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Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany (Philadelphia)

The Church of Saint Luke and The Epiphany is an Episcopal congregation located at 330 South 13th Street between Spruce and Pine Streets in the Center City neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is part of the Diocese of Pennsylvania. The church was formed in 1898 as a result of the merger of St. Luke's Church (1839) and The Church of The Epiphany (1834), which consolidated at St. Luke's location.

Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany
(2022)
39°56′45″N 75°09′47″W / 39.94593°N 75.16311°W / 39.94593; -75.16311
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
CountryUnited States
DenominationEpiscopal
ChurchmanshipBroad church
Membership250
Weekly attendance140–160
Websitehttp://www.slatechurch.org/
Designated1961[1]
History
Former name(s)St. Luke’s Church (1839–1898)
FoundedApril 6, 1898
ConsecratedOctober 16, 1840
Architecture
Architect(s)Thomas Somerville Stewart
Furness & Hewitt (1875, chapel and parish house)
Wilson Eyre, Jr. (1906 renovation)
StyleGreek Revival
GroundbreakingMay 24, 1839
Construction cost$58,000
Specifications
Capacityabout 1,000
Administration
ProvinceThree
DiocesePennsylvania (1784)
DeanerySouthwark
Clergy
RectorThe Rev. Joseph Wallace-Williams
Laity
Organist(s)Jonathan M. Bowen

The church building was constructed in 1839–1840 for St. Luke's and was designed by Thomas Somerville Stewart in the Greek Revival style. Additions and renovations were made in 1875 and 1906. The building was listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places in 1961.

Today the congregation stands at about 250 members. As an urban parish, the congregation reflects the racial, cultural, and gender diversity found in the city. This diversity contributes to the church's reputation for being open and welcoming, a trait it exhibited during the AIDS Crisis of the 1980s, when it was one of the first churches in the city to open its doors to allow funerals for those who had died from AIDS.

History edit

St. Luke's Church (1839–1898) edit

 
St. Luke's Church interior c.1868, view towards chancel.

A committee of 18 men[note 1] from seven Philadelphia Episcopal parishes organized St. Luke's Church in 1839. Their goal being the establishment of an Episcopal congregation on the southwestern edge of development within the original boundaries of Philadelphia (it would take almost another 10 years before an Episcopal church was organized across Broad Street and below Chestnut Street – St. Mark's Church at 16th and Locust Streets). These men advanced the money to build the church and were repaid through the sale of pews.[2] Several sites were considered including the corner Broad and Locust Streets and the corner of 13th and Spruce Streets. These locations were rejected due to cost. The committee chose the present site of the church and selected Philadelphia architect Thomas Somerville Stewart to design the structure. Stewart's design is one of the finest examples of Greek Revival architecture surviving in the city.

The committee submitted the church's charter to the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania's Standing Committee for approval. Upon the first reading the charter was denied because, in the opinion of the Standing Committee, too much money was allocated to the "education of Youth and the Support of the Poor of the Congregation." The committee explained this clause to mean that the charter permitted "the application of revenue" to only those "in immediate association" with the congregation. The Standing Committee agreed with the rationale and St. Luke's Church was admitted to the Church and the Diocese at the 55th Convention of the Diocese of Pennsylvania on May 22, 1839.[3]

A ceremony was held on June 24, 1839, for the laying of the northeasternmost cornerstone of the building. Bishop Henry Ustick Onderdonk led a procession which began at his home and ended at the site of the church. The procession included many Philadelphia clergy and vestrymen. Bishop Onderdonk addressed the crowd and at the end of his address a lead box containing the Bible, Book of Common Prayer, a "Diocese of Pennsylvania Convention Journal", several copies of Philadelphia and Episcopal newspapers, and a copy of St. Luke's charter was placed within the cornerstone. The ceremony was concluded with sealing the cornerstone.

At the time of the laying of the cornerstone, a rector had yet to be named. The vestry selected the Rev. Edmund Neville of Taunton, Massachusetts. Humbled by the call, Neville declined the offer because he felt organizing and growing a new congregation was too much for him to bear. The vestry then selected the Rev. William W. Spear, rector of St. Michael's Church, Charleston, South Carolina. He accepted the call on July 15, 1840.

Bishop Onderdonk consecrated St. Luke's Church on October 16, 1840, and the first regular services were held on October 18 (St. Luke's Day). By all accounts, the first year was a success. Its location on 13th Street placed the parish near rapidly growing areas. As Spear noted at the 57th Diocesan Convention: "The wisdom of the location [is] best attested by the fact that throughout the winter its services have been attended by numerous and generally crowded congregations and its temporal interest has already reached a degree of prosperity scarcely anticipated."[4]

St. Luke's infant years were a period of healthy congregational growth, but compounded with serious financial constraints. By late 1841, it became clear that the congregation had not raised enough money through the sale of pews to pay for the building's construction costs. Further, the church's operating costs far exceeded its income. Initial cuts were to the music program. This action had the unintended result of further reducing the number of pew holders.[5] Further cost-cutting measures were considered, including eliminating the paid choir, reducing salaries of the rector, and contracting the number of weekly services. These options were not attractive to Spear or the vestry. The vestry added surtaxes upon the pews and took occasional special collections to reduce the church's operating deficits. In the end, the burden of reducing the church's operating costs fell upon Spear himself. Twice during his rectorship his salary was reduced. Spear's salary had been slashed from $2,500 per annum in 1841 to $1,500 in 1845. In September 1845, Spear resigned to assume the position of associate editor of the Episcopal Recorder, which was published in Philadelphia.[6] Mr. Spear continued to fill the pulpit until his successor was named.

The Rev. Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe, rector of St. James’ Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, accepted the Church's call in June 1846. Early in his rectorship, plans were developed to satisfy the church's debt. William Welsh, a noted Philadelphia merchant, Episcopal philanthropist, and vestryman, issued a challenge to the congregation. He would contribute 60% of the funds needed to pay the debts if the vestry could raise the rest. The church rose to his challenge and the church's debts were satisfied in September 1851.

Mr. Welsh's generosity and the Rev. Dr. Howe's leadership allowed St. Luke's to become one of the most prominent parishes in the city. Early in the 1850s, the congregation grew to near seated capacity. Howe wrote to the vestry to ask that the church be renovated to seat more people as he had requests to purchase pews that could not be accommodated. These plans would not be realized until much later. Howe was committed to missionary work both at home and abroad. For example, St. Luke's assumed the administration of Church of the Ascension, at 11th and Lombard Streets, between 1861 and 1867. Ascension was administered as the "St. Luke’s Mission Chapel." Howe also expanded the Church's benevolent activities including establishing the St. Luke's Church Home for Aged Women in 1871, thanks to the generosity of Asa Whitney.

Soon after Howe's arrival he became active in local and national Episcopal circles. He was considered one of the most important and influential Episcopal clergyman in the city. For example, he was elected missionary Bishop of Nevada in 1865, a position he declined. As Howe rose to national prominence, so to did the profile of St. Luke's.[7] St. Luke's Church hosted its first diocesan convention in 1854; further, the Church hosted the general convention in 1865. As the first convention after the Civil War, it was unclear if the wounds of the war could be healed. As Morgan Dix, rector of the old St. Paul's Chapel of the Parish of Trinity Church on Wall Streetin lower Manhattan of New York City remarked:

[T]he Convention assembled in St. Luke's Church, for the opening service, one of the southern Bishops was there. He came alone, and took a seat among the congregation: he looked like a stranger. That was a sight which his brethren in the Apostolic Episcopate could not bear. They saw him; they became uneasy. At last they sent a dignified messenger to tell him that he must come to them. Then he hesitated no longer; he arose, and just as he was, with no vestment or robe of office, passed up to the chancel and went to his brethren. I was told that there was not a dry eye in that august company at that moment. Men felt that GOD was giving answer to the question whether this Church could be one again.[8]

Near the end of Dr. Howe's rectorship, the Church of the Ascension proposed to buy St. Luke's Church. Howe asked the vestry to consider seriously this offer. Many of St. Luke's parishioners had already moved west of Broad Street. Further, Howe was concerned about the possibility of the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas purchasing Ascension's building. For these reasons, Howe wondered if the time had come for St. Luke's to move west, too. Sites were considered at 22nd and Spruce Streets, 22nd and Walnut Streets, 18th Street and Rittenhouse Square, and several others. However, the vestry eventually decided to stay on 13th Street.

Howe's rectorship ended in 1871 after twenty-five years. He was elected the first bishop of Central Pennsylvania in 1871. He was installed as bishop at St. Luke's Church on December 8, 1871.[9] Howe's contributions to the parish are remembered in the form of a memorial tablet in the church's sanctuary. Wallis E. Howe, a Providence, RI, architect and the Rev. Dr. Howe's youngest son, designed the tablet. Howe's eldest son, Dr. Herbert M. Howe, a physician and capitalist, donated the tablet to the parish. The tablet was dedicated on March 28, 1909.[10]

The Rev. Charles George Currie, rector of Grace Church, Providence, Rhode Island, was unanimously elected rector, and Dr. Howe's successor, on July 1, 1872. The Rev. Dr. Currie's rectorship began on a promising note. George Leib Harrison, vestryman and industrialist, donated the funds to expand the church. He commissioned Furness & Hewitt to construct a parish house with a chapel for additional capacity. The Harrison addition (now known as the Furness Chapel) opened for services on November 7, 1875, and was formally consecrated by Bishop William Bacon Stevens on December 14, 1875. The remainder of Currie's rectorship was plagued with a declining membership and financial problems. The church lacked an endowment and relied upon its wealthier members to fund special projects, repairs, and its music program. As these members moved to other sections of Philadelphia, St. Luke's could not rely on its traditional sources of support. Under these circumstances, Currie resigned on March 10, 1887, and accepted the rectorship of Christ Church, Baltimore, MD. Currie and his family maintained their ties to St. Luke's after they left Philadelphia. In 1913, his family donated the Christ with Nicodemus stained glass window in his honor.[11] Currie even preached the sermon at its dedication. Further, several of Currie's grandchildren were married at St. Luke's.[12]

The Rev. Dr. Currie's successor, the Rev. Leverett Bradley, rector of Christ Church, Andover, Massachusetts, was called in early 1888. Bradley's biographer described St. Luke's bleak situation this way "Old St. Luke’s parish...had very much run down. It was on a side street, and was the only downtown church without any endowment." Rev. Bradley understood the challenges he faced when he accepted the rectorship. He, almost immediately, dedicated himself and the church to the needs of the city's poor. He tirelessly worked with the Board of City Missions and St. Luke's responded by giving generously to the annual missions appeal. However, during a sojourn to Paris in 1894, Bradley concluded that its activities were hampered by the lack of an endowment. From 1894 onward, Bradley spent the remainder of his rectorship trying to secure the long-term viability of the parish. Early efforts were made to start building an endowment, made very difficult by the fact that "many of the wealthy families had left" before his arrival. Preliminary discussions had taken place between the vestries of St. Luke's, St. Stephen's, and Church of the Epiphany about a possible amalgam. These discussions did not progress very far, and no action was taken. It was only after a bout with typhoid fever in 1897, which left him severely weakened, did Bradley seriously entertain any ideas of a merger.[13]

In the fall of 1897, the Rev. Mr. Bradley and Bishop Ozi W. Whittaker had extensive conversations about possible mergers or consolidations. Bishop Whittaker indicated that Church of The Epiphany, which was unable to find a suitable site for a new building, would consider merging with a parish if their rector would lead the combined parish. Bradley suggested that Church of The Epiphany’s vestry should contact St. Luke's vestry about a merger.

The vestry would not act until they received assurances from Bradley that he was satisfied with an arrangement whereby he would find himself in a subordinate position. Bradley assured the vestry the arrangement was satisfactory to him, for the merger with Church of The Epiphany fulfilled Bradley's goal of building an endowment for the church. Church of The Epiphany came with $575,000, of which $300,000 would go directly into an endowment account. Bradley would have a lifetime position, with the option of becoming senior rector if/when Epiphany's rector retired or resigned. In a moving sermon just before the pewholders voted upon the merger on March 24, 1898, Bradley spoke movingly,

God seems to be leading us in a way we would avoid. There are all kinds of successes. Perhaps this seeming failure may be nearer God’s idea of success than we think. It is my conviction that by this time we should have had a sufficient endowment had not circumstances opposed our moving vigorously in the matter. I seem to see the hand of God, who may be purposing to engage us in larger and broader activities. Having trained our spirits to loyalty and love, He may now give us the material resources to make glad the hearts of many yet unborn.[14]

The pewholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the merger. After a similar vote at Epiphany, the merger became effective on April 6, 1898, after which the combined congregation became known as The Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany.

 
The Church of The Epiphany, c.1900

Church of The Epiphany (1834–1898) edit

The Church of The Epiphany was located on the northwest corner of 15th and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1834 and merged with St. Luke's Church in 1898 after the sale of its property to Philadelphia merchant John Wanamaker in 1896.

Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany (1898 – present) edit

The merger of St. Luke's Church and The Church of The Epiphany was not without friction. The agreement of consolidation placed two individuals, each of whom had previously been rector for a part of the congregation, in positions of leadership in the new parish. The vestry recommended that Fr. Bradley take a year leave to give the Rev. Thomas A. Tidball a chance to assume the rectorship of the combined parish without interference. During Fr. Bradley's absence, Fr. Tidball began the task of stitching together a new parish. Almost immediately, renovations to the church were made to incorporate the organ from the Church of the Epiphany and changes were made to the chancel (see architecture section below). In May 1901, Fr. Bradley chose not to exercise his option to become rector emeritus and retire with full salary. Fr. Tidball abruptly resigned on November 6, 1902, effective January 1, 1903. The vestry gave Fr. Bradley 30 days to become either rector or rector emeritus. Given Fr. Bradley's declining health the only reasonable action was retirement as rector emeritus with full salary as of January 1, 1903. During the Christmas holiday, Fr. Bradley became very ill and died on December 31, 1902, at the age of 56. Early in 1904, the vestry organized a committee to develop a memorial to the Rev. Leverett Bradley chaired by Philadelphia architect Frank Miles Day. Although Day did submit a design, the committee ultimately selected a memorial tablet designed by Philadelphia sculptor Charles Grafly. The tablet, which can be found in the sanctuary, was dedicated on December 31, 1905.[15]

 
Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany view towards chancel, Christmas 2010.

