The Synod Hall and Diocesan House are located on the southern boundary 302 Various paths gardens play areas and furniture are located on the cathedral close as are numerous artworks and several commemorative or religious objects 66 The initial plans for the cathedral close put forth in the 1890s varied widely The included a 1892 plan for buildings on Morningside Drive and Cathedral Parkway various proposals for an Episcopal residence somewhere along the close and an 1898 1899 plan for a deaconesses training school 244 Two other plans were proposed in 1902 and 1903 303 but after objections to the 1903 plan from St Luke s Hospital a new plan was presented in 1906 66 The Training School for Deaconesses was completed in 1909 independently of the plan 304 Cram presented to the trustees an extensive plan for all the structures on the grounds in October 1911 116 and the trustees approved the choir school the same month 66 The following month the trustees certified plans for the Synod Hall bishop s house and deanery 305 306 as well as the never built diocesan offices and canons residences 66 A heating plant at the southwestern corner of the cathedral close added to the plan in 1913 and two structures planned for the western boundary and approved in 1920 were not built 66 A shelter was built in 2015 for the cathedral s three peacocks Jim Phil and Harry 307 who lived on the cathedral close from the early 2000s to 2023 308 Ithiel Town Building edit The former Leake and Watts Asylum building designed by Ithiel Town and completed in 1843 9 309 is located south of the crossing where the south transept would have been located 302 The building designed in the Greek Revival style was originally composed of five parts There was a central pavilion with Ionic style porticos to the south and north 309 The front entrance located within the south portico was approached by a wide granite staircase The only decorative element was at the south portico s pediment which was supported by six stucco covered brick columns topped by capitals made of wood 9 309 Brick wings flanked the central pavilion to each side and originally contained wooden porches along their facades replaced with iron balconies in 1888 309 nbsp Ithiel Town Building former orphanage seen here in 1934Originally there were common areas and staff rooms within the central pavilion and dormitories for 300 children in the wings 9 309 When the Episcopal Diocese of New York acquired the site the former asylum building served several functions for the cathedral Between 1892 and 1899 it was used as an employee dormitory and construction offices 3 while the parlor hosted worship services 310 Afterward the former asylum s west wing was used by the day school for the cathedral s choirboys between 1901 and 1913 Cathedral leaders had proposed demolishing parts of the asylum building since it was in the way of the proposed southern transept though these demolitions did not happen 3 Subsequently the west wing was used by the Diocese offices and the east wing by Cathedral offices until 1949 3 310 The building then became the Exhibit Hall 310 and the top stories were removed sometime afterward The structure was renovated in 2004 2012 becoming the Ithiel Town Building 309 The Ithiel Town Building houses a textile laboratory that conserves the cathedral s textiles including the Barberini tapestries to cartoons by Raphael The laboratory also conserves tapestries needlepoint upholstery costumes and other textiles for its clients 311 The building has also housed the Museum of Religious Art as well as offices shops choir rehearsal quarters sacristies and the Cathedral Community Cares program 309 Diocesan House edit The Diocesan House also known as St Faith s House is the only building on the cathedral close to be designed by Heins amp LaFarge before they were fired 304 310 The structure designed in the Tudor Gothic style 310 312 is located on the southern side of the cathedral close close to Cathedral Parkway 110th Street 313 It is a 3 1 2 story H shaped building with a brick facade a base of Indiana limestone and gable roofs above the pavilions on the western end The southern elevation also contains an additional basement story Its main entrance on the eastern portion of the northern elevation is a recessed arched portal with an oriel window on the third story 304 As of 2017 update the Diocesan House is used by the diocese s offices and archives the cathedral s library and apartments 304 313 The Diocesan House was originally built for the New York Training School for Deaconesses which was established in 1890 and had been searching for new locations since 1898 or 1899 304 313 Funds to build the structure were finally received in 1907 after Archdeacon Charles Comfort Tiffany included 125 000 for the deaconesses school in his will 304 314 The building was originally supposed to be on the northern side of the cathedral close but was moved due to objections from St Luke s Hospital 304 Construction started in May 1910 315 and the school opened by that October 304 316 All work was finished in February 1911 and the building was used as a deaconesses school until May 1948 and it was converted to office use the following year 304 Synod Hall edit nbsp Synod Hall main entranceThe Synod Hall also known as the Synod House houses the cathedral s synod or council but is also used for various events and other functions It was completed in 1913 and was the first of four structures on the cathedral close to be designed by Cram and was designed to be the most beautiful thing in New York 313 It is located at the southwestern corner of the cathedral close 317 250 The main entrance an arched portal facing Amsterdam Avenue contains carvings of Christian figures which flank oak double doors 317 A carving of George Washington is located between the doors and six smaller figures are located on the tympanum above the doors 318 The exterior is made of pink Kingwood sandstone 317 319 320 Inside is a hall that can seat over a thousand people k with gallery seating above the main level There are grisaille windows to the north and south and wooden trusses on the ceiling supporting the gable roof 318 319 The Synod Hall also contains a three manual Skinner pipe organ 320 Plans for a diocesan building were considered as early as 1903 250 The current Synod Hall was announced in 1911 in preparation for the 1913 General Convention of the Episcopal Church 320 321 Cram s firm submitted plans for Synod Hall in March 1912 322 and it opened in October 1913 with the start of the convention 323 However the hall was not completed until early 1914 250 After Bayard Cutting and J P Morgan made large donations toward the Synod Hall the cathedral had to return some of the previous donations as the two men had given more than enough funds to pay for the building 320 School edit Further information The Cathedral School of St John the Divine nbsp