In February 1904, the Rev. David McConnell Steele, assistant rector of St. Bartholomew's Church in New York City, was called as rector.[16] Early in his rectorate, Steele realized that the area around the church was shifting from a neighborhood of single-family dwellings to one "thickly populated boarding house, apartment house, and hotel region of which [St. Luke's] is the centre."[17] In response, Steele actively created programs to reach this transient population. For example, he restarted the church's magazine, called the Parish Helper. Started in 1887 and dormant since 1902, it was resurrected in 1906 as part church newsletter/ part religious magazine. Further, the church hosted various socials, dances, lectures, and other social events to reach this population. Various accounts in The Philadelphia Inquirer report that these events were well attended, with one New Year's Eve party counting over 1,500 guests in attendance. The success of these outreach activities can be seen in the confirmation registers. For example, in 1915, 50 people were confirmed at the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany. Of the 50, only 6 were children or young people. The rest were converts from the various Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, and Roman Catholic traditions (a trend that has continued in this church to the present). Throughout the nineteen-teens and early nineteen-twenties, the confirmation classes ranged between 50 and 100 persons per year.[18]

Although the neighborhood around the church was changing, St. Luke's pewholders were still from Philadelphia's upper-middle and upper classes. For example, Thomas Voorhees, President of the old Reading Railroad, Owen J. Roberts, future Supreme Court Justice, and Andrew C. and Mary B. Dulles, parents of the infamous RMS Titanic disaster, a victim William Crothers Dulles,[19] were all pew holders. In most cases, the pewholders had since moved out of the immediate area around the church. However, these families remained committed to the work of the parish. They contributed greatly to the enhancement of the church, for example, by donating the stained glass windows in the gallery in 1912, and to the church's endowment, through planned giving. The wealthy members, mainly the wealthy women, of the church instituted several charity missions during Steele's tenure, including oil and ice deliveries for the needy of the neighborhood. Their contributions even allowed the church to purchase a farm in Delaware County, near Broomall, where the congregation could retire on weekends or during the summer for social activities and outdoor chapel.

The Rev. Dr. Steele was a prolific author and noted lecturer. By the end of his tenure he was widely known and well regarded within the Episcopal Church for his liberal views. Steele spoke out against the Pennsylvania blue laws and was an active supporter of the repeal of the "Eighteenth Amendment" to the U.S. Constitution for the Prohibition of alcohol.

As the 1920s wore on, the change in the neighborhood began to take its toll as attendance and participation at the church started to dip noticeably. Steele saw this as a personal affront. He felt he was losing or had already lost the support of the congregation; further, Steele felt the vestry was not doing enough missions work and outreach. For these reasons, he tended his resignation to the vestry on January 8, 1929. The vestry promptly tabled Steele's resignation and then voted instead to increase the church's mission work.

St. Luke and The Epiphany was hit hard during the early years of the "Great Depression" in the 1930s. Its noted music program was the first budget item to be trimmed. For example, the choir master's salary was reduced from $8,500 to $6,500. By January 1933, Steele had enough. After 30 years, he resigned from his rectorship on January 15, 1933. As reported in The New York Times, "Because of the population drift away from the center of the city, where his church is located, and congregations in that area had been losing membership steadily. He wished to ‘step to one side and allow any other man, if such there be, to build a congregation with a better attendance."[20]

Steele remained connected to the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany after his retirement; the vestry granted him the title Rector Emeritus with an accompanying salary. The congregation fondly remembered the Rev. David Steele; his rectorship marked the moment when the two consolidated parishes truly became one. The congregation remembered his contributions in the form of a plaque, which was placed in the sanctuary in 1946.

In less than two months after Steele announced his retirement, informal discussions began concerning a merger with the Church of the Holy Trinity. Discussions progressed rapidly, and by late April the question of merger was put before both congregations. The combined parish would be known as The Churches of the Holy Trinity and Saint Luke and the Epiphany. The proposal, which was supported by both vestries, was put forth to the congregations. The Church of the Holy Trinity overwhelmingly supported the merger. However the proposal was overwhelmingly defeated by the congregants of the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany.

Rev. Thomas L. Harris came to St. Luke's in 1933 as a supply priest at first to fill the vacancy left by Dr. Steele's retirement. After one year, the vestry decided to elect him rector on May 3, 1934. He selected the Rev. Nelson Waite Rightmyer as his curate; both were quite young compared to the aging pew holding congregation. He began his ministry at the height of the "Great Depression" and was deeply committed to social ministry and the needs and issues of the people of the neighborhood. His determination to include them in the life of the Church was not welcomed by the more socially prominent members of the congregation. Harris was active within a group of young theologians who saw their call to ministry through a lens of social justice. Together, they made several attempts to provide for the needs of the deteriorating neighborhood, including a possible merger with St. James Church, an Episcopal parish once located at 22nd and Walnut Streets, to form a church-based community center in 1935, as well as a partnership with the city's Social Services Department.

Additionally, services had remained relatively static at St. Luke's during David McConnell Steele's 30 years as rector. While many other congregations in the Episcopal Church in the U.S.A. were embracing more Anglo-Catholic liturgical elements, St. Luke's resisted. A few attempts by Harris to change the musical program were resisted as well. With mounting resistance from the Vestry and pew holding congregation, he recognized he had become alienated from the congregation and submitted this resignation in 1938 with the recommendation that the church merge with another parish or close. While there were still a number of people attending the church there was no deep loyalty to it as demonstrated by a poll to determine its future. Out of 250 votes cast, 120 indicated no preference on whether the church should close, merge, or remain independent. Mr. Rightmyer, the curate, resigned shortly thereafter.

The Rev. Dr. Joseph Fort Newton, former co-rector of St. James' Church in Philadelphia, was elected as rector on February 11, 1938. The Rev. Dr. Newton faced the task of, as termed in his autobiography, "remaking a church." The issues which the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany faced in the 1930s, were not unlike those faced by the stately "downtown" churches across the country. They were faced with declining resources and congregations. Newton shepherded the congregation through this transition in two ways. First, "in every way possible, [he] tried to make a church of free and tolerant faith, of friendly spirit and homey atmosphere. Our congregation grew, people coming from a distance, many who had been alienated from the church returned."[21] Second, the church's finances stabilized. The church benefited from several generous contributions and from the sale of the church farm in Broomall, Delaware County, replenished an endowment decimated during the Great Depression. Newton was noted for his great preaching ability. In 1939, for example, he was voted one of the five foremost Protestant clergymen in America.[22] He was also a prolific writer. Newton authored more than thirty books and published a popular weekly column in the afternoon paper "Philadelphia Bulletin", which had the largest circulation in the city. Dr. Newton died on January 24, 1950.

The Rev. Dr. Walter M. Haushalter was elected rector on March 24, 1950. Haushalter was a seasoned clergyman, having been ordained in the Congregational Church some years before. However, he had recently been ordained in the Episcopal Church, and the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany was his first and only rectorate as an Episcopal clergyman.[23] Many of the older members, who had contributed generously to the church, had died or moved to the suburbs. In 1960, the topic of merger arose again. Bishop Oliver J. Hart suggested to Haushalter that a committee be formed, once again, to consider a merger with the Church of the Holy Trinity. Discussions were held; however, St. Luke and the Epiphany was not interested in any merger. Haushalter died while traveling in France on August 28, 1963.

The Rev. Frederick R. Isacksen was elected rector on October 23, 1963. In 1965, the vestry purchased a rectory on South Camac Street. It was the first time since the nineteen-teens (the Rev. Dr. Steele) that a rector lived in the neighborhood and since the mid-1940s (the Rev. Dr. Newton) that a rector lived within the Philadelphia city limits. The purchase of the rectory was an outward symbol that St. Luke and The Epiphany was both committed to the neighborhood and to the city. In February 1969, Isacksen proposed that the church build a senior housing development at the corner of 13th and Pine Streets with assistance from the federal government. He believed this would establish a base of parishioners for the church. Properties were acquired and substantial sums spent on plans for the project. After Isacksen's retirement in 1975, the project was abandoned when the HUD grant was denied resulting in substantial losses to the Church.

In searching for Isacksen's successor, the parish had two major requirements. First, the new rector had to be young (in his mid to late thirties), and second, be married and have children. The church hoped that by having a young rector with a family, similar people would be attracted back to the parish. These requirements were filled by the Rev. John Edward Bird, Jr., curate of Christ Episcopal Church, Woodbury, NJ. He was elected rector on May 12, 1975.

Under the direction of the present rector, the Rev. Rodger C. Broadley, the Church responded very quickly to the onset of the HIV/AIDS crisis in the early 1980s. Given the church's central location in Philadelphia's "Gayborhood" and the Episcopal Church's open funeral policy, St. Luke and The Epiphany was the site for many of the funerals for Philadelphia's early HIV/AIDS victims.[24] As part of the church's response to the AIDS crisis, St. Luke and The Epiphany opened The Hospitality Center in 1989 under the direction of Sister Kathleen Snyder. The Hospitality Center was one of the earliest multi-faceted support structures for people living with the disease. Still active in 2011, The Hospitality Center was recently led by The Reverend Marlene Haines, Associate Rector of St. Luke and The Epiphany from 1998 until her retirement in 2011.

During this time of turbulence in the wider neighborhood, Broadley opened the Church's doors to other community organizations, such as "Philadelphia FIGHT" and "ACT UP", who were not able to secure other safe places to meet and organize.[25] Other community, secular and arts organizations that use the building presently include Alcoholics Anonymous, Dignity USA, "The Philadelphia Pops", from the University of the Arts, and others. Other missions of the Church include support for neighbor Mercy Hospice, a faith-based transitional shelter for women, visibility at community events, Bible fellowship, young adults fellowship, and various service activities in Philadelphia. Members of the congregation have participated in every AIDS Walk Philadelphia since its inception; the Rev. Ms. Haines had for many years read names of AIDS victims and given the benediction at the beginning of the event. The congregation maintains missionary connections to the wider world, supporting Millennium Development Goals through the Episcopal Relief and Development Fund and Fikelela,[26] a parish-based HIV/AIDS clinic in South Africa.

Currently, St. Luke and The Epiphany has entered a new period of growth and vitality. The church is both a worship and community center. Major renovations to the buildings have been completed and he parish has grown substantially over the previous decade. Many members have been at the church for less than six years. In addition to those participating in regular worship, over 3,000 people a month come through the doors for various support programs and community events.

Architecture edit

 
Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany view towards chancel, Easter 2011.

Church edit

The church is listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places (1961)[1] and in the Historic American Buildings Survey of the Library of Congress (PA-1499). The two-story structure is constructed of stuccoed stone and brick and measures approximately 65 feet by 130 feet with gabled roof. The entire building is raised on a pedestal above the surrounding neighborhood. Neoclassical granite steps from Quincy, Massachusetts, lead up to the entrance of the Church. A cast-iron fence featuring Greek Revival motifs encloses the property along the street. The six-bay portico features wooden column shafts topped with richly articulated cast iron capitals in the Greek Corinthian order of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, an ancient monument in Athens. The twin monumental front doors and flanking windows have corbeled lintels. The interior of the church is organized around a three-aisle plan with second story self-supporting gallery. Pilasters with capitals finished in gold leaf around the perimeter are based on a Greek-style adaptation by the New York architect Minard Lafever and published in his pattern book, The Beauties of Modern Architecture (1835). Free standing columns in the chancel employ the same Greek Corinthian order as the front portico.[27][28]

The church was designed by Philadelphia architect Thomas Somerville Stewart; it is acclaimed as one of the finest examples of Greek Revival architecture surviving in the city. The site was selected after other locations at Broad and Locust Streets and 13th and Spruce Streets were rejected because of cost. The present site of the church was acquired for $15,000. The cornerstone was laid on May 24, 1839, by Bishop Henry Ustick Onderdonk, and it was opened for services on October 18, 1840.[29]

Stewart's design was chosen over six other plans submitted by several prominent architects including William Strickland and John Notman. The original design included a 200-foot-high steeple over the portico, however, the church was unable to raise through subscription the full cost of $7,000 and it was not built.[30] A contract was approved to build the Church for $30,000 plus $200 for the self-supporting gallery.

The Philadelphia Public Ledger reported at the time: "The interior is exceedingly beautiful and chaste. Without pretending to give a detailed description, we state that above the floor every thing, even to the glass of the windows, is of a pure white, and in every section of the church is introduced the richest and most elaborate carving and molding in wood and plaster. Even the organ is of this color and in this style. It is praised as a superb instrument. The pews are represented as of oak and the damask covering them is of a corresponding color. The effect is remarkably fine."

The chancel has undergone the most dramatic changes over the years. Originally, it was only eight feet deep and a semi-circular platform extended into the body of the church. It had a raised central pulpit behind a reading desk and communion table.

In 1853 the chancel was torn down and a new one built in the current shape. The platform extending into the church was removed and ten new pews added. A richly carved elevated pulpit was built to one side and a lectern placed on the other. Carved wooden benches for clergy were built on the sides and an altar placed against the rear wall. An altar rail was also added at that time. On the walls above were inscribed the Ten Commandments and the Creed. The central circle in the ceiling was painted glass lit from windows above.[31] It has since been plastered over. In 1890 and 1891 the current brass pulpit and lectern replaced the previous wood ones.

With the merger with the Church of The Epiphany in 1898, the organ from Epiphany was installed in the chancel. Until 1925 when the current Austin organ was installed, the church had two organs, the original in the gallery and the chancel organ.

In 1899, the chancel was once again extended into the body of the church and the first two rows of pews in the center aisle were removed. The renovation of 1906 by Wilson Eyre Jr. achieved the current look of the chancel; the tile floor and choir stalls were installed at that time, as well as an enlarged narthex with new doors and windows.[32] The reredos mosaic of St. Luke and those of the symbols of The Epiphany were installed in the chancel over the tablets of the creed and Ten Commandments. They were designed by Sawyer and Flintoff and added in 1912.

Keeping with contemporary liturgical trends, the altar was moved away from the wall and placed in its current position in 1976. The cross above the altar was also added at the same time.

The stained glass windows on the main floor were added gradually between 1876 and 1899. Those in the gallery representing the Apostles were designed by the Philadelphia studio of Alfred Godwin & Co., located at 1324 Market Street, and were installed in 1912. Each window was placed in memory of a former parishioner. The total cost of the 10 windows was $3,000. The windows were restored by Willet Studios in 1983.

The baptismal font, now located in the narthex, was first placed in front of the steps to the chancel. It was given to the church in 1856 by George L. Harrison, a prominent businessman and vestryman for many years. The lady chapel to the north of the chancel was built as a baptistery with a bequest from Asa Whitney and the font was moved there in 1876. It was moved to its current location in 1976.

For many years, the exterior of the building was painted a dull brown to look like brownstone. It was briefly painted a light gray, accented with polychrome capitals in the mid-1930s, before being changed back. The church has been painted white since the late 1960s. The garden between the church and parish house replaced a patio in 1965.[33]

In 2009, the church completed its largest maintenance project in generations, removing the roof to install 50 new trusses and a new electrical system, then installing a new roof and painting the entire exterior of the structure. It was the culmination of a decade of maintenance projects that grew out of a comprehensive building assessment commissioned by the vestry in 2002. That assessment revealed the need for several small projects and uncovered dangerous failures of the original trusses that held up the roof and ceiling and span the 62 feet from north wall to south wall, the largest clear-span timber roof remaining in the city. Armed only with that assessment and rough estimates for the project, the vestry and clergy hired a fund-raising consultant and rallied a team to spearhead the first capital campaign in decades. After several years of planning and preparing, in September 2007 the church launched a campaign titled "Preserving Our Past/Building Our Future." Over three months of intense, one-on-one meetings with parishioners and regular updates during services, the campaign generated $500,000 in three-year pledges from the congregation. In early 2008, the vestry put out a call for proposals and began interviewing some of the best church architects in the country, eventually hiring Philadelphia-based DPK&A Architects and its team of structural and electrical engineers, headed by preservation architect Clive Copping. In the summer of 2008, the team came up with a proposal to reinforce the existing 10 trusses and replace the roof at a cost of $2.6 million. That proposal, more than three times the original estimate of $750,000, was rejected by the vestry. The designers were ordered back to the drawing board. They brought in a contractor, J.S. Cornell and Sons of Philadelphia, to help find a less costly alternative. By the end of that summer, the designers crafted a plan to entirely remove the roof and lower into place 50 prefabricated light-weight wood trusses. That plan had an estimated cost of $1.6 million. The vestry took out a mortgage to fund the balance of the cost and work commenced in May 2009. With strict oversight and cost incentives crafted by the vestry, the work came in more than $300,000 under the estimate and was completed by October 2009. In 2009, the project was recognized by the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia with a Grand Jury Award.

St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond, Virginia, designed by Stewart several years later, is largely based on his designs for St. Luke's Church. Notable similarities include the design of the envelope of the church, interior organization, ventilation system, and decorative elements. In St. Paul's, one can see what St. Luke's might have looked like had the steeple been built.[34]

The Furness addition edit

The chapel and parish house on the south side of the church was designed by Furness & Hewitt and was built in 1875[35] with a donation from George L. Harrison, a warden on the vestry. The addition is two stories, with a partial basement. The facade is divided horizontally by a string course, wall surfaces below the string course have the appearance of rusticated stone construction, while those above are finished in a smooth plaster. There are several fenestrated projections on the second floor overlooking the interior courtyard and street.

The addition is organized around a monumental stair hall of a very fine marble, with administrative spaces to one side and public spaces to another. The chapel runs the width of the addition with a clear span, supported by steel tension rods visible at the ceiling. The interior elevations of the chapel are divided into equal bays by high pilasters, six bays wide by eight bays long. The pilaster capitals feature exaggerated organic detailing characteristic of the work from Furness's office. Separated by the pilasters are leaded glass clerestory windows with a geometric pattern, ratios of the divided lights relating to the dimension of the window as a whole. The walls are detailed in plaster to give a paneled look reminiscent of rusticated stone construction and are painted in colors characteristic of the Victorian era, such as sage green and maroon. As the space is constructed with a clear span, the ceiling is vaulted with a large skylight at its apex and is painted a deep blue and accented with gold painted stars. There is not any fixed furniture, with the exception of a small dark-stained wood altar against the north wall. The chapel has its own small pipe organ for musical accompaniment; the chapel is very lively acoustically. Originally, the wall to the church was removed and pews placed in the chapel extending into the Church. The wall was replaced in 1891 when an addition was added to accommodate the Sunday Schools. The chapel still communicates to the church via a large double door.

Today, the addition houses the parish office, hall, and kitchen on the first and basement floors, as well as the rector's office, vestry room, chapel, and choir room on the second floor.

Music edit

Choir edit

St. Luke's Church was the first in Philadelphia to employ a professional, vested choir. At its height before World War One, the choir was well regarded in the city as one of the best, counting approximately 40 choristers among its ranks. In various times in the past the choir has been accompanied by the Philadelphia Orchestra. The Church continues this tradition of choral excellence, employing approximately 20 choristers during the Church year (September through July).

Organs edit

 
St. Luke's Church interior, c.1868, view towards gallery and organ.

The first organ for St. Luke's Church was built in 1840 by E. and G.G. Hook of Boston and located in the gallery at the rear of the Church. It had 3 manuals (keyboards) and pedals. The full organ comprised 29 1/2 stops and 1,552 pipes; at that time it was noted to be one of the best church organs in Philadelphia. It was well received by visiting organists of the city.

Later, the organ was showing signs of unreliability and eventually was replaced in 1877. The new organ was again built by E. and G.G. Hook & Hastings of Boston. The older Hook organ was traded in as part of the payment towards the new organ, as well as some of the pipe work used in the new organ. The second Hook organ was larger, with 51 stops.

At the merger, the two organs were connected together by an up-and-coming organ builder, Ernest M. Skinner of Boston. In 1907 he installed a console in the chancel to play the Hook & Hastings in the back gallery and Church of the Epiphany's organ built by George Jardine of New York City in 1882 that had been placed in a large chamber on the left side of the chancel. The console controlled 88 ranks of pipes from both organs.

During the tenure of Dr. Steele, rector, and H. Alexander Matthews, organist-choirmaster, the church purchased a new pipe organ which was installed in 1925.[36] The organ was built by the Austin Organ Co. of Hartford, CT. At the time of its installation it was considered to be among the finest in the city. The Austin organ was completely installed in the front of the church. As part of this installation, an upper pipe loft was added above the lady chapel to accommodate an increased number of pipes. The Austin organ served the church longer than any other. At the time the Austin was built, the romantic era of organ building was in its prime; the organ's tone was dark and rich with various beautiful orchestral stops. It was also a time when most organists were playing transcriptions of orchestral and operatic music. To play organ music such as Bach, Buxtehude and other Baroque composers, it sounded muddy.

In the early to mid-1990s, the Church felt it was time to do something about the Austin organ. Some wanted to restore it, others wanted to replace it with an electronic substitute, while others were in favor of rebuilding and enlarging it. Rebuilding and enlargement was the decided route.

Currently the organ has all of its Austin windchests, mechanicals, etc. During the tenure of Jonathan Bowen, current organist-choirmaster, the organ has been transformed into an instrument that is able to play organ music from just about any period. Its primary function is to play service music particularly in the Anglican style. Many of the ranks (sets) of pipes have been replaced to achieve this sound. Digitally sampled stops by Walker Technical Co. were added at the time of the rebuild in 1998 as well.

Despite space and funding limitations at the time of the rebuild, The Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany now has an organ that not only serves the needs of the parish but the community as well. The parish has always had great choral, orchestral, and chamber music ensembles using the space for performance. It is now currently the second largest church organ in Philadelphia. The total count of pipe and digital ranks currently stands at 150. A full list of current and past stops may be found on the Music page of the Church's website.[37]

Organists/choirmasters edit

St. Luke's Church (1839–1898)

  • William Henry Westray Darley (1840–1872)[38]
  • George Fitz-Curwood Lejeune (1873-1875)
  • Oscar A. Knipe (1875–1880)
  • Lewis Leaming Forman (1881–1885)[39]
  • Dr. Carl H. Reed (1886-1890)
  • Stanley Addicks (1890–1896)
  • _____ Goeff (1890s)

Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany (1898 – present)

  • Joseph Spencer Brock (1899-1904) - Choirmaster[40]
  • James M. Dickinson (1899-1904) - Organist
  • Franklin Whitman Robinson (1904–1917)[41]
  • Harry Alexander Matthews (1917–1937)
  • Harry Banks (1937–1946)
  • Clarence K. Bawden (1946–1971)
  • Frances S.Jerome (1971–1983)
  • William J. Gatens (1983–1991)
  • Jonathan M. Bowen (1991 – present)

Leadership edit

Vestry edit

The current vestry is composed of 12 members of the congregation. Each is elected to a three-year term, and since the 1970s, each vestry member has been limited to serving two consecutive terms. The current rector's warden is Neville Strumpf, the current accounting warden is John Erickson, and the current secretary is Richard Keiser. Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts served on the Vestry in the 1920s.

Rectors edit

In the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, the rector is the priest elected to head a self-supporting parish.

St. Luke's Church (1839–1898)

Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany (1898 – present)

  • The Rev. Dr. Thomas Allen Tidball (1898–1903)
  • The Rev. Dr. David M. Steele (1904–1933)[43]
  • The Rev. Thomas Leonard Harris (1934–1938)[44]
  • The Rev. Dr. Joseph Fort Newton (1938–1950)
  • The Rev. Dr. Walter M. Haushalter (1950–1963)
  • The Rev. Frederick R. Isacksen (1963–1975)
  • The Rev. John E. Bird, Jr. (1975–1982)[45]
  • The Rev. Rodger C. Broadley (1984 – 2020)[46]
  • The Rev. Joseph Wallace-Williams (2021–present)

Assistants edit

St. Luke's Church (1839–1898)

  • The Rev. Dr. Frederic Gardiner (1847–1848) Assistant Rector[47]
  • The Rev. Daniel Washburn (1848–1849) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. John Kemper Murphy (1849–1852) Assistant Rector[48]
  • The Rev. Edmund Roberts (1852–1853) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. J. A. Stone (1853–1854) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Dr. John A. Childs (1854–1859) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. William Hobart Hare (1859–1861) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. James De Wolf Perry (1861–1863) Assistant Rector[49]
  • The Rev. John Woart (1864–1865) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Morrison (1866) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. F. W. Winslow (1866–1867) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. William McGlathery (1867–1868) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Reginald Heber Howe (1868–1869) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. James W. Saul (1869–1870) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Alfred Louderback (1870–1872) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Algernon Morton (1872) Assistant in Charge, (1872–1873) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. William Bower (1874–1875) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Alfred Louderback (1875–1877) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Richard N. Thomas (1878–1879) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. W. G. Ware (1880–1882) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. George E. D. Mortimer (1882–1884) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Martin Aigner (1884–1890) Assistant Rector[50]
  • The Rev. Alden L. Bennett (1890–1893) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. William Bower (1893–1898) Assistant Rector

Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany (1898 – present)

  • The Rev. Leverett Bradley (1898–1902) Associate Rector[51]
  • The Rev. William Bower (1898–1904) Assistant Rector[52]
  • The Rev. Philip Justice Steinmetz Jr. (1904–1906)[53][54]
  • The Rev. Dr. John Hendrik de Vries (1906–1907)
  • The Rev. Henry C. Stone (1907–1910) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Oliver W. De Venish (1911–1912)
  • The Rev. Charles Lewis Biggs (1912–1915) Curate[55]
  • The Rev. Dr. Gabriel Farrell Jr. (1916–1917)
  • The Rev. Granville Taylor (1917–1919)
  • The Rev. Addison Alvord Ewing (1919–1922)Curate[56]
  • The Rev. W. Arthur Warner (1923–1934) Curate
  • The Rev. Dr. Nelson Rightmyer (1934–1938) Curate
  • The Rev. Thomas A. Merryweather (1944-1946)Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Frederick R. Isacksen (1946–1949) Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Dr. Percy R. Stockman (1960–1968) Part-time Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. J. Aubrey Craig (1968-1974) Part-time Assistant Rector
  • The Rev. Malcolm McGuire (1970–1971) Part-time Curate
  • The Rev. Robert S. Harris (1971–1995) Part-time Assistant Rector[57]
  • The Rev. James Lloyd (1977–1980) Curate
  • The Rev. Rodger C. Broadley (1980–1983) Curate
  • The Rev. Marlene Haines (1998–2011) Associate Rector
  • The Rev. Carol Anthony (2011–2014) Part-time Associate Rector

Relationship with the Diocese edit

Due to the church's large capacity, ably handling over 1,000 people in one sitting, close proximity to Church House and the Philadelphia Divinity School for a number of years, and the congregation's social standing, the church has been host to many diocesan conventions, including: 1858, 1865, 1870, 1887, 1888, 1890 through 1900, 1902 through 1910, 1912, 1915 through 1921, and 1979.

Epiphany Chapel (1898–1918) edit

 
Epiphany Chapel at 17th and Winter Streets, from The Philadelphia Inquirer article Nov 13, 1899.