The Cathedral School of St John the DivineThe choir school building now the Cathedral School of St John the Divine is located on the cathedral close s eastern border 302 The building is in the Collegiate Gothic style and is 4 1 2 stories tall 310 324 The exterior contains gray schist cladding and limestone trim with architectural features such as a gabled roof dormers protruding from the roof and Tudor style arched openings Inside the building contained classrooms gathering space for reception dining music rooms a library a gymnasium a dormitory and masters and service rooms 324 The choir school was created in 1901 within the Town Building 3 A separate structure was first proposed in Walter Cook amp Winthrop A Welch s 1906 plan for the campus 324 In January 1910 Mary Eliza Blodgett alternatively Mrs J Jarrett Blodgett donated 25 000 toward the new school building s projected 150 000 cost as a gift to honor her father John H Sherwood 324 325 Blodgett later covered the rest of the choir school building s cost after no one else donated while former choirboy Frederick G Bourne provided a 500 000 endowment in 1914 310 324 Cram approved Cook amp Welch s plan in January 1912 and filed construction plans that July with work beginning that October 324 The school building was finished in September 1913 318 324 The choir school consisted of day school for 20 adult men and a boarding school for 40 choirboys who paid no tuition It was turned into a boys day school in 1964 and a coeducational day school for grades K 8 in 1972 324 Bishop s house and deanery edit The Episcopal Residence consisting of the bishop s house also Cathedral House and deanery also Ogilvie House were the final buildings that Cram designed within the cathedral close 318 The structures were intentionally built close together to evoke a feeling of coziness 319 According to Cram the Chateauesque style buildings were inspired by later domestic buildings in the French Gothic style 326 The bishop s house is west of the deanery on slightly higher ground the deanery is thus hidden behind the bishop s house 318 A small garden is located at the northeast corner of the buildings 310 As built the two structures contained a myriad of living space inside The bishop s house contained eight rooms with seven bathrooms while the deanery contained 20 rooms with five bathrooms 127 The deanery is three stories tall like the choir school it has gray schist cladding and limestone trim It contains several pavilions with dormers and gabled roofs as well as a loggia and an oriel window on the southern elevation 327 The bishop s house is four stories tall and is largely in the same design but part of the northern elevation is made of exposed brick marking the location where it would have connected to the unbuilt southern transept 158 The ornamentation of the bishop s house contains symbols of the diocesan offices such as bishops by contrast the deanery has simpler decorations such as depictions of flowers and cats A private chapel between the two buildings was not built 318 An episcopal residence had been announced in 1897 327 and Heins amp LaFarge drew up plans for such a structure in 1902 303 The Deanery was donated by Helen Slade Ogilvie in 1911 in memory of her late husband Clinton 310 319 328 while the bishop s house was funded partly by the sale of a previous bishop s house at Gramercy Park 327 Initially the site of the two structures was contested because the buildings would have blocked views of the main cathedral from the south 318 Before the structures construction started in 1912 the sites for the bishop s house and deanery were relocated eastward 329 The two buildings sites were given preliminary approval in May 1912 and were officially approved that October 319 The bishop s house started in November 1912 330 and was finished in April 1914 327 while the deanery was started in February 1913 and completed by that November 319 Both structures were erected by Leonard Jacob and Frederick T Youngs 319 After the 1947 Diocesan Convention the bishop moved into the upper two floors of the deanery and the old bishop s house was turned into administration offices 158 310 328 Residential buildings edit nbsp Avalon Morningside Park built on a portion of the cathedral close in 2007In 2008 the cathedral leased the southeast corner of its property which contained the cathedral s playground and Rose Garden to the AvalonBay Communities which built a luxury apartment building called the Avalon Morningside Park The project includes 295 apartments of which 20 are affordable housing units as well as replacement rose garden 331 The cathedral leased the northeastern edge of its property formerly a parking lot in 2012 332 The lessee was the Brodsky Organization which built a residential building called the Enclave between 2014 333 and 2015 202 334 The Enclave consists of 428 rental apartments in two 15 story buildings separated by the passageway leading to the northern transept an underground gallery connects the two buildings 202 Both developments leased the land from the cathedral for 99 year terms The lease on the land under the Enclave pays the Cathedral about 3 million a year the lease on the Avalon about 2 5 million 201 202 Art activities and exhibitions editConcerts and special events edit The cathedral s interior is frequently used for concerts performances and other special events 335 Recurring events edit The cathedral has an annual New Year s Eve Concert for Peace The Postlude to Act I of Leonard Bernstein s opera Quiet Place received its New York premiere at the 1985 concert 335 The 1990 concert was a tribute to Bernstein himself who helped found the event and had died two months earlier on October 14 336 Paul Winter has given many concerts at the cathedral and the Paul Winter Consort are the artists in residence 337 Among the major musical events that takes place every year is a celebration of the feast day of St Francis when the Paul Winter Consort participates in a liturgical performance of Winter s Missa Gaia Earth Mass 338 339 The musical group also performs at the annual Winter Solstice program 340 341 One time events edit The cathedral has also been used for several individual events Duke Ellington s Second Sacred Concert of his original sacred music compositions premiered at the cathedral on January 19 1968 78 342 343 When construction on the south tower restarted in 1982 French high wire artist Philippe Petit walked on a tightrope stretched across Amsterdam Avenue 154 344 Petit was also the artist in residence at St John s starting in 1982 345 In 1990 the avant garde musician Diamanda Galas performed Plague Mass a culmination of her work dedicated to the victims of the AIDS epidemic Galas s performance consisted of covering her body in cattle blood and reinterpreting biblical texts and classic literature She said it was a protest against what she saw as the ignorance