Epiphany Chapel was a mission first of the Church of the Epiphany and later the consolidated parish. Epiphany Chapel was admitted to the Diocese of Pennsylvania convention in 1878 as a mission of Church of the Epiphany. The chapel remained located at 23 and Cherry Streets until the 1898 merger.

At that time, the parish purchased the Church of the Atonement on the northeast corner of Schuylkill Avenue (now 17th Street) and Summer Street. That building had been built in 1847–48 to designs by noted architect Napoleon LeBrun. This Church of the Atonement was demolished to make way for a new three-building complex consisting of a chapel, Sunday school, and parish house arranged in a u-shape around a courtyard fronting on 17th Street, designed in Gothic Revival style by noted ecclesiastical architect Isaac Pursell, AIA, a former student of architect Samuel Sloan. The cornerstone was laid on November 18, 1898, by Bishop Whitaker, along with the Revs. Tidball and Michael in attendance. Original construction costs (including purchase of the property) totaled $75,000.[58] By completion, costs had grown to $100,000.[59]

The Philadelphia Inquirer described the building as a "handsome new chapel;" constructed from rough-faced gray granite with limestone for all details, tracery and interior structure. Interior surfaces are finished in cypress, including a vaulted and paneled hammer-beam roof. The pulpit and rood screen are of quartersawn oak; the altar is constructed of marble. Built to serve the growing neighborhood, the buildings housed a variety of services such as a bowling alley, bicycle room, shuffleboard and other game rooms, gymnasium, kitchen, and running track in the parish house, six small classrooms and one large classroom in the Sunday school building, and room for 400 congregants in the chapel.[59] A few years after the chapel's completion, a house on Summer Street was purchased for the vicar's residence.

The anticipated growth of the surrounding neighborhood never materialized, however, and in 1915 the vestry voted to sell the parish house and Sunday school buildings. The Orthopedic Hospital across the street purchased both buildings for approximately $40,000 for use as an outpatient facility. The sale was controversial as many in the parish believed there to be a real need for the entire mission and as a result, the vicar at that time, Rev. McGrew, resigned in protest.[60] The parish house and Sunday school buildings have since been demolished.

Services at Epiphany Chapel ceased in October 1918.[61] St. John Chrysostom, an Albanian Orthodox Church, began renting the building for services shortly thereafter, the congregation finally bought the chapel in 1946 for $22,500.

Vicars of Epiphany Chapel edit

A vicar in the Episcopal Church is usually the priest-in-charge of a mission of the parish.

  • The Rev. Oscar Stewart Michael (1898–1899)
  • The Rev. Gasherie De Witt Dowling (1899–1901)[62]
  • The Rev. Dr. Edward M. Hardcastle (1901–1904)
  • The Rev. Frederick J. Walton (1904–1905)
  • The Rev. H. St. Clair Hathaway (1905–1906)
  • The Rev. Dr. Philip Justice Steinmetz Jr. (1906–1912)[54]
  • The Rev. Irving Angell McGrew (1913–1915)[63]
  • The Rev. W. Arthur Warner (1916–1918)

St. Luke's Mission Chapel (1861–1867) edit

The Church of the Ascension, 1112–1118 Lombard Street, was designed by noted Philadelphia architect Thomas Ustick Walter for the Episcopal parish of All Souls in 1834. All Souls had just been organized the year before at 5th and Walnut Streets. Early in the construction, All Souls experienced serious financial difficulties, and in 1835 decided to unite with the emerging congregation of the Church of the Ascension. The prospects of the Church of the Ascension were very bright at first. However, with the construction of St Luke's much larger church a few blocks away and the area becoming popular with black families,[64] it struggled along for many years beset by a lack of members and financial support. Instead of closing the parish, the vestry of St. Luke's voted to absorb Ascension as a mission chapel. Ascension was deeply indebted and its building required significant repairs. During the final year of St. Luke's administration, for example, $3000.00 was spent on building repairs and another $7000.00 to discharge the parish's debt ($3000.00 of which came directly from St. Luke's parishioners).[65] These actions put the mission on stable footing, and the Rev. Dr. Howe and St. Luke's vestry jointly decided to dissolve the relationship in 1867. Although Ascension resumed as an independent parish, the parish was still confronted with many difficulties in making its way. Ascension moved to Broad and South Streets in 1886; the parish finally closed in 1946.[66] The 11th and Lombard Street building was later sold to Shiloh Baptist Church. At present, the building is a part of the Washington Mews Condominium complex.[67]

Vicars of St. Luke's Mission Chapel edit

  • The Rev. Samuel Cox (1861–1862)
  • The Rev. John A. Childs (1862–1864)
  • The Rev. C. W. Duane (1864)
  • The Rev. John Woart (1864–1867)

Other church properties edit

  • The St Luke's Church Home, located at 1317 Pine Street, was a charity for "aged women members of the Parish."[9] The building was sold in 1911.
  • Between 1873 and 1902, the rectory was located at 1217 Spruce Street. Between 1902 and 1966, the rectors received a housing allowance and could choose their own place of residence. The rectors typically chose to live in suburban Lower Merion Township, Montgomery County. The current rectory on Camac Street was purchased in December 1965.
  • Brenz Farm, Broomall, PA. In 1920, the Church purchased 45 acres in suburban Delaware County to be used for spring and summer activities. The farm was sold in 1945 for $30,000.

Publications edit

Many of the Rectors were well and widely published. Below is a select list, text for many may be found via Google Books.

  • Bradley, Leverett. A Soldier Boy's Letters 1862–1865; A Man's Work in the Ministry; The Priesthood: A Sermon by Phillips Brooks. Boston: The Everett Press, 1905.
  • Harris, Thomas Leonard. Christian Public Worship: Its History, Development and Ritual for To-day. New York: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1928.
  • Harris, Thomas Leonard. "Religion for a Scanty Band." Harper's Magazine: August 1933, 298–307.
  • Harris, Thomas Leonard. Unholy Pilgrimage. New York: Round Table Press, 1937.
  • Haushalter, Walter M. The Mystery of the Cross. Philadelphia: Dorrance, 1956.
  • Haushalter, Walter M. The Crucifixion of Superiority. Philadelphia: Dorrance, 1967.
  • Howe, Mark Anthony De Wolfe. Memoirs of the Life and Services of the Right Reverend Alonzo Potter, D. D., LL. D. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1871.
  • Isacksen, Frederick R. Healing Leaves. New York: Vantage, 1972.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. Living Every Day. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1937
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. We Here Highly Resolve. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1939.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. Living Up to Life. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1941.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. His Cross and Ours. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1941.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. Live, Love and Learn: a little book about the great business of living. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1943.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. Where are we in Religion? New York: Macmillan, 1945.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. River of Years: An Autobiography. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1946.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. The One Great Church: Adventures of Faith. New York: Macmillan, 1948.
  • Newton, Joseph Fort. Everyday Religion. New York: Abingdon-Cokesbury, 1950.
  • Spear, William W. Ministerial Devotedness, A Sermon Occasioned by the Death of Re. Daniel Cobia.Charleston: A. E. Miller, 1837.
  • Spear, William W., ed. Cotterill's Family Prayers. Philadelphia: Herman Hooker, 1844.
  • Steele, David McConnell. Going Abroad Overland: Studies of Places and People in the Far West. New York: Putnam, 1917.
  • Steele, David McConnell. Vacation Journeys East and West. New York: Putnam, 1918.
  • Steele, David McConnell. Papers and Essays for Churchman. Philadelphia: Jacobs, 1919.
  • Steele, David McConnell. A Dozen After-Dinner Speeches. Philadelphia: Jacobs, 1920.
  • Steele, David McConnell. Addresses and Sermons to Students. New York: Putnam, 1919.

Gallery edit

Church of St. Luke

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ James Dundas, William Welsh, John Welsh, Jr., James S. Newbold, Thomas Dunlap, George Witman, William H. Newbold, Joseph Bispham, William L. Newbold, Edward W. Warner, Gideon Scull, Samuel Breck, John R. Milner, Nathan Smith, John Grigg, S. Robert, Mordecai D. Lewis, David M. Broadhead

Citations

  1. ^ a b "PRHP: List of properties with OPA-compliant addresses" (PDF). Philadelphia Historical Commission. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  2. ^ Wainwright, Nicholas (October 1979). "The Diary of Samuel Breck, 1839–1840". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 104 (4): 503, 524.
  3. ^ Journal of the Proceedings of the Fifty-Fifth Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the State of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Jesper Harding. 1839. pp. 24–25, 27.
  4. ^ Journal of the Proceedings of the 57th Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the State of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. 1841. pp. 73–74.
  5. ^ Vestry Minutes of St. Luke's Church. 1844. pp. 94–100.
  6. ^ Vestry Minutes of St. Luke's Church. 1845. pp. 114–116.
  7. ^ Armstrong, George S. (1889). The Hawes School Memorial. Boston, MA: David Clapp. pp. 138–139.
  8. ^ Dix, Morgan (1865). The General Convention of 1865. New York, NY: James Potts.
  9. ^ a b History of Philadelphia, 1609–1884, Volume 2. 1884. p. 1353.
  10. ^ Ferree, Barr (1910). Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society. New York: Pennsylvania Society. p. 201.
  11. ^ Ferree, Barr (1914). Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society. New York: Pennsylvania Society. p. 227.
  12. ^ "Jane Currie to be Wed". The New York Times. October 29, 1950.
  13. ^ Bradley, Susan Hinckley (1905). Leverett Bradley. Boston. pp. 71–73.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Bradley, Susan Hinckley (1905). Leverett Bradley. Boston. p. 74.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Ferree, Barr (1906). Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society. New York: Pennsylvania Society. p. 154.
  16. ^ "New Pastor for St. Luke's". The Philadelphia Inquirer. February 11, 1904.
  17. ^ "Transient Residents at Church Reception". The Philadelphia Inquirer. October 10, 1913.
  18. ^ "70 in Confirmation Class". The Philadelphia Inquirer. March 26, 1917.
  19. ^ "In Memoriam - William Crothers Dulles, Titantic Victim and St. Luke and The Epiphany Congregent (1872-1912)". April 10, 2014. Retrieved April 11, 2014.
  20. ^ "Rev.Dr. Steele, Resigns". The New York Times. January 16, 1930.
  21. ^ Newton, Joseph Fort (1946). River of Years. Philadelphia: Lippincott. pp. 262–263.
  22. ^ Bishop, John. "Joseph Fort Newton". Past Masters. Retrieved July 8, 2011.
  23. ^ "W. H. Haushalter Clergyman, Was 71". The New York Times. August 31, 1963.
  24. ^ Daly, Molly (June 6, 2011). "Center City Church Marks 30 Years Serving Those Affected By AIDS". CBS Philly. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
  25. ^ "St. Luke and The Epiphany as Philadelphia's First LGBT Community Center (1997)". April 11, 2014. Retrieved April 11, 2014.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2011.
  27. ^ "Supporting Material". Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  28. ^ "Supporting Material". December 3, 2010. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  29. ^ History of Philadelphia, 1609–1884, Volume 2. 1884.
  30. ^ "St. Luke's Church". The Philadelphia Inquirer. May 31, 1839.
  31. ^ Journal of the 70th Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: King & Baird. 1854. pp. 107–108.
  32. ^ "Chronology". St. Luke and The Epiphany. Retrieved July 14, 2011.
  33. ^ "Building". St. Luke and the Epiphany. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved July 20, 2011.
  35. ^ "Chronology". St. Luke's Parish House. Retrieved July 14, 2011.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  37. ^ "Music". St. Luke and The Epiphany. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  38. ^ Burton, Gideon (1895). Reminiscences of Gideon Burton. Cincinnati: Houston. p. 99.
  39. ^ Briggs, Ward W. (1994). Biographical dictionary of North American classicists. Westport, CT: Greenwood. p. 191.
  40. ^ The Churchman. April 22, 1899. pp. vii.
  41. ^ Saerchinger, Cesar (1918). International Who's Who in Music. New York: Current Literature. pp. 530–531.
  42. ^ "Rev. Leverett Bradley Formally Took Possession of the Pulpit". The Philadelphia Inquirer. February 16, 1888.
  43. ^ "Dr. Steele's Resignation from St. Luke and The Epiphany (1933): An Editorial from Church News". February 19, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  44. ^ "Rev. Thomas L. Harris Called to St. Luke and The Epiphany". February 3, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  45. ^ . Christ Church, Woodbury, NJ. Archived from the original on March 26, 2012. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  46. ^ "The Institution of Rev Rodger Broadley as the 8th Rector of the Church of St. Luke and The Epiphany 2 March 1984". February 24, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  47. ^ Schaff, Philadelphia (1887). Encyclopedia of Living Divines and Christian Workers of all Demonminations. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 76.
  48. ^ "Rev. John Kemper Murphy, D.D., U of Pa., '88 died at Germantown, Pa., October 21, 1900". The Alumni Register. 5 (2): 64. November 1900.
  49. ^ Historical Catalogue of Brown University 1764–1914. Providence, RI: Brown University. 1914. p. 199.
  50. ^ Distinguished Successful Americans of Our Day. Chicago: Successful Americans. 1912. p. 222.
  51. ^ "Will Become Emeritus". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 4, 1902.
  52. ^ "Rev. William Bower Caught Fatal Cold". The Philadelphia Inquirer. January 4, 1907.
  53. ^ Secretary's Fourth Report: Harvard College Class of 1901. Cambridge, MA: Crimson Publishing Company. 1916. p. 1916.
  54. ^ a b Stowe's Clerical Directory, 1920–21. Minneapolis, MN: The Rev. Andrew David Stowe, D.D. 1920. p. 250.
  55. ^ "Rev. D. M. Steele Assistant Resigns". Evening Public Ledger. July 7, 1915.
  56. ^ "Called to Gloria Dei". The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 30, 1922.
  57. ^ "Deaths Here". The Philadelphia Inquirer. October 14, 1995.
  58. ^ "Corner Stone Laid". The Philadelphia Inquirer. November 18, 1898.
  59. ^ a b "Opening of the Handsome New Epiphany Chapel". The Philadelphia Inquirer. November 13, 1899.
  60. ^ "Sale of Parish House Makes Rector Resign". The Philadelphia Inquirer. July 6, 1915.
  61. ^ Twelves, J. Wesley (1969). A History of the Diocese of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Diocese of Pennsylvania. p. 202.
  62. ^ Historical Catalogue of Brown University 1764–1904. Providence, RI: Brown University. 1905. p. 424.
  63. ^ Stowe's Clerical Directory. 1920–1921. p. 173.
  64. ^ History of Philadelphia. Philadelphia. 1889. p. 1352.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  65. ^ Journal of the 82nd Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. 1867. pp. 101–102.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  66. ^ Twelves, J. Wesley (1969). A History of the Diocese of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, PA: Diocese of Pennsylvania. pp. 145–146.
  67. ^ "Communities". The Changing Heart of the City: Building and Rebuilding Western 'Wash West'. Retrieved July 19, 2011.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Facebook
  • Listing and photographs at the Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mystery worshiper reports: 1
  • KYW Radio Interview with Rector Rodger Broadley: 2

church, luke, epiphany, philadelphia, church, saint, luke, epiphany, episcopal, congregation, located, south, 13th, street, between, spruce, pine, streets, center, city, neighborhood, philadelphia, pennsylvania, part, diocese, pennsylvania, church, formed, 189. The Church of Saint Luke and The Epiphany is an Episcopal congregation located at 330 South 13th Street between Spruce and Pine Streets in the Center City neighborhood of Philadelphia Pennsylvania It is part of the Diocese of Pennsylvania The church was formed in 1898 as a result of the merger of St Luke s Church 1839 and The Church of The Epiphany 1834 which consolidated at St Luke s location Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 2022 39 56 45 N 75 09 47 W 39 94593 N 75 16311 W 39 94593 75 16311LocationPhiladelphia PennsylvaniaCountryUnited StatesDenominationEpiscopalChurchmanshipBroad churchMembership250Weekly attendance140 160Websitehttp www slatechurch org Philadelphia Register of Historic PlacesDesignated1961 1 HistoryFormer name s St Luke s Church 1839 1898 FoundedApril 6 1898ConsecratedOctober 16 1840ArchitectureArchitect s Thomas Somerville StewartFurness amp Hewitt 1875 chapel and parish house Wilson Eyre Jr 1906 renovation StyleGreek RevivalGroundbreakingMay 24 1839Construction cost 58 000SpecificationsCapacityabout 1 000AdministrationProvinceThreeDiocesePennsylvania 1784 DeanerySouthwarkClergyRectorThe Rev Joseph Wallace WilliamsLaityOrganist s Jonathan M BowenThe church building was constructed in 1839 1840 for St Luke s and was designed by Thomas Somerville Stewart in the Greek Revival style Additions and renovations were made in 1875 and 1906 The building was listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places in 1961 Today the congregation stands at about 250 members As an urban parish the congregation reflects the racial cultural and gender diversity found in the city This diversity contributes to the church s reputation for being open and welcoming a trait it exhibited during the AIDS Crisis of the 1980s when it was one of the first churches in the city to open its doors to allow funerals for those who had died from AIDS Contents 1 History 1 1 St Luke s Church 1839 1898 1 2 Church of The Epiphany 1834 1898 1 3 Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 1898 present 2 Architecture 2 1 Church 2 2 The Furness addition 3 Music 3 1 Choir 3 2 Organs 3 3 Organists choirmasters 4 Leadership 4 1 Vestry 4 2 Rectors 4 3 Assistants 5 Relationship with the Diocese 6 Epiphany Chapel 1898 1918 6 1 Vicars of Epiphany Chapel 7 St Luke s Mission Chapel 1861 1867 7 1 Vicars of St Luke s Mission Chapel 8 Other church properties 9 Publications 10 Gallery 11 References 12 External linksHistory editSt Luke s Church 1839 1898 edit nbsp St Luke s Church interior c 1868 view towards chancel A committee of 18 men note 1 from seven Philadelphia Episcopal parishes organized St Luke s Church in 1839 Their goal being the establishment of an Episcopal congregation on the southwestern edge of development within the original boundaries of Philadelphia it would take almost another 10 years before an Episcopal church was organized across Broad Street and below Chestnut Street St Mark s Church at 16th and Locust Streets These men advanced the money to build the church and were repaid through the sale of pews 2 Several sites were considered including the corner Broad and Locust Streets and the corner of 13th and Spruce Streets These locations were rejected due to cost The committee chose the present site of the church and selected Philadelphia architect Thomas Somerville Stewart to design the structure Stewart s design is one of the finest examples of Greek Revival architecture surviving in the city The committee submitted the church s charter to the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania s Standing Committee for approval Upon the first reading the charter was denied because in the opinion of the Standing Committee too much money was allocated to the education of Youth and the Support of the Poor of the Congregation The committee explained this clause to mean that the charter permitted the application of revenue to only those in immediate association with the congregation The Standing Committee agreed with the rationale and St Luke s Church was admitted to the Church and the Diocese at the 55th Convention of the Diocese of Pennsylvania on May 22 1839 3 A ceremony was held on June 24 1839 for the laying of the northeasternmost cornerstone of the building Bishop Henry Ustick Onderdonk led a procession which began at his home and ended at the site of the church The procession included many Philadelphia clergy and vestrymen Bishop Onderdonk addressed the crowd and at the end of his address a lead box containing the Bible Book of Common Prayer a Diocese of Pennsylvania Convention Journal several copies of Philadelphia and Episcopal newspapers and a copy of St Luke s charter was placed within the cornerstone The ceremony was concluded with sealing the cornerstone At the time of the laying of the cornerstone a rector had yet to be named The vestry selected the Rev Edmund Neville of Taunton Massachusetts Humbled by the call Neville declined the offer because he felt organizing and growing a new congregation was too much for him to bear The vestry then selected the Rev William W Spear rector of St Michael s Church Charleston South Carolina He accepted the call on July 15 1840 Bishop Onderdonk consecrated St Luke s Church on October 16 1840 and the first regular services were held on October 18 St Luke s Day By all accounts the first year was a success Its location on 13th Street placed the parish near rapidly growing areas As Spear noted at the 57th Diocesan Convention The wisdom of the location is best attested by the fact that throughout the winter its services have been attended by numerous and generally crowded congregations and its temporal interest has already reached a degree of prosperity scarcely anticipated 4 St Luke s infant years were a period of healthy congregational growth but compounded with serious financial constraints By late 1841 it became clear that the congregation had not raised enough money through the sale of pews to pay for the building s construction costs Further the church s operating costs far exceeded its income Initial cuts were to the music program This action had the unintended result of further reducing the number of pew holders 5 Further cost cutting measures were considered including eliminating the paid choir reducing salaries of the rector and contracting the number of weekly services These options were not attractive to Spear or the vestry The vestry added surtaxes upon the pews and took occasional special collections to reduce the church s operating deficits In the end the burden of reducing the church s operating costs fell upon Spear himself Twice during his rectorship his salary was reduced Spear s salary had been slashed from 2 500 per annum in 1841 to 1 500 in 1845 In September 1845 Spear resigned to assume the position of associate editor of the Episcopal Recorder which was published in Philadelphia 6 Mr Spear continued to fill the pulpit until his successor was named The Rev Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe rector of St James Church in Roxbury Massachusetts accepted the Church s call in June 1846 Early in his rectorship plans were developed to satisfy the church s debt William Welsh a noted Philadelphia merchant Episcopal philanthropist and vestryman issued a challenge to the congregation He would contribute 60 of the funds needed to pay the debts if the vestry could raise the rest The church rose to his challenge and the church s debts were satisfied in September 1851 Mr Welsh s generosity and the Rev Dr Howe s leadership allowed St Luke s to become one of the most prominent parishes in the city Early in the 1850s the congregation grew to near seated capacity Howe wrote to the vestry to ask that the church be renovated to seat more people as he had requests to purchase pews that could not be accommodated These plans would not be realized until much later Howe was committed to missionary work both at home and abroad For example St Luke s assumed the administration of Church of the Ascension at 11th and Lombard Streets between 1861 and 1867 Ascension was administered as the St Luke s Mission Chapel Howe also expanded the Church s benevolent activities including establishing the St Luke s Church Home for Aged Women in 1871 thanks to the generosity of Asa Whitney Soon after Howe s arrival he became active in local and national Episcopal circles He was considered one of the most important and influential Episcopal clergyman in the city For example he was elected missionary Bishop of Nevada in 1865 a position he declined As Howe rose to national prominence so to did the profile of St Luke s 7 St Luke s Church hosted its first diocesan convention in 1854 further the Church hosted the general convention in 1865 As the first convention after the Civil War it was unclear if the wounds of the war could be healed As Morgan Dix rector of the old St Paul s Chapel of the Parish of Trinity Church on Wall Streetin lower Manhattan of New York City remarked T he Convention assembled in St Luke s Church for the opening service one of the southern Bishops was there He came alone and took a seat among the congregation he looked like a stranger That was a sight which his brethren in the Apostolic Episcopate could not bear They saw him they became uneasy At last they sent a dignified messenger to tell him that he must come to them Then he hesitated no longer he arose and just as he was with no vestment or robe of office passed up to the chancel and went to his brethren I was told that there was not a dry eye in that august company at that moment Men felt that GOD was giving answer to the question whether this Church could be one again 8 Near the end of Dr Howe s rectorship the Church of the Ascension proposed to buy St Luke s Church Howe asked the vestry to consider seriously this offer Many of St Luke s parishioners had already moved west of Broad Street Further Howe was concerned about the possibility of the African Episcopal Church of St Thomas purchasing Ascension s building For these reasons Howe wondered if the time had come for St Luke s to move west too Sites were considered at 22nd and Spruce Streets 22nd and Walnut Streets 18th Street and Rittenhouse Square and several others However the vestry eventually decided to stay on 13th Street Howe s rectorship ended in 1871 after twenty five years He was elected the first bishop of Central Pennsylvania in 1871 He was installed as bishop at St Luke s Church on December 8 1871 9 Howe s contributions to the parish are remembered in the form of a memorial tablet in the church s sanctuary Wallis E Howe a Providence RI architect and the Rev Dr Howe s youngest son designed the tablet Howe s eldest son Dr Herbert M Howe a physician and capitalist donated the tablet to the parish The tablet was dedicated on March 28 1909 10 The Rev Charles George Currie rector of Grace Church Providence Rhode Island was unanimously elected rector and Dr Howe s successor on July 1 1872 The Rev Dr Currie s rectorship began on a promising note George Leib Harrison vestryman and industrialist donated the funds to expand the church He commissioned Furness amp Hewitt to construct a parish house with a chapel for additional capacity The Harrison addition now known as the Furness Chapel opened for services on November 7 1875 and was formally consecrated by Bishop William Bacon Stevens on December 14 1875 The remainder of Currie s rectorship was plagued with a declining membership and financial problems The church lacked an endowment and relied upon its wealthier members to fund special projects repairs and its music program As these members moved to other sections of Philadelphia St Luke s could not rely on its traditional sources of support Under these circumstances Currie resigned on March 10 1887 and accepted the rectorship of Christ Church Baltimore MD Currie and his family maintained their ties to St Luke s after they left Philadelphia In 1913 his family donated the Christ with Nicodemus stained glass window in his honor 11 Currie even preached the sermon at its dedication Further several of Currie s grandchildren were married at St Luke s 12 The Rev Dr Currie s successor the Rev Leverett Bradley rector of Christ Church Andover Massachusetts was called in early 1888 Bradley s biographer described St Luke s bleak situation this way Old St Luke s parish had very much run down It was on a side street and was the only downtown church without any endowment Rev Bradley understood the challenges he faced when he accepted the rectorship He almost immediately dedicated himself and the church to the needs of the city s poor He tirelessly worked with the Board of City Missions and St Luke s responded by giving generously to the annual missions appeal However during a sojourn to Paris in 1894 Bradley concluded that its activities were hampered by the lack of an endowment From 1894 onward Bradley spent the remainder of his rectorship trying to secure the long term viability of the parish Early efforts were made to start building an endowment made very difficult by the fact that many of the wealthy families had left before his arrival Preliminary discussions had taken place between the vestries of St Luke s St Stephen s and Church of the Epiphany about a possible amalgam These discussions did not progress very far and no action was taken It was only after a bout with typhoid fever in 1897 which left him severely weakened did Bradley seriously entertain any ideas of a merger 13 In the fall of 1897 the Rev Mr Bradley and Bishop Ozi W Whittaker had extensive conversations about possible mergers or consolidations Bishop Whittaker indicated that Church of The Epiphany which was unable to find a suitable site for a new building would consider merging with a parish if their rector would lead the combined parish Bradley suggested that Church of The Epiphany s vestry should contact St Luke s vestry about a merger The vestry would not act until they received assurances from Bradley that he was satisfied with an arrangement whereby he would find himself in a subordinate position Bradley assured the vestry the arrangement was satisfactory to him for the merger with Church of The Epiphany fulfilled Bradley s goal of building an endowment for the church Church of The Epiphany came with 575 000 of which 300 000 would go directly into an endowment account Bradley would have a lifetime position with the option of becoming senior rector if when Epiphany s rector retired or resigned In a moving sermon just before the pewholders voted upon the merger on March 24 1898 Bradley spoke movingly God seems to be leading us in a way we would avoid There are all kinds of successes Perhaps this seeming failure may be nearer God s idea of success than we think It is my conviction that by this time we should have had a sufficient endowment had not circumstances opposed our moving vigorously in the matter I seem to see the hand of God who may be purposing to engage us in larger and broader activities Having trained our spirits to loyalty and love He may now give us the material resources to make glad the hearts of many yet unborn 14 The pewholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the merger After a similar vote at Epiphany the merger became effective on April 6 1898 after which the combined congregation became known as The Church of St Luke and The Epiphany nbsp The Church of The Epiphany c 1900Church of The Epiphany 1834 1898 edit Main article Church of The Epiphany Philadelphia The Church of The Epiphany was located on the northwest corner of 15th and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia Pennsylvania It was founded in 1834 and merged with St Luke s Church in 1898 after the sale of its property to Philadelphia merchant John Wanamaker in 1896 Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 1898 present edit The merger of St Luke s Church and The Church of The Epiphany was not without friction The agreement of consolidation placed two individuals each of whom had previously been rector for a part of the congregation