and condemnation toward people with AIDS from religious and political groups 346 On December 8 1994 Mariah Carey hosted a benefit concert for The Fresh Air Fund 347 The concert helped raise 700 000 to support the Fresh Air Fund and Carey s own Camp Mariah and an additional 1 million from Carey herself 348 The wedding of Ethan Hawke and Uma Thurman took place at the cathedral on May 1 1998 349 In November 2017 Aretha Franklin held her last large public concert a 25th anniversary event for the Elton John AIDS Foundation being hosted at the cathedral 350 The Cathedral of St John the Divine has also hosted events with spiritual leaders 78 Among them are Tenzin Gyatso the 14th Dalai Lama who first visited the cathedral in 1979 351 In addition Bishop Desmond Tutu led a service in the cathedral in 1986 352 Temporary art exhibitions edit The Cathedral of St John the Divine is also used as an art exhibition space 353 In 1977 a sculpture dedicated to the 12 firemen who died in the 23rd Street Fire of 1966 was unveiled at St John s 354 Edwina Sandys s Christa a sculpture exhibited during Holy Week in 1984 was based upon the feminine divine Though the sculpture generally received positive acclaim several pieces of hate mail were addressed to the cathedral accusing the cathedral of blasphemy with its depiction of Christ on the cross 355 The statue was displayed again at The Christa Project Manifesting Divine Bodies exhibition in 2016 355 356 The Value of Water curated by artist activist Fredericka Foster was exhibited at the cathedral in 2011 Featuring over forty artists it was the largest ever art exhibition to appear at the cathedral 357 358 359 In 2014 the cathedral housed Phoenix a sculptural group by Chinese artist Xu Bing The two sculptures that comprised Phoenix was one of the largest pieces of sculpture ever displayed in the United States weighing 12 short tons 11 long tons 11 t with lengths of 90 and 100 feet 27 and 30 m 360 Poets Corner edit The Poets Corner inspired by a similar corner at Westminster Abbey is located in the Arts Bay on the nave s northern side 361 362 It was dedicated in 1985 with Emily Dickinson Washington Irving and Walt Whitman being the first poets to be inducted as part of the tradition 362 363 364 The Poets Corner consists of a poet in residence hired for a five year term who in turn appoints electors on staggered terms The poets in residence and electors have included 17 United States Poet Laureates 361 The electors then vote on choices for honorees whose names are carved into blocks in the Poets Corner subsequent honorees have included Edgar Allan Poe T S Eliot William Faulkner and William Carlos Williams The electors choices can be overturned as occurred in 1999 when the Very Reverend Harry Pritchett vetoed Ezra Pound s inclusion because of Pound s anti Semitic statements during World War II 365 Permanent works edit nbsp Closeup of the Peace FountainThe pulpit green contains the Peace Fountain a large bronze work of public art by the cathedral s sculptor in residence Greg Wyatt It was commissioned in 1985 and depicts the struggle of good and evil a battle between the Archangel Michael and Satan and images of the Sun the Moon and several animals 366 367 Advocacy editThroughout the years the Cathedral of St John the Divine has been involved in various initiatives and projects These programs included youth initiatives a soup kitchen a homeless shelter and AIDS outreach During the Vietnam War the cathedral was also part of the opposition to United States involvement in the war 237 368 The Temple of Understanding an interfaith organization was housed at the cathedral for several decades in the late 20th century moving to Midtown Manhattan in the 1990s 369 370 Several programs have been directed toward helping members of the surrounding community In 1971 the cathedral founded ACT Athletics Creativity and Trips a program that provided after school activities and summer camp to children in the neighborhood 78 369 The program still runs as of 2018 update 371 under the name Advancing the Community of Tomorrow 372 In 1974 in response to a need for housing in New York City St John s created a program that became the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board UHAB 179 373 by 1987 the program had helped residential tenants in over 500 buildings to renovate and take ownership of their houses 374 Additionally a homeless shelter crisis center clothes closet and kitchen are run by in house volunteers 369 Deans editWilliam Mercer Grosvenor 1911 1916 375 Howard Chandler Robbins 1917 1929 375 376 Milo Hudson Gates 1930 1939 375 James Pernette DeWolfe 1940 1942 375 vacant 1942 1952 375 James Albert Pike 1952 1958 375 John Vernon Butler 1960 1966 375 377 vacant 1966 1972 375 378 James Parks Morton 1972 378 1997 379 Harry Houghton Pritchett Jr 1997 380 2001 381 James August Kowalski 2002 381 2017 382 Clifton Daniel III 2018 2022 383 Patrick Malloy 2022 present 384 Notable funerals and memorials editThe following people are listed with the year of their funeral or memorial service in parentheses Alvin Ailey memorial 1989 choreographer 385 Arthur Ashe memorial 1993 tennis player 386 George Balanchine funeral 1983 choreographer 387 James Baldwin funeral 1987 writer activist 388 Joseph Brodsky funeral 1996 poet 389 Joan Didion memorial 2022 novelist screenwriter and wife of John Gregory Dunne 390 John Gregory Dunne funeral 2004 novelist screenwriter and literary critic 391 Duke Ellington funeral 1974 composer 343 James Gandolfini funeral 2013 actor 392 Dizzy Gillespie funeral 1993 musician 393 Allen Ginsberg funeral 1998 poet 394 Jim Henson funeral 1990 Muppets creator 395 Trevor Huddleston memorial 1997 anti apartheid activist 78 Richard Hunt funeral 1992 Muppet performer 396 Audre Lorde funeral 1993 poet activist 397 Toni Morrison funeral 2019 author 398 Paul Moore Jr funeral 2003 bishop 399 Eleanor Roosevelt memorial 1962 activist diplomat U S First Lady 400 Nikola Tesla funeral 1943 inventor 401 Terence Tolbert funeral 2008 political operative 402 Visitor access editIn addition to worship services the Cathedral of St John the Divine offers both self guided and guided tours of the interior exhibits the cathedral close and the gardens These tours require paid tickets there are discounts for seniors and students as well as for those in tour groups Admission is also included within several New York City tourist passes The cathedral is open for tourism between 9 a m and 5 p m on Mondays through Saturdays and between 12 30 to 2 30 p m on Sundays it is open for worship between 7 30 a m and 6 00 p m on all days of the week 403 Additionally St John s offers three types of daily tours specific tours of different aspects of the cathedral which cost more than the regular tickets 404 Landmark status editThe Cathedral of St John the Divine complex had been considered for designation as an official landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1966 At the time St John s trustees had opposed the move because the structure was incomplete and a landmark designation would have required the commission to review every proposed major expansion thereafter 405 The church s trustees were able to prevent designation by claiming the church was not completed using a stipulation in the landmark s law that stated that potential landmarks had to have been completed for at least 30 years A subsequent landmark designation was precluded in 1979 for a similar reason 9 In 2003 the exterior of the cathedral was again considered for landmark status the interior was ineligible because the commission was legally unable to recognize religious buildings interiors as landmarks 406 However shortly after the commission conferred landmark status on the structure the designation was unanimously overturned by the New York City Council some of whose members favored landmark status for the entire cathedral close instead of just the main building Councilman Bill Perkins proposed that the protective status should also be extended to the cathedral s grounds in order to control development there 198 407 The lack of an official city landmark designation meant that the cathedral site could potentially be redeveloped 408 and as such two residential buildings were built on the same block as the cathedral 201 In 2017 the cathedral and six other buildings on the grounds were re designated a New York City Landmark the designation excludes the two new structures 203 409 410 See also editList of cathedrals in the United States List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan above 110th Street List of the Episcopal cathedrals of the United StatesReferences editNotes edit a b This distinction depends on which dimensions are considered For a discussion on the matter of size see Quirk 1993 pp 15 16 Sources differ over how many plans were submitted The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission states that 68 plans were submitted 30 but architectural writer Robert A M Stern writes that 66 plans were submitted 33 The largest stone columns were those at Saint Isaac s Cathedral in the Russian city of Saint Petersburg 85 86 However St John s is not literally at the highest point in Manhattan That distinction belongs to Bennett Park in Hudson Heights 265 feet 81 m above sea level 215 The street grid as laid out in the Commissioners Plan of 1811 is rotated about 29 degrees clockwise from true compass west and east 218 It was the fifth largest cathedral in 2000 195 but the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception which is larger 221 was completed in 2017 222 The other three are at St Bartholomew s Church Brighton St Mary s Church Nottingham and Salada Tea Company Boston 239 240 Quirk 1993 pp 43 75 gives a detailed analysis of the stained glass at arcade level Quirk 1993 pp 76 83 describes the stained glass in the clerestory a b c d e f From 1910 to 1990 the organist for the cathedral was also the organist for the Cathedral School 269 The donors for each chapel were 284 St Ansgar built in memory of William Reed Huntington St Boniface gift of George and Julia Bowdoin and their children St Columba gift of Mary Augusta King St Savior gift of August Belmont Jr St Martin gift of Clementina Furniss St Ambrose gift of Sara Whiting Rives St James gift of Elizabeth Scrivan Potter wife of Henry Codman Potter According to Dolkart 1998 p 64 the space could fit 1 200 people However Quirk 1993 p 147 says that the hall can only seat 1 000 Citations edit Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 1 Hall Edward Hagaman 1916 A Brief History of Morningside Park and Vicinity Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York p 554 a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 4 Dolkart 1998 p 13 a b Dolkart 1998 p 1 Richmond 1872 p 326 a b Dolkart 1998 pp 19 21 Richmond 1872 p 327 a b c d e f Gray Christopher June 24 1990 Streetscapes The Leake amp Watts Orphan Asylum A Castoff in the Path of a Growing Great Cathedral The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 29 2019 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 6 a b Burrows Edwin G and Wallace Mike 1999 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 New York Oxford University Press p 1087 ISBN 0 195 11634 8 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 37 a b Jackson 2010 pp 416 418 a b St John s Cathedral Mapped 113 Years Ago Diary of Phil Hone Mayor in 1820s Shows The New York Times November 22 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 29 2019 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 7 a b Dolkart 1998 p 38 a b c Memories of a Metropolitan Bishop by George F Nelson 1927 Project Canterbury Retrieved November 29 2019 a b c d e f Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 396 Quirk 1993 p 19 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 25 footnote 16 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 39 Episcopal Church Diocese of New York 1883 The Election and Consecration of the Rev Henry Codman Potter D D LL D As Assistant Bishop of the Diocese of New York J Pott Retrieved November 30 2019 a b New Cathedral Planned Bishop Potter Asks the City for Aid the Episcopalians Propose to Build a Great Temple Worthy of Their Creed and the City The New York Times June 2 1887 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 News in Brief Brooklyn Standard Union June 2 1887 p 2 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com Making Cordial Response Bishop Potter s Plan Gets Only Commendation Steps Already Taking to Build the Great Cathedral and Words of Encouragement from Every Side Appeals from the Pulpits The New York Times June 6 1887 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Real Barberini Tapestries a Gift to the Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times August 15 1891 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Dolkart 1998 p 40 Hodges George 1915 Henry Codman Potter seventh bishop of New York Macmillan p 206 Retrieved November 29 2019 a b Dolkart 1998 p 41 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 8 a b c d e f Hall 1920 p 25 a b Quirk 1993 p 20 a b c d Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 398 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 42 Plans for the Cathedral The New York Times January 16 1889 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Plans for the Great Cathedral New York Evening World January 15 1889 p 4 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 26 Cathedral Plans New York Evening World May 16 1889 p 2 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com The Cathedral Designs the Four Plans from Which One Is to Be Selected The New York Times May 18 1889 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 a b The Churchman George S Mallory 1889 p 685 Retrieved