in positions of leadership in the new parish The vestry recommended that Fr Bradley take a year leave to give the Rev Thomas A Tidball a chance to assume the rectorship of the combined parish without interference During Fr Bradley s absence Fr Tidball began the task of stitching together a new parish Almost immediately renovations to the church were made to incorporate the organ from the Church of the Epiphany and changes were made to the chancel see architecture section below In May 1901 Fr Bradley chose not to exercise his option to become rector emeritus and retire with full salary Fr Tidball abruptly resigned on November 6 1902 effective January 1 1903 The vestry gave Fr Bradley 30 days to become either rector or rector emeritus Given Fr Bradley s declining health the only reasonable action was retirement as rector emeritus with full salary as of January 1 1903 During the Christmas holiday Fr Bradley became very ill and died on December 31 1902 at the age of 56 Early in 1904 the vestry organized a committee to develop a memorial to the Rev Leverett Bradley chaired by Philadelphia architect Frank Miles Day Although Day did submit a design the committee ultimately selected a memorial tablet designed by Philadelphia sculptor Charles Grafly The tablet which can be found in the sanctuary was dedicated on December 31 1905 15 nbsp Church of St Luke and The Epiphany view towards chancel Christmas 2010 In February 1904 the Rev David McConnell Steele assistant rector of St Bartholomew s Church in New York City was called as rector 16 Early in his rectorate Steele realized that the area around the church was shifting from a neighborhood of single family dwellings to one thickly populated boarding house apartment house and hotel region of which St Luke s is the centre 17 In response Steele actively created programs to reach this transient population For example he restarted the church s magazine called the Parish Helper Started in 1887 and dormant since 1902 it was resurrected in 1906 as part church newsletter part religious magazine Further the church hosted various socials dances lectures and other social events to reach this population Various accounts in The Philadelphia Inquirer report that these events were well attended with one New Year s Eve party counting over 1 500 guests in attendance The success of these outreach activities can be seen in the confirmation registers For example in 1915 50 people were confirmed at the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany Of the 50 only 6 were children or young people The rest were converts from the various Protestant Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic traditions a trend that has continued in this church to the present Throughout the nineteen teens and early nineteen twenties the confirmation classes ranged between 50 and 100 persons per year 18 Although the neighborhood around the church was changing St Luke s pewholders were still from Philadelphia s upper middle and upper classes For example Thomas Voorhees President of the old Reading Railroad Owen J Roberts future Supreme Court Justice and Andrew C and Mary B Dulles parents of the infamous RMS Titanic disaster a victim William Crothers Dulles 19 were all pew holders In most cases the pewholders had since moved out of the immediate area around the church However these families remained committed to the work of the parish They contributed greatly to the enhancement of the church for example by donating the stained glass windows in the gallery in 1912 and to the church s endowment through planned giving The wealthy members mainly the wealthy women of the church instituted several charity missions during Steele s tenure including oil and ice deliveries for the needy of the neighborhood Their contributions even allowed the church to purchase a farm in Delaware County near Broomall where the congregation could retire on weekends or during the summer for social activities and outdoor chapel The Rev Dr Steele was a prolific author and noted lecturer By the end of his tenure he was widely known and well regarded within the Episcopal Church for his liberal views Steele spoke out against the Pennsylvania blue laws and was an active supporter of the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U S Constitution for the Prohibition of alcohol As the 1920s wore on the change in the neighborhood began to take its toll as attendance and participation at the church started to dip noticeably Steele saw this as a personal affront He felt he was losing or had already lost the support of the congregation further Steele felt the vestry was not doing enough missions work and outreach For these reasons he tended his resignation to the vestry on January 8 1929 The vestry promptly tabled Steele s resignation and then voted instead to increase the church s mission work St Luke and The Epiphany was hit hard during the early years of the Great Depression in the 1930s Its noted music program was the first budget item to be trimmed For example the choir master s salary was reduced from 8 500 to 6 500 By January 1933 Steele had enough After 30 years he resigned from his rectorship on January 15 1933 As reported in The New York Times Because of the population drift away from the center of the city where his church is located and congregations in that area had been losing membership steadily He wished to step to one side and allow any other man if such there be to build a congregation with a better attendance 20 Steele remained connected to the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany after his retirement the vestry granted him the title Rector Emeritus with an accompanying salary The congregation fondly remembered the Rev David Steele his rectorship marked the moment when the two consolidated parishes truly became one The congregation remembered his contributions in the form of a plaque which was placed in the sanctuary in 1946 In less than two months after Steele announced his retirement informal discussions began concerning a merger with the Church of the Holy Trinity Discussions progressed rapidly and by late April the question of merger was put before both congregations The combined parish would be known as The Churches of the Holy Trinity and Saint Luke and the Epiphany The proposal which was supported by both vestries was put forth to the congregations The Church of the Holy Trinity overwhelmingly supported the merger However the proposal was overwhelmingly defeated by the congregants of the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany Rev Thomas L Harris came to St Luke s in 1933 as a supply priest at first to fill the vacancy left by Dr Steele s retirement After one year the vestry decided to elect him rector on May 3 1934 He selected the Rev Nelson Waite Rightmyer as his curate both were quite young compared to the aging pew holding congregation He began his ministry at the height of the Great Depression and was deeply committed to social ministry and the needs and issues of the people of the neighborhood His determination to include them in the life of the Church was not welcomed by the more socially prominent members of the congregation Harris was active within a group of young theologians who saw their call to ministry through a lens of social justice Together they made several attempts to provide for the needs of the deteriorating neighborhood including a possible merger with St James Church an Episcopal parish once located at 22nd and Walnut Streets to form a church based community center in 1935 as well as a partnership with the city s Social Services Department Additionally services had remained relatively static at St Luke s during David McConnell Steele s 30 years as rector While many other congregations in the Episcopal Church in the U S A were embracing more Anglo Catholic liturgical elements St Luke s resisted A few attempts by Harris to change the musical program were resisted as well With mounting resistance from the Vestry and pew holding congregation he recognized he had become alienated from the congregation and submitted this resignation in 1938 with the recommendation that the church merge with another parish or close While there were still a number of people attending the church there was no deep loyalty to it as demonstrated by a poll to determine its future Out of 250 votes cast 120 indicated no preference on whether the church should close merge or remain independent Mr Rightmyer the curate resigned shortly thereafter The Rev Dr Joseph Fort Newton former co rector of St James Church in Philadelphia was elected as rector on February 11 1938 The Rev Dr Newton faced the task of as termed in his autobiography remaking a church The issues which the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany faced in the 1930s were not unlike those faced by the stately downtown churches across the country They were faced with declining resources and congregations Newton shepherded the congregation through this transition in two ways First in every way possible he tried to make a church of free and tolerant faith of friendly spirit and homey atmosphere Our congregation grew people coming from a distance many who had been alienated from the church returned 21 Second the church s finances stabilized The church benefited from several generous contributions and from the sale of the church farm in Broomall Delaware County replenished an endowment decimated during the Great Depression Newton was noted for his great preaching ability In 1939 for example he was voted one of the five foremost Protestant clergymen in America 22 He was also a prolific writer Newton authored more than thirty books and published a popular weekly column in the afternoon paper Philadelphia Bulletin which had the largest circulation in the city Dr Newton died on January 24 1950 The Rev Dr Walter M Haushalter was elected rector on March 24 1950 Haushalter was a seasoned clergyman having been ordained in the Congregational Church some years before However he had recently been ordained in the Episcopal Church and the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany was his first and only rectorate as an Episcopal clergyman 23 Many of the older members who had contributed generously to the church had died or moved to the suburbs In 1960 the topic of merger arose again Bishop Oliver J Hart suggested to Haushalter that a committee be formed once again to consider a merger with the Church of the Holy Trinity Discussions were held however St Luke and the Epiphany was not interested in any merger Haushalter died while traveling in France on August 28 1963 The Rev Frederick R Isacksen was elected rector on October 23 1963 In 1965 the vestry purchased a rectory on South Camac Street It was the first time since the nineteen teens the Rev Dr Steele that a rector lived in the neighborhood and since the mid 1940s the Rev Dr Newton that a rector lived within the Philadelphia city limits The purchase of the rectory was an outward symbol that St Luke and The Epiphany was both committed to the neighborhood and to the city In February 1969 Isacksen proposed that the church build a senior housing development at the corner of 13th and Pine Streets with assistance from the federal government He believed this would establish a base of parishioners for the church Properties were acquired and substantial sums spent on plans for the project After Isacksen s retirement in 1975 the project was abandoned when the HUD grant was denied resulting in substantial losses to the Church In searching for Isacksen s successor the parish had two major requirements First the new rector had to be young in his mid to late thirties and second be married and have children The church hoped that by having a young rector with a family similar people would be attracted back to the parish These requirements were filled by the Rev John Edward Bird Jr curate of Christ Episcopal Church Woodbury NJ He was elected rector on May 12 1975 Under the direction of the present rector the Rev Rodger C Broadley the Church responded very quickly to the onset of the HIV AIDS crisis in the early 1980s Given the church s central location in Philadelphia s Gayborhood and the Episcopal Church s open funeral policy St Luke and The Epiphany was the site for many of the funerals for Philadelphia s early HIV AIDS victims 24 As part of the church s response to the AIDS crisis St Luke and The Epiphany opened The Hospitality Center in 1989 under the direction of Sister Kathleen Snyder The Hospitality Center was one of the earliest multi faceted support structures for people living with the disease Still active in 2011 The Hospitality Center was recently led by The Reverend Marlene Haines Associate Rector of St Luke and The Epiphany from 1998 until her retirement in 2011 During this time of turbulence in the wider neighborhood Broadley opened the Church s doors to other community organizations such as Philadelphia FIGHT and ACT UP who were not able to secure other safe places to meet and organize 25 Other community secular and arts organizations that use the building presently include Alcoholics Anonymous Dignity USA The Philadelphia Pops from the University of the Arts and others Other missions of the Church include support for neighbor Mercy Hospice a faith based transitional shelter for women visibility at community events Bible fellowship young adults fellowship and various service activities in Philadelphia Members of the congregation have participated in every AIDS Walk Philadelphia since its inception the Rev Ms Haines had for many years read names of AIDS victims and given the benediction at the beginning of the event The congregation maintains missionary connections to the wider world supporting Millennium Development Goals through the Episcopal Relief and Development Fund and Fikelela 26 a parish based HIV AIDS clinic in South Africa Currently St Luke and The Epiphany has entered a new period of growth and vitality The church is both a worship and community center Major renovations to the buildings have been completed and he parish has grown substantially over the previous decade Many members have been at the church for less than six years In addition to those participating in regular worship over 3 000 people a month come through the doors for various support programs and community events Architecture edit nbsp Church of St Luke and The Epiphany view towards chancel Easter 2011 Church edit The church is listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places 1961 1 and in the Historic American Buildings Survey of the Library of Congress PA 1499 The two story structure is constructed of stuccoed stone and brick and measures approximately 65 feet by 130 feet with gabled roof The entire building is raised on a pedestal above the surrounding neighborhood Neoclassical granite steps from Quincy Massachusetts lead up to the entrance of the Church A cast iron fence featuring Greek Revival motifs encloses the property along the street The six bay portico features wooden column shafts topped with richly articulated cast iron capitals in the Greek Corinthian order of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates an ancient monument in Athens The twin monumental front doors and flanking windows have corbeled lintels The interior of the church is organized around a three aisle plan with second story self supporting gallery Pilasters with capitals finished in gold leaf around the perimeter are based on a Greek style adaptation by the New York architect Minard Lafever and published in his pattern book The Beauties of Modern Architecture 1835 Free standing columns in the chancel employ the same Greek Corinthian order as the front portico 27 28 The church was designed by Philadelphia architect Thomas Somerville Stewart it is acclaimed as one of the finest examples of Greek Revival architecture surviving in the city The site was selected after other locations at Broad and Locust Streets and 13th and Spruce Streets were rejected because of cost The present site of the church was acquired for 15 000 The cornerstone was laid on May 24 1839 by Bishop Henry Ustick Onderdonk and it was opened for services on October 18 1840 29 Stewart s design was chosen over six other plans submitted by several prominent