November 30 2019 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 pp 398 399 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 43 The Episcopal Cathedral The New York Times October 21 1890 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Architects of the New Cathedral New York Sun July 26 1891 p 18 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com a b Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 400 Dolkart 1998 pp 44 45 Architect W W Kent The Buffalo Commercial April 13 1891 p 19 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com Mr W W Kent s Vindication The Buffalo Commercial November 30 1892 p 9 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com a b Dolkart 1998 pp 46 47 Stern Robert A M Mellins Thomas Fishman David 1999 New York 1880 Architecture and Urbanism in the Gilded Age Monacelli Press p 366 ISBN 978 1 58093 027 7 OCLC 40698653 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 9 Gray Christopher October 10 2004 New York s Subway That Engineering Marvel Also Had Architects The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 To Revise Cathedral Plans the Architects to Consider Suggestions Made by the Trustees The New York Times October 21 1891 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Plans for the New Cathedral New York Sun November 29 1891 p 8 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com Will Begin Work Next Spring The New York Times November 29 1891 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 a b Dolkart 1998 p 48 a b c d Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 401 St John the Divine Plans of the Trustees as to Its Building The New York Times April 1 1892 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 The Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times December 27 1892 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 29 2019 Dolkart 1998 p 50 Federal Writers Project 1939 p 380 Hall 1920 p 25 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 6 a b c St John the Divine New York Evening World December 27 1892 p 2 Retrieved November 30 2019 via newspapers com The Cathedral Cornerstone Arrangements for the Ceremonies Are Rapidly Completing The New York Times December 8 1892 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e Kirby David January 10 1999 St John The Unfinished Dean of Cathedral on Morningside The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 12 2009 The Cathedral of St John the Divine more than a century in the making may never be really finished Ready to Begin the Cathedral New York Sun January 25 1893 p 1 Retrieved December 1 2019 via newspapers com Its Title Deed Secured The First Step Toward Building the Cathedral of St John the Divine Taken The New York Times May 23 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 15 a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 50 a b Cathedral Builders Puzzled A Pocket of Soft Shale Found on the Site of the Church of St John the Divine The New York Times September 10 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Building in a Mud Pocket The World September 9 1893 p 8 Retrieved December 24 2022 via newspapers com a b c Founded on the Rock Brooklyn Citizen August 18 1895 p 11 Retrieved December 1 2019 via newspapers com a b c d Its Foundations Rising Work on the Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times August 13 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 Possible Changes for the Cathedral New York Tribune September 10 1893 p 12 Retrieved December 24 2022 via newspapers com a b c d e f Broad William December 23 2022 A Cathedral Tried to Approach Heaven but the Earth Held a Deep Secret The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 23 2022 Hall 1920 p 27 a b c Religious News and Views The New York Times July 23 1898 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Charms of Morningside The New York Times August 2 1896 p 24 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 via newspapers com a b c Hall 1920 p 76 a b c d e f g History Cathedral of St John the Divine Archived from the original on June 17 2018 Retrieved June 16 2018 a b Quirk 1993 p 21 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 51 a b c d e f g h i j Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 10 Cathedral Choir Columns St John the Divine Trustees Announce That a Sufficient Sum for the Work Has Been Subscribed The New York Times March 25 1903 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Pushing New Cathedral Three More Arches to Follow the Eight Great Pillars The New York Times March 30 1903 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b Engineering News McGraw Hill Publishing Company 1903 pp 491 493 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 30 a b c d e f Dolkart 1998 pp 52 53 a b c Big Pillars in Place New York Tribune July 6 1904 p 5 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Hewitt Rich December 19 2001 Church s columns quarried on Vinalhaven Bangor Daily News Retrieved December 3 2019 Moving Cathedral Columns It Took Seven Hours to Turn a 100 Ton Monolith at the Wharf and One Hour to Haul It 50 Feet The New York Times August 28 1903 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Get Ready to Move Big Columns New York Tribune July 14 1903 p 6 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com New Charter For Protestant Cathedral Adopted by the Trustees of St John the Divine The New York Times March 23 1904 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Cathedral of St John the Divine Taking New Start With the King Bequest of 100 000 There Is Practically 800 000 Available for Pushing the Work The New York Times May 28 1905 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b Great Organ Ordered For New Cathedral Will Be Among World s Most Powerful Instruments The New York Times March 7 1906 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Looking Back Into the Past PDF The Diapason Vol 47 no 2 January 1 1956 p 22 Archived PDF from the original on October 25 2022 The Great Cathedral s Golden Granite Brooklyn Standard Union July 30 1905 p 18 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Sculptor Destroys His Cathedral Angels Wouldn t See Them Wrangled About and Carted Off The New York Times October 11 1905 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Church and Religious News and Notes New York Tribune October 5 1907 p 16 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com a b c Dolkart 1998 p 54 George Lewis Heins Dead Designer of the Cathedral of St John the Divine a Victim of Meningitis The New York Times September 27 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b c d e f g h i Macrae Gibson 1979 p 120 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 55 Delay in New Cathedral St John s the Divine Can t Be Opened for Months It Is Said The New York Times October 25 