architects including William Strickland and John Notman The original design included a 200 foot high steeple over the portico however the church was unable to raise through subscription the full cost of 7 000 and it was not built 30 A contract was approved to build the Church for 30 000 plus 200 for the self supporting gallery The Philadelphia Public Ledger reported at the time The interior is exceedingly beautiful and chaste Without pretending to give a detailed description we state that above the floor every thing even to the glass of the windows is of a pure white and in every section of the church is introduced the richest and most elaborate carving and molding in wood and plaster Even the organ is of this color and in this style It is praised as a superb instrument The pews are represented as of oak and the damask covering them is of a corresponding color The effect is remarkably fine The chancel has undergone the most dramatic changes over the years Originally it was only eight feet deep and a semi circular platform extended into the body of the church It had a raised central pulpit behind a reading desk and communion table In 1853 the chancel was torn down and a new one built in the current shape The platform extending into the church was removed and ten new pews added A richly carved elevated pulpit was built to one side and a lectern placed on the other Carved wooden benches for clergy were built on the sides and an altar placed against the rear wall An altar rail was also added at that time On the walls above were inscribed the Ten Commandments and the Creed The central circle in the ceiling was painted glass lit from windows above 31 It has since been plastered over In 1890 and 1891 the current brass pulpit and lectern replaced the previous wood ones With the merger with the Church of The Epiphany in 1898 the organ from Epiphany was installed in the chancel Until 1925 when the current Austin organ was installed the church had two organs the original in the gallery and the chancel organ In 1899 the chancel was once again extended into the body of the church and the first two rows of pews in the center aisle were removed The renovation of 1906 by Wilson Eyre Jr achieved the current look of the chancel the tile floor and choir stalls were installed at that time as well as an enlarged narthex with new doors and windows 32 The reredos mosaic of St Luke and those of the symbols of The Epiphany were installed in the chancel over the tablets of the creed and Ten Commandments They were designed by Sawyer and Flintoff and added in 1912 Keeping with contemporary liturgical trends the altar was moved away from the wall and placed in its current position in 1976 The cross above the altar was also added at the same time The stained glass windows on the main floor were added gradually between 1876 and 1899 Those in the gallery representing the Apostles were designed by the Philadelphia studio of Alfred Godwin amp Co located at 1324 Market Street and were installed in 1912 Each window was placed in memory of a former parishioner The total cost of the 10 windows was 3 000 The windows were restored by Willet Studios in 1983 The baptismal font now located in the narthex was first placed in front of the steps to the chancel It was given to the church in 1856 by George L Harrison a prominent businessman and vestryman for many years The lady chapel to the north of the chancel was built as a baptistery with a bequest from Asa Whitney and the font was moved there in 1876 It was moved to its current location in 1976 For many years the exterior of the building was painted a dull brown to look like brownstone It was briefly painted a light gray accented with polychrome capitals in the mid 1930s before being changed back The church has been painted white since the late 1960s The garden between the church and parish house replaced a patio in 1965 33 In 2009 the church completed its largest maintenance project in generations removing the roof to install 50 new trusses and a new electrical system then installing a new roof and painting the entire exterior of the structure It was the culmination of a decade of maintenance projects that grew out of a comprehensive building assessment commissioned by the vestry in 2002 That assessment revealed the need for several small projects and uncovered dangerous failures of the original trusses that held up the roof and ceiling and span the 62 feet from north wall to south wall the largest clear span timber roof remaining in the city Armed only with that assessment and rough estimates for the project the vestry and clergy hired a fund raising consultant and rallied a team to spearhead the first capital campaign in decades After several years of planning and preparing in September 2007 the church launched a campaign titled Preserving Our Past Building Our Future Over three months of intense one on one meetings with parishioners and regular updates during services the campaign generated 500 000 in three year pledges from the congregation In early 2008 the vestry put out a call for proposals and began interviewing some of the best church architects in the country eventually hiring Philadelphia based DPK amp A Architects and its team of structural and electrical engineers headed by preservation architect Clive Copping In the summer of 2008 the team came up with a proposal to reinforce the existing 10 trusses and replace the roof at a cost of 2 6 million That proposal more than three times the original estimate of 750 000 was rejected by the vestry The designers were ordered back to the drawing board They brought in a contractor J S Cornell and Sons of Philadelphia to help find a less costly alternative By the end of that summer the designers crafted a plan to entirely remove the roof and lower into place 50 prefabricated light weight wood trusses That plan had an estimated cost of 1 6 million The vestry took out a mortgage to fund the balance of the cost and work commenced in May 2009 With strict oversight and cost incentives crafted by the vestry the work came in more than 300 000 under the estimate and was completed by October 2009 In 2009 the project was recognized by the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia with a Grand Jury Award St Paul s Episcopal Church in Richmond Virginia designed by Stewart several years later is largely based on his designs for St Luke s Church Notable similarities include the design of the envelope of the church interior organization ventilation system and decorative elements In St Paul s one can see what St Luke s might have looked like had the steeple been built 34 The Furness addition edit The chapel and parish house on the south side of the church was designed by Furness amp Hewitt and was built in 1875 35 with a donation from George L Harrison a warden on the vestry The addition is two stories with a partial basement The facade is divided horizontally by a string course wall surfaces below the string course have the appearance of rusticated stone construction while those above are finished in a smooth plaster There are several fenestrated projections on the second floor overlooking the interior courtyard and street The addition is organized around a monumental stair hall of a very fine marble with administrative spaces to one side and public spaces to another The chapel runs the width of the addition with a clear span supported by steel tension rods visible at the ceiling The interior elevations of the chapel are divided into equal bays by high pilasters six bays wide by eight bays long The pilaster capitals feature exaggerated organic detailing characteristic of the work from Furness s office Separated by the pilasters are leaded glass clerestory windows with a geometric pattern ratios of the divided lights relating to the dimension of the window as a whole The walls are detailed in plaster to give a paneled look reminiscent of rusticated stone construction and are painted in colors characteristic of the Victorian era such as sage green and maroon As the space is constructed with a clear span the ceiling is vaulted with a large skylight at its apex and is painted a deep blue and accented with gold painted stars There is not any fixed furniture with the exception of a small dark stained wood altar against the north wall The chapel has its own small pipe organ for musical accompaniment the chapel is very lively acoustically Originally the wall to the church was removed and pews placed in the chapel extending into the Church The wall was replaced in 1891 when an addition was added to accommodate the Sunday Schools The chapel still communicates to the church via a large double door Today the addition houses the parish office hall and kitchen on the first and basement floors as well as the rector s office vestry room chapel and choir room on the second floor Music editChoir edit St Luke s Church was the first in Philadelphia to employ a professional vested choir At its height before World War One the choir was well regarded in the city as one of the best counting approximately 40 choristers among its ranks In various times in the past the choir has been accompanied by the Philadelphia Orchestra The Church continues this tradition of choral excellence employing approximately 20 choristers during the Church year September through July Organs edit nbsp St Luke s Church interior c 1868 view towards gallery and organ The first organ for St Luke s Church was built in 1840 by E and G G Hook of Boston and located in the gallery at the rear of the Church It had 3 manuals keyboards and pedals The full organ comprised 29 1 2 stops and 1 552 pipes at that time it was noted to be one of the best church organs in Philadelphia It was well received by visiting organists of the city Later the organ was showing signs of unreliability and eventually was replaced in 1877 The new organ was again built by E and G G Hook amp Hastings of Boston The older Hook organ was traded in as part of the payment towards the new organ as well as some of the pipe work used in the new organ The second Hook organ was larger with 51 stops At the merger the two organs were connected together by an up and coming organ builder Ernest M Skinner of Boston In 1907 he installed a console in the chancel to play the Hook amp Hastings in the back gallery and Church of the Epiphany s organ built by George Jardine of New York City in 1882 that had been placed in a large chamber on the left side of the chancel The console controlled 88 ranks of pipes from both organs During the tenure of Dr Steele rector and H Alexander Matthews organist choirmaster the church purchased a new pipe organ which was installed in 1925 36 The organ was built by the Austin Organ Co of Hartford CT At the time of its installation it was considered to be among the finest in the city The Austin organ was completely installed in the front of the church As part of this installation an upper pipe loft was added above the lady chapel to accommodate an increased number of pipes The Austin organ served the church longer than any other At the time the Austin was built the romantic era of organ building was in its prime the organ s tone was dark and rich with various beautiful orchestral stops It was also a time when most organists were playing transcriptions of orchestral and operatic music To play organ music such as Bach Buxtehude and other Baroque composers it sounded muddy In the early to mid 1990s the Church felt it was time to do something about the Austin organ Some wanted to restore it others wanted to replace it with an electronic substitute while others were in favor of rebuilding and enlarging it Rebuilding and enlargement was the decided route Currently the organ has all of its Austin windchests mechanicals etc During the tenure of Jonathan Bowen current organist choirmaster the organ has been transformed into an instrument that is able to play organ music from just about any period Its primary function is to play service music particularly in the Anglican style Many of the ranks sets of pipes have been replaced to achieve this sound Digitally sampled stops by Walker Technical Co were added at the time of the rebuild in 1998 as well Despite space and funding limitations at the time of the rebuild The Church of St Luke and The Epiphany now has an organ that not only serves the needs of the parish but the community as well The parish has always had great choral orchestral and chamber music ensembles using the space for performance It is now currently the second largest church organ in Philadelphia The total count of pipe and digital ranks currently stands at 150 A full list of current and past stops may be found on the Music page of the Church s website 37 Organists choirmasters edit St Luke s Church 1839 1898 William Henry Westray Darley 1840 1872 38 George Fitz Curwood Lejeune 1873 1875 Oscar A Knipe 1875 1880 Lewis Leaming Forman 1881 1885 39 Dr Carl H Reed 1886 1890 Stanley Addicks 1890 1896 Goeff 1890s Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 1898 present Joseph Spencer Brock 1899 1904 Choirmaster 40 James M Dickinson 1899 1904 Organist Franklin Whitman Robinson 1904 1917 41 Harry Alexander Matthews 1917 1937 Harry Banks 1937 1946 Clarence K Bawden 1946 1971 Frances S Jerome 1971 1983 William J Gatens 1983 1991 Jonathan M Bowen 1991 present Leadership editVestry edit The current vestry is composed of 12 members of the congregation Each is elected to a three year term and since the 1970s each vestry member has been limited to serving two consecutive terms The current rector s warden is Neville Strumpf the current accounting warden is John Erickson and the current secretary is Richard Keiser Supreme Court Justice Owen J Roberts served on the Vestry in the 1920s Rectors edit In the Episcopal Church in the United States of America the rector is the priest elected to head a self supporting parish St Luke s Church 1839 1898 The Rev William Spear D D 1840 1845 The Rev Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe S T D D D LL D 1845 1871 The Rev Charles George Currie D D 1872 1887 The Rev Leverett Bradley 1888 1898 42 Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 1898 present The Rev Dr Thomas Allen Tidball 1898 1903 The Rev Dr David M Steele 1904 1933 43 The Rev Thomas Leonard Harris 1934 1938 44 The Rev Dr Joseph Fort Newton 1938 1950 The Rev Dr Walter M Haushalter 1950 1963 The Rev Frederick R Isacksen 1963 1975 The Rev John E Bird Jr 1975 1982 45 The Rev Rodger C Broadley 1984 2020 46 The Rev Joseph Wallace Williams 2021 present Assistants edit St Luke s Church 1839 1898 The Rev Dr Frederic Gardiner 1847 1848 Assistant Rector 47 The Rev Daniel Washburn 1848 1849 Assistant Rector The Rev John Kemper Murphy 1849 1852 Assistant Rector 48 The Rev Edmund Roberts 1852 1853 Assistant Rector The Rev J A Stone 1853 1854 Assistant Rector The Rev Dr John A Childs 1854 1859 Assistant Rector The Rev William Hobart Hare 1859 1861 Assistant Rector The Rev James De Wolf Perry 1861 1863 Assistant Rector 49 The Rev John Woart 1864 1865 Assistant Rector The Rev Morrison 1866 Assistant Rector The Rev F W Winslow 1866 1867 Assistant Rector The Rev William McGlathery 1867 1868 Assistant Rector The Rev Reginald Heber Howe 1868 1869 Assistant Rector The Rev James W Saul 1869 1870 Assistant Rector The Rev Alfred Louderback 1870 1872 Assistant Rector The Rev Algernon Morton 1872 Assistant in Charge 1872 1873 Assistant Rector The Rev William Bower 1874 1875 Assistant Rector The Rev Alfred Louderback 1875 1877 Assistant Rector The Rev Richard N Thomas 1878 1879 Assistant Rector The Rev W G Ware 1880 1882 Assistant Rector The Rev George E D Mortimer 1882 1884 Assistant Rector The Rev Martin Aigner 1884 1890 Assistant Rector 50 The Rev Alden L Bennett 1890 1893 Assistant Rector The Rev William Bower 1893 1898 Assistant RectorChurch of St Luke and The Epiphany 1898 present The Rev Leverett Bradley 1898 1902 Associate Rector 51 The Rev William Bower 1898 1904 Assistant Rector 52 The Rev Philip Justice Steinmetz Jr 1904 1906 53 54 The Rev Dr John Hendrik de Vries 1906 1907 The Rev Henry C Stone 1907 1910 Assistant Rector The Rev Oliver W De Venish 1911 1912 The Rev Charles Lewis Biggs 1912 1915 Curate 55 The Rev Dr Gabriel Farrell Jr 1916 1917 The Rev Granville Taylor 1917 1919 The