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b To Maintain Cathedral New York Tribune October 25 1909 p 4 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com St John s Almost Completed Buffalo Morning News November 21 1909 p 17 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Choir of New Cathedral Forty eight Voices for St John the Divine Opening on April 19 The New York Times March 4 1911 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Great Cathedral is Consecrated 320 000 Toward Completion of Edifice Contributed at Impressive Services The New York Times April 20 1911 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b c d e f g Dolkart 1998 p 56 a b c d e f Quirk 1993 pp 22 23 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 58 a b Oust Architect Who Designed the Cathedral Trustees of St John the Divine Put Ralph Adams Cram in Place of C Grant La Farge The New York Times June 21 1911 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 pp 401 402 a b Cram s Cathedral All Gothic New York Sun June 22 1911 p 3 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com a b Hall 1920 p 24 Cram Will Build Gothic Cathedral Boston Architect Says He Will Depart from La Farge s Romanesque Design The New York Times June 22 1911 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Dolkart 1998 p 57 a b Shows Plans for Cathedral Houses PDF New York Herald October 26 1911 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved December 4 2019 via fultonhistory com a b c d e f g h i j k Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 11 a b As The Cathedral May Look New York Sun June 21 1911 p 33 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Dolkart 1998 p 59 Ask for 5 500 000 to Finish Cathedral League Devoted to Raising St John the Divine Building Fund Outlines Its Plans The New York Times May 5 1912 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 3 2019 Dolkart 1998 pp 62 64 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 1 Cathedral to Build 1 500 000 Nave Bishop Greer Says Trustees of St John the Divine Are Ready for Bids The New York Times January 27 1916 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Bishop Starts Cathedral Nave New York Tribune May 9 1916 p 9 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Ground is Broken For 3 000 000 Nave Imposing Ceremonies Mark the Start of Work on St John Cathedral Building The New York Times May 9 1916 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Halt Work at Cathedral Cash Is Needed to Finish Nave of St John the Divine The New York Times November 19 1916 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Work on Nave to Go On New York Tribune November 20 1916 p 7 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 66 a b Campaign to Raise 6 000 000 for Completion of Cathedral of St John the Divine Decided Upon New York Tribune April 13 1919 p 15 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com Resume Cathedral Work Nave of St John the Divine to be a Memorial to New York Soldiers The New York Times February 11 1919 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 To Start Work Soon on St John s Nave Plans Adopted Will Make It Third Largest Cathedral in the World The New York Times February 26 1919 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Cathedral Plans No Drive Funds for Nave of St John the Divine to be Raised Otherwise The New York Times May 2 1920 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Drive to Complete Cathedral Opens Plan to Make St John the Divine Largest Edifice of English Speaking World The New York Times June 20 1923 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 13 2019 Letter from Franklin D Roosevelt to Dr Charles D Walcott Proceedings of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution at the Annual Meeting held December 11 1924 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution November 18 1924 pp 639 640 Adler Ruth ed 1981 The Working Press Special to the New York Times Arno Press pp 155 160 ISBN 978 0 405 13783 9 Retrieved November 1 2019 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 67 Bishop to Start Cathedral Work Brooklyn Times Union May 25 1924 p 15 Retrieved December 4 2019 via newspapers com Cathedral Board Seeks Bids on Nave Four Firms Asked to Submit Figures for Main Portion of St John the Divine The New York Times October 20 1924 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Fund for Cathedral Over Half Raised New Donations of 657 805 Announced at Rally Make Total 7 663 200 The New York Times February 24 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Cathedral Stone Will Be Laid Today Gov Smith and Other Notables Will Speak at Nave at St John the Divine The New York Times November 9 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Nave Stone Laid for Cathedral Brooklyn Times Union November 10 1925 p 37 Retrieved December 4 2019 via newspapers com a b c Dolkart 1998 p 68 a b Dolkart 1998 pp 70 71 Bishop to Report on Cathedral Drive The New York Times February 15 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 27 2019 Cathedral Tower Problem is Solved Trustees Accept Design Hailed as American Contribution to Gothic Architecture The New York Times January 15 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Women s Transept Begun at St John s Ceremonies Mark the Breaking of Ground for 1 000 000 Unit of the Cathedral The New York Times December 6 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Cathedral Work Will Be Resumed Building of Women s Transept Halted in 1930 to Continue Soon Manning Announces The New York Times November 8 1934 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Funds to Complete Transept Available Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 8 1934 p 12 Retrieved December 3 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com 1 300 000 Job Let on Cathedral Work Bishop Manning Says Project Will Extend Massive Facade to Enclose Great Nave The New York Times December 28 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Cathedral Needs 10 000 000 More Bishop Manning Reveals Total Sum Necessary to Complete St John the Divine Edifice The New York Times July 8 1934 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 1 000 000 Is Asked to Rush Cathedral Manning Appeals for Aid in Getting St John s Ready by Time Fair Opens The New York Times January 3 1938 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d Federal Writers Project 1939 p 381 Full Vista at St John s Cathedral Revealed at Preview of Opening 60 Foot Curtains Drawn Apart Disclose an Expanse of a Tenth of a Mile The New York Times November 28 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 29 2019 a b 15 000 Join in Service At St John s Cathedral Brooklyn Daily Eagle December 1 1941 p 13 Retrieved December 3 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com a b c d e f