Rev Addison Alvord Ewing 1919 1922 Curate 56 The Rev W Arthur Warner 1923 1934 Curate The Rev Dr Nelson Rightmyer 1934 1938 Curate The Rev Thomas A Merryweather 1944 1946 Assistant Rector The Rev Frederick R Isacksen 1946 1949 Assistant Rector The Rev Dr Percy R Stockman 1960 1968 Part time Assistant Rector The Rev J Aubrey Craig 1968 1974 Part time Assistant Rector The Rev Malcolm McGuire 1970 1971 Part time Curate The Rev Robert S Harris 1971 1995 Part time Assistant Rector 57 The Rev James Lloyd 1977 1980 Curate The Rev Rodger C Broadley 1980 1983 Curate The Rev Marlene Haines 1998 2011 Associate Rector The Rev Carol Anthony 2011 2014 Part time Associate RectorRelationship with the Diocese editDue to the church s large capacity ably handling over 1 000 people in one sitting close proximity to Church House and the Philadelphia Divinity School for a number of years and the congregation s social standing the church has been host to many diocesan conventions including 1858 1865 1870 1887 1888 1890 through 1900 1902 through 1910 1912 1915 through 1921 and 1979 Epiphany Chapel 1898 1918 edit nbsp Epiphany Chapel at 17th and Winter Streets from The Philadelphia Inquirer article Nov 13 1899 Epiphany Chapel was a mission first of the Church of the Epiphany and later the consolidated parish Epiphany Chapel was admitted to the Diocese of Pennsylvania convention in 1878 as a mission of Church of the Epiphany The chapel remained located at 23 and Cherry Streets until the 1898 merger At that time the parish purchased the Church of the Atonement on the northeast corner of Schuylkill Avenue now 17th Street and Summer Street That building had been built in 1847 48 to designs by noted architect Napoleon LeBrun This Church of the Atonement was demolished to make way for a new three building complex consisting of a chapel Sunday school and parish house arranged in a u shape around a courtyard fronting on 17th Street designed in Gothic Revival style by noted ecclesiastical architect Isaac Pursell AIA a former student of architect Samuel Sloan The cornerstone was laid on November 18 1898 by Bishop Whitaker along with the Revs Tidball and Michael in attendance Original construction costs including purchase of the property totaled 75 000 58 By completion costs had grown to 100 000 59 The Philadelphia Inquirer described the building as a handsome new chapel constructed from rough faced gray granite with limestone for all details tracery and interior structure Interior surfaces are finished in cypress including a vaulted and paneled hammer beam roof The pulpit and rood screen are of quartersawn oak the altar is constructed of marble Built to serve the growing neighborhood the buildings housed a variety of services such as a bowling alley bicycle room shuffleboard and other game rooms gymnasium kitchen and running track in the parish house six small classrooms and one large classroom in the Sunday school building and room for 400 congregants in the chapel 59 A few years after the chapel s completion a house on Summer Street was purchased for the vicar s residence The anticipated growth of the surrounding neighborhood never materialized however and in 1915 the vestry voted to sell the parish house and Sunday school buildings The Orthopedic Hospital across the street purchased both buildings for approximately 40 000 for use as an outpatient facility The sale was controversial as many in the parish believed there to be a real need for the entire mission and as a result the vicar at that time Rev McGrew resigned in protest 60 The parish house and Sunday school buildings have since been demolished Services at Epiphany Chapel ceased in October 1918 61 St John Chrysostom an Albanian Orthodox Church began renting the building for services shortly thereafter the congregation finally bought the chapel in 1946 for 22 500 Vicars of Epiphany Chapel edit A vicar in the Episcopal Church is usually the priest in charge of a mission of the parish The Rev Oscar Stewart Michael 1898 1899 The Rev Gasherie De Witt Dowling 1899 1901 62 The Rev Dr Edward M Hardcastle 1901 1904 The Rev Frederick J Walton 1904 1905 The Rev H St Clair Hathaway 1905 1906 The Rev Dr Philip Justice Steinmetz Jr 1906 1912 54 The Rev Irving Angell McGrew 1913 1915 63 The Rev W Arthur Warner 1916 1918 St Luke s Mission Chapel 1861 1867 editThe Church of the Ascension 1112 1118 Lombard Street was designed by noted Philadelphia architect Thomas Ustick Walter for the Episcopal parish of All Souls in 1834 All Souls had just been organized the year before at 5th and Walnut Streets Early in the construction All Souls experienced serious financial difficulties and in 1835 decided to unite with the emerging congregation of the Church of the Ascension The prospects of the Church of the Ascension were very bright at first However with the construction of St Luke s much larger church a few blocks away and the area becoming popular with black families 64 it struggled along for many years beset by a lack of members and financial support Instead of closing the parish the vestry of St Luke s voted to absorb Ascension as a mission chapel Ascension was deeply indebted and its building required significant repairs During the final year of St Luke s administration for example 3000 00 was spent on building repairs and another 7000 00 to discharge the parish s debt 3000 00 of which came directly from St Luke s parishioners 65 These actions put the mission on stable footing and the Rev Dr Howe and St Luke s vestry jointly decided to dissolve the relationship in 1867 Although Ascension resumed as an independent parish the parish was still confronted with many difficulties in making its way Ascension moved to Broad and South Streets in 1886 the parish finally closed in 1946 66 The 11th and Lombard Street building was later sold to Shiloh Baptist Church At present the building is a part of the Washington Mews Condominium complex 67 Vicars of St Luke s Mission Chapel edit The Rev Samuel Cox 1861 1862 The Rev John A Childs 1862 1864 The Rev C W Duane 1864 The Rev John Woart 1864 1867 Other church properties editThe St Luke s Church Home located at 1317 Pine Street was a charity for aged women members of the Parish 9 The building was sold in 1911 Between 1873 and 1902 the rectory was located at 1217 Spruce Street Between 1902 and 1966 the rectors received a housing allowance and could choose their own place of residence The rectors typically chose to live in suburban Lower Merion Township Montgomery County The current rectory on Camac Street was purchased in December 1965 Brenz Farm Broomall PA In 1920 the Church purchased 45 acres in suburban Delaware County to be used for spring and summer activities The farm was sold in 1945 for 30 000 Publications editMany of the Rectors were well and widely published Below is a select list text for many may be found via Google Books Bradley Leverett A Soldier Boy s Letters 1862 1865 A Man s Work in the Ministry The Priesthood A Sermon by Phillips Brooks Boston The Everett Press 1905 Harris Thomas Leonard Christian Public Worship Its History Development and Ritual for To day New York Doubleday Doran amp Company Inc 1928 Harris Thomas Leonard Religion for a Scanty Band Harper s Magazine August 1933 298 307 Harris Thomas Leonard Unholy Pilgrimage New York Round Table Press 1937 Haushalter Walter M The Mystery of the Cross Philadelphia Dorrance 1956 Haushalter Walter M The Crucifixion of Superiority Philadelphia Dorrance 1967 Howe Mark Anthony De Wolfe Memoirs of the Life and Services of the Right Reverend Alonzo Potter D D LL D Philadelphia Lippincott 1871 Isacksen Frederick R Healing Leaves New York Vantage 1972 Newton Joseph Fort Living Every Day New York Harper amp Brothers 1937 Newton Joseph Fort We Here Highly Resolve New York Harper amp Brothers 1939 Newton Joseph Fort Living Up to Life New York Harper amp Brothers 1941 Newton Joseph Fort His Cross and Ours New York Harper amp Brothers 1941 Newton Joseph Fort Live Love and Learn a little book about the great business of living New York Harper amp Brothers 1943 Newton Joseph Fort Where are we in Religion New York Macmillan 1945 Newton Joseph Fort River of Years An Autobiography Philadelphia Lippincott 1946 Newton Joseph Fort The One Great Church Adventures of Faith New York Macmillan 1948 Newton Joseph Fort Everyday Religion New York Abingdon Cokesbury 1950 Spear William W Ministerial Devotedness A Sermon Occasioned by the Death of Re Daniel Cobia Charleston A E Miller 1837 Spear William W ed Cotterill s Family Prayers Philadelphia Herman Hooker 1844 Steele David McConnell Going Abroad Overland Studies of Places and People in the Far West New York Putnam 1917 Steele David McConnell Vacation Journeys East and West New York Putnam 1918 Steele David McConnell Papers and Essays for Churchman Philadelphia Jacobs 1919 Steele David McConnell A Dozen After Dinner Speeches Philadelphia Jacobs 1920 Steele David McConnell Addresses and Sermons to Students New York Putnam 1919 Gallery editChurch of St Luke nbsp St Luke s Church interior view towards chancel Rev Howe standing in chancel in vestments c 1868 nbsp Church of St Luke and The Epiphany facade looking north on 13th Street 1974 nbsp Church of St Luke and The Epiphany facade 1974 nbsp Gate of wrought iron fence 1974References editInformational notes James Dundas William Welsh John Welsh Jr James S Newbold Thomas Dunlap George Witman William H Newbold Joseph Bispham William L Newbold Edward W Warner Gideon Scull Samuel Breck John R Milner Nathan Smith John Grigg S Robert Mordecai D Lewis David M Broadhead Citations a b PRHP List of properties with OPA compliant addresses PDF Philadelphia Historical Commission Retrieved March 7 2013 Wainwright Nicholas October 1979 The Diary of Samuel Breck 1839 1840 Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 104 4 503 524 Journal of the Proceedings of the Fifty Fifth Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the State of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Jesper Harding 1839 pp 24 25 27 Journal of the Proceedings of the 57th Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the State of Pennsylvania Philadelphia 1841 pp 73 74 Vestry Minutes of St Luke s Church 1844 pp 94 100 Vestry Minutes of St Luke s Church 1845 pp 114 116 Armstrong George S 1889 The Hawes School Memorial Boston MA David Clapp pp 138 139 Dix Morgan 1865 The General Convention of 1865 New York NY James Potts a b History of Philadelphia 1609 1884 Volume 2 1884 p 1353 Ferree Barr 1910 Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society New York Pennsylvania Society p 201 Ferree Barr 1914 Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society New York Pennsylvania Society p 227 Jane Currie to be Wed The New York Times October 29 1950 Bradley Susan Hinckley 1905 Leverett Bradley Boston pp 71 73 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bradley Susan Hinckley 1905 Leverett Bradley Boston p 74 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ferree Barr 1906 Yearbook of the Pennsylvania Society New York Pennsylvania Society p 154 New Pastor for St Luke s The Philadelphia Inquirer February 11 1904 Transient Residents at Church Reception The Philadelphia Inquirer October 10 1913 70 in Confirmation Class The Philadelphia Inquirer March 26 1917 In Memoriam William Crothers Dulles Titantic Victim and St Luke and The Epiphany Congregent 1872 1912 April 10 2014 Retrieved April 11 2014 Rev Dr Steele Resigns The New York Times January 16 1930 Newton Joseph Fort 1946 River of Years Philadelphia Lippincott pp 262 263 Bishop John Joseph Fort Newton Past Masters Retrieved July 8 2011 W H Haushalter Clergyman Was 71 The New York Times August 31 1963 Daly Molly June 6 2011 Center City Church Marks 30 Years Serving Those Affected By AIDS CBS Philly Retrieved July 10 2011 St Luke and The Epiphany as Philadelphia s First LGBT Community Center 1997 April 11 2014 Retrieved April 11 2014 Fikelela Anglicans Reaching Out Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved September 7 2011 Supporting Material Retrieved July 15 2011 Supporting Material December 3 2010 Retrieved July 15 2011 History of Philadelphia 1609 1884 Volume 2 1884 St Luke s Church The Philadelphia Inquirer May 31 1839 Journal of the 70th Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Pennsylvania Philadelphia King amp Baird 1854 pp 107 108 Chronology St Luke and The Epiphany Retrieved July 14 2011 Building St Luke and the Epiphany Retrieved July 10 2011 Architecture Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved July 20 2011 Chronology St Luke s Parish House Retrieved July 14 2011 The New Organ at Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 1925 Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Music St Luke and The Epiphany Retrieved July 11 2011 Burton Gideon 1895 Reminiscences of Gideon Burton Cincinnati Houston p 99 Briggs Ward W 1994 Biographical dictionary of North American classicists Westport CT Greenwood p 191 The Churchman April 22 1899 pp vii Saerchinger Cesar 1918 International Who s Who in Music New York Current Literature pp 530 531 Rev Leverett Bradley Formally Took Possession of the Pulpit The Philadelphia Inquirer February 16 1888 Dr Steele s Resignation from St Luke and The Epiphany 1933 An Editorial from Church News February 19 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Rev Thomas L Harris Called to St Luke and The Epiphany February 3 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Clergy and Staff Christ Church Woodbury NJ Archived from the original on March 26 2012 Retrieved July 11 2011 The Institution of Rev Rodger Broadley as the 8th Rector of the Church of St Luke and The Epiphany 2 March 1984 February 24 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Schaff Philadelphia 1887 Encyclopedia of Living Divines and Christian Workers of all Demonminations New York Funk amp Wagnalls p 76 Rev John Kemper Murphy D D U of Pa 88 died at Germantown Pa October 21 1900 The Alumni Register 5 2 64 November 1900 Historical Catalogue of Brown University 1764 1914 Providence RI Brown University 1914 p 199 Distinguished Successful Americans of Our Day Chicago Successful Americans 1912 p 222 Will Become Emeritus The Philadelphia Inquirer December 4 1902 Rev William Bower Caught Fatal Cold The Philadelphia Inquirer January 4 1907 Secretary s Fourth Report Harvard College Class of 1901 Cambridge MA Crimson Publishing Company 1916 p 1916 a b Stowe s Clerical Directory 1920 21 Minneapolis MN The Rev Andrew David Stowe D D 1920 p 250 Rev D M Steele Assistant Resigns Evening Public Ledger July 7 1915 Called to Gloria Dei The Philadelphia Inquirer September 30 1922 Deaths Here The Philadelphia Inquirer October 14 1995 Corner Stone Laid The Philadelphia Inquirer November 18 1898 a b Opening of the Handsome New Epiphany Chapel The Philadelphia Inquirer November 13 1899 Sale of Parish House Makes Rector Resign The Philadelphia Inquirer July 6 1915 Twelves J Wesley 1969 A History of the Diocese of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Diocese of Pennsylvania p 202 Historical Catalogue of Brown University 1764 1904 Providence RI Brown University 1905 p 424 Stowe s Clerical Directory 1920 1921 p 173 History of Philadelphia Philadelphia 1889 p 1352 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Journal of the 82nd Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Pennsylvania Philadelphia 1867 pp 101 102 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Twelves J Wesley 1969 A History of the Diocese of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA Diocese of Pennsylvania pp 145 146 Communities The Changing Heart of the City Building and Rebuilding Western Wash West Retrieved July 19 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Church of St Luke and The Epiphany Philadelphia nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Philadelphia portalOfficial website Facebook Listing and photographs at the Historic American Buildings Survey Mystery worshiper reports 1 KYW Radio Interview with Rector Rodger Broadley 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Church of St Luke and The Epiphany Philadelphia amp oldid 1176433767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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