g Quirk 1993 p 24 1 000 At Cathedral Take Communion Record Gathering Participates as St John the Divine Ends Week of Celebration The New York Times December 8 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 29 2019 a b c d Cathedral Needs Final 10 000 000 St John the Divine Will Be Largest Gothic Structure of Its Kind in the World The New York Times January 30 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 69 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 22 10 000 000 Sought to Aid Cathedral Change in Architectural Design of Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times June 4 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Fiske Edward B November 22 1966 Unfinished Cathedral Hope to Complete St John the Divine Is Stalled by Changing Role of Church The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Dugan George February 26 1955 Cathedral Faces a Design Problem To Finish St John the Divine Involves Choice of Gothic or Contemporary Style The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Fiske Edward B May 11 1966 Cathedral Plans to Build Again St John the Divine Still Is Unfinished After 25 Years The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b Macrae Gibson 1979 p 122 Trustees Back St John s Cathedral Dome A Compromise Plan Will Complete Gothic Edifice The New York Times November 23 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Colored Glass Dome Proposed to Finish St John the Divine Contemporary Dome of Multicolored Glass Proposed for Finishing Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times November 21 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 Dome Chosen for Cathedral New York Daily News November 23 1966 p 328 Retrieved December 5 2019 via newspapers com Aid to N Y City Poor to Delay Cathedral Completion Democrat and Chronicle October 29 1967 p 16 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com a b Blau Eleanor May 21 1973 Building to Resume at St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 23 a b Macrae Gibson 1979 p 123 Religion A People s Cathedral Time July 16 1973 Archived from the original on December 14 2008 Retrieved May 7 2011 Blau Eleanor December 11 1973 The New St John s A Community Catalyst The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 5 2019 a b Goldberger Paul September 30 1982 St John the Divine The Slow Finishing Touch An Appraisal The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 5 2019 a b c d e Briggs Kenneth A December 5 1978 Construction of Cathedral of St John Will Resume The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 5 2019 Building to resume on Cathedral of St John New York Daily News December 5 1978 p 9 Retrieved December 5 2019 via newspapers com Church construction is testament of faith Star Gazette July 8 1979 p 30 Retrieved December 3 2019 via newspapers com St John the Unfinished Stonemasons Represent Activism Tradition Los Angeles Times October 31 1987 Retrieved January 29 2020 Stone Carver s Magnificent Obsession The New York Times January 29 1989 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 29 2020 a b c Macrae Gibson 1979 p 124 Daniels Lee A June 22 1979 Work Begins at Cathedral of St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 12 Geist William E March 19 1986 About New York Taking the Long View of Building a Cathedral The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 5 2019 World s largest Gothic cathedral in process after century Democrat and Chronicle November 22 1984 p 140 Retrieved December 5 2019 via newspapers com a b c d e f g Quirk 1993 p 34 Cochran Tracy October 31 2013 Seeking Verity Parabola Retrieved February 22 2019 Culturally too Cathedral of St John is divine New York Daily News April 17 1988 p 370 Retrieved December 5 2019 via newspapers com a b c Bloom Jennifer Kingson November 20 1994 Neighborhood Report Morningside Heights Scaffolding Leaving the Cathedral of St John the Divine More to Come The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Dolkart 1998 p 70 a b Dunlap David W November 6 2007 A Blossoming Cathedral Tower Sheds Its Scaffolding The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 Feuer Alan Wakin Daniel J December 19 2001 Fire Damages St John the Divine Gutting Gift Shop and Scorching Art The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 6 2019 Fire hits St John the Divine Democrat and Chronicle December 19 2001 p 20 Retrieved December 6 2019 via newspapers com Fire Damages Historic Cathedral CBS News December 18 2001 Retrieved December 6 2019 Wakin Daniel J February 6 2002 Restoring a Cathedral To Unfinished Glory Huge Cleanup for St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 6 2019 Barron James October 15 2008 Stop by Stop Cathedral s Organ Is Reassembled After a 2001 Fire The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 6 2019 a b c Chan Sewell November 30 2008 Repaired After Fire Cathedral Reopens The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 12 2009 Vitello Paul November 30 2008 Awash in New Light Angels Are Revealed at St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 24 2019 Mindlin Alex October 24 2004 St John the Unfinished Becomes St John the Downsized The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 6 2019 a b Hu Winnie October 25 2003 No Landmark Status for St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 20 2019 Dunlap David W June 27 2003 Big Buildings Planned on Grounds of St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 6 2019 Enclave at the Cathedral Handel Architects a b c McKeogh Tim November 20 2016 New Rentals Steps From St John the Divine The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 21 2019 a b c d Rosenberg Zoe September 21 2015 Rentals Hiding Cathedral of St John the Divine Nearly Complete Curbed NY Retrieved October 21 2019 a b Rosenberg Zoe February 21 2017 Cathedral of St John the Divine finally becomes a NYC landmark Curbed NY Retrieved November 29 2019 a b Stapinski Helene August 30 2018 Secret Doorways Gargoyles and Wood Carved Angels Cleaning Out the Cathedral Basement The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b Ferre Sadurni Luis April 14 2019 Fire in Basement Crypt at St John the Divine Forces Palm Sunday Worshipers Outside The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 25 2019 Elizalde Elizabeth Annese John April 15 2019 Crypt fire disrupts Palm Sunday services at Cathedral of St John the Divine nydailynews com Retrieved December 6 2019 a b Fall 2019 at the Cathedral PDF Cathedral of Saint John the Divine Fall 2019 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved November 25 2019 Margolies Jane September 17 2019 St John the Divine Cathedral Is in Recovery Mode The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 1 2019 Ennead Architects March 26 2019 Crossing Dome Roof NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission Public Hearing PDF nyc gov New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 a b Morris Sebastian March 26 2019 Copper Dome Proposed for St John the Divine Heads to Landmarks for Approval New York YIMBY Retrieved November 30 2019 a b Margolies Jane December 22 2022 Cathedral of St John Finally Solves a 100 Year Old Problem The New York Times Retrieved December 22 2022 Chapman Ben Honan Kati December 14 2020 NYPD Officers Fatally Shoot Gunman at Cathedral Church of St John the Divine Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved December 16 2020 Gunman killed by police on steps of Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church in New York www anglicannews org Retrieved December 16 2020 MTA Neighborhood Maps Morningside Heights PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2018 Retrieved October 1 2018 Pollak Michael February 26 2010 Manhattan Highs and Your Permanent Record The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 30 2019 Quirk 1993 p 30 a b Quirk 1993 p 33 Koeppel Gerard 2015 City on a grid how New York became New York Boston MA Da Capo Press a member of the Perseus Books Group p 45 ISBN 978 0 306 82284 1 OCLC 902657028 Hall 1920 p 13 Hall 1920 p 191 Architectural Details of the Basilica PDF National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved February 27 2020 After 100 years Shrine of the Immaculate Conception is finished USA Today December 9 2017 Retrieved March 9 2020 a b c d Brock H j January 30 1927 Transformation of a Great Cathedral Plans for St John the Divine Undergo a Change In the Direction of Pure Gothic The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 60 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Patrick Mellins Thomas 1987 New York 1930 Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars New York Rizzoli p 156 ISBN 978 0 8478 3096 1 OCLC 13860977 a b See Williams Peter 2000 Houses of God region religion and architecture in the United States Urbana IL University of Illinois Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 252 06917 8 OCLC 47361692 McFarlan Donald 1989 1990 Guinness Book of World Records New York Sterling p 267 ISBN 978 0 8069 5790 6 OCLC 20612099 Hutchison William R December 1998 Houses of God Church History 67 4 807 809 doi 10 2307 3169900 JSTOR 3169900 S2CID 162550176 a b c d The Cathedral Church of St John the Divine New York City New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists Retrieved December 19 2019 a b Hall 1920 p 31 a b Quirk 1993 p 39 a b Quirk 1993 p 40 a b c d e f New York City Fodor s 2008 Fodor s Travel Publications 2006 pp 150 151 ISBN 978 1 4000 1680 8 Retrieved December 7 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 13 Carlson Jen October 12 2017 Photos This Apocalyptic NYC Church Facade Depicts City Collapsing Beneath Giant Waves amp Nuclear Explosion Gothamist Archived from the original on December 7 2019 Retrieved December 7 2019 Kent R Simonson L McBride H Blossom F A 1932 Creative Art A Magazine of Fine and Applied Art A and C Boni incorporated p 93 Retrieved December 8 2019 Cathedral of St John the Divine New York City Sacred Destinations July 26 2010 Retrieved January 17 2013 Manton Cyndy 2009 Henry Wilson practical idealist Cambridge Lutterworth Press ISBN 978 0 7188 3097 7 OCLC 297148674 a b c d Lankevich G J 2003 Postcards from Manhattan Sights amp Sentiments from the Last Century Postcards From Series Square One Publishers p 86 ISBN 978 0 7570 0101 7 Retrieved December 7 2019 Kurian G T Lamport M A Marty M E 2016 Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 2053 ISBN 978 1 4422 4432 0 Retrieved December 7 2019 Goodall J Barker P 2015 Parish Church Treasures The Nation s Greatest Art Collection Bloomsbury Publishing p 282 ISBN 978 1 4729 1765 2 Retrieved December 7 2019 Olia M 2019 No Access Boston Beantown s Hidden Treasures Haunts and Forgotten Places Globe Pequot p 161 ISBN 978 1 4930 3594 6 Retrieved March 8 2020 a b c d e f g h Federal Writers Project 1939 p 382 a b Quirk 1993 p 42 a b c d Hall 1920 p 32 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 14 Quirk 1993 p 76 a b c d Quirk 1993 p 41 a b c Nave Cathedral of Saint John the Divine www stjohndivine org Retrieved December 7 2019 a b c d e f g Quirk 1993 p 97 Quirk 1993 p 133 a b c d e Landmarks Preservation Commission 2017 p 18 Quirk 1993 p 127 a b c d Quirk 1993 p 128 a b c d Quirk 1993 p 131 Historical Parapet Given to Cathedral Nineteen Statues Represent Foremost Workers for World Uplift Since Christ The New York Times July 15 1922 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 21 2019 A Christian Hall of Fame The Literary Digest 74 5 32 34 July 29 1922 Quirk 1993 p 132 Residencies Cathedral of Saint John the Divine Archived from the original on May 16 2023 Retrieved May 16 2023 a b c d e f Quirk 1993 p 129 Dedication At Cathedral Clarence Dickinson in First Recital on Organ PDF The Diapason 2 7 1 June 1 1911 Resurgence Of A Landmark Instrument The Restoration Of The Great Organ In The Cathedral Of St John The Divine New York City The American Organist November 2009 Archived from the original on December 19 2019 a b c Barron James November 26 2008 Before Its Debut Cathedral Organ Has a Sound Check The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 21 2019 The Cathedral Church of St John the Divine Quimby Pipe Organs Inc Archived from the original on April 22 2015 Cathedral Organs The Cathedral Church of St John the Divine a b c Cathedral Organs Cathedral of Saint John the Divine April 14 2019 Retrieved December 24 2019 Shift About at Cathedral The New York Times February 25 1905 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 19 2019 a b Tempest in Musical Teapot Philadelphia Inquirer May 23 1909 p 10 Retrieved December 19 2019 via newspapers com Miles Farrow Called Baltimore Sun May 5 1909 p 7 Retrieved December 19 2019 via newspapers com Coke Jephcott to John Divine New York Daily News November 27 1931 p 646 Retrieved December 19 2019 via newspapers com Our History The Cathedral School of St John the Divine Retrieved December 24 2019 Coke Jephcott 68 Organist Is Dead Choirmaster at St John the Divine From 1932 1953 The New York Times March 15 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 19 2019 Whitney Craig R March 23 2007 Alec Wyton 85 Organist Who Updated Church Music Is Dead The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 21 2019 Dorothy Papadakos AGO National Convention Program Houston TX American Guild of Organists 2016 Archived from the original on August 21 2018 Retrieved August 18 2018 Performance Music at Scranton Presents World Famous Organist In Recital Royal News November 26 2019 Retrieved December 24 2019 a b Catton Pia July 14 2011 St John the Divine Taps New Music Director WSJ Retrieved December 19 2019 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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