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St. Patrick's Cathedral (Midtown Manhattan)

St. Patrick's Cathedral is a Catholic cathedral in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. It is the seat of the Archbishop of New York as well as a parish church. The cathedral occupies a city block bounded by Fifth Avenue, Madison Avenue, 50th Street, and 51st Street, directly across from Rockefeller Center. Designed by James Renwick Jr., it is the largest Gothic Revival Catholic cathedral in North America.

St. Patrick's Cathedral
View of the cathedral from the south on Fifth Avenue
Location631 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York, U.S.
CountryUnited States
DenominationCatholic Church
TraditionLatin Church
WebsiteSt. Patrick's Cathedral
History
StatusCathedral
DedicationSaint Patrick
DedicatedOctober 5, 1910
Earlier dedicationMay 25, 1879
ConsecratedOctober 5, 1910
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architect(s)James Renwick Jr.
Architectural typeChurch
StyleDecorated Neo-Gothic
Specifications
Capacity2,400
Length396.7 feet (120.9 m)
Number of spires2
Spire height329.6 feet (100.5 m)[a]
MaterialsTuckahoe marble
Bells19 (29,122.73 lb (13,209.85 kg))
Administration
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of New York
DeanerySouth Manhattan
Clergy
ArchbishopTimothy Cardinal Dolan
RectorVery Rev. Enrique Salvo
Laity
Director of musicJennifer Pascual, D.M.A.
Organist(s)Daniel Brondel
Mark Pacoe
OCIA coordinatorSueanne Nilsen
St. Patrick's Cathedral Complex
Coordinates40°45′31″N 73°58′35″W / 40.75861°N 73.97639°W / 40.75861; -73.97639
Area2 acres (0.81 ha)
Built1878
NRHP reference No.76001250
NYSRHP No.06101.000367
NYCL No.0267
Significant dates
Added to NRHPDecember 8, 1976[3]
Designated NHLDecember 8, 1976[4]
Designated NYSRHPJune 23, 1980[1]
Designated NYCLOctober 19, 1966[2]

The cathedral was constructed starting in 1858 to accommodate the growing Archdiocese of New York and to replace St. Patrick's Old Cathedral. Work was halted in the early 1860s during the American Civil War; the cathedral was completed in 1878 and dedicated on May 25, 1879. The archbishop's house and rectory were added in the early 1880s, both designed by James Renwick Jr., and the spires were added in 1888. A Lady chapel designed by Charles T. Mathews was constructed from 1901 to 1906. The cathedral was consecrated on October 5, 1910, after all its debt had been paid off. Extensive restorations of the cathedral were conducted several times, including in the 1940s, 1970s, and 2010s.

St. Patrick's Cathedral is clad in marble and has several dozen stained glass windows. It measures 332 feet (101 m) long, with a maximum width of 174 feet (53 m) at the transepts. The bronze doors that form the cathedral's main entrance on Fifth Avenue are flanked by towers with spires rising 329.5 feet (100 m). The northern tower contains nineteen bells, and the interior has two pipe organs. Inside is a nave flanked by several chapels; two transepts; a chancel and apse; and a crypt. East of the apse are the rectory, Lady chapel, and archbishop's residence facing Madison Avenue. The cathedral is a New York City designated landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

History edit

The Diocese of New York was founded by Pope Pius VII in 1808.[5][6][7] St. Patrick's was founded shortly afterward to serve New York City's small, but growing, Catholic population, which could no longer fit in St. Peter's Church.[6] A site was selected on Mulberry Street in what is now Lower Manhattan, and St. Patrick's Old Cathedral was dedicated in 1815.[8][9] At the time, there were 15,000 Catholics in the diocese.[7]

Early site history edit

In March 1810, the Rev. Father Anthony Kohlmann bought the land on which the present cathedral stands. The site was bounded by what is now Fifth Avenue on the west, 51st Street on the north, Madison Avenue to the east, and 50th Street on the south.[10][11] The Jesuit community built a college on the site, which at the time was north of New York City proper.[12] It contained a "fine old house" which was fitted with a chapel of St. Ignatius.[13] In 1813, the Jesuits sold the lot to the Diocese of New York. The school closed in 1814 and the diocese gave the property to Dom Augustin LeStrange, the abbot of a community of Trappists who were fleeing persecution by French authorities. In addition to a small monastic community, they looked after orphans. With the downfall of Napoleon, the Trappists returned to France in 1815, but the neighboring orphanage was maintained by the diocese into the late nineteenth century.[14]

In 1828, trustees of St. Patrick's, St. Peter's, and St. Mary's met to discuss the feasibility of establishing a burial ground at Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets.[15] The trustees bought the property in 1829 but did not use it as a cemetery.[16][17] Bishop John Dubois reopened the chapel in 1840 for Catholics employed at the Deaf and Dumb Asylum and in the general neighborhood. A modest frame church was built for the parish of St. John the Evangelist and dedicated in 1841 by the Rev. John Hughes, administrator of the diocese.[16][18] Tickets were sold to the dedication to ease the parish's debt, but the mortgage was foreclosed upon, and in 1844 the church was sold at auction.[18] The church's pastor, the Rev. Felix Larkin, was said to have died from stress as a result.[19] The Rev. Michael A. Curran was appointed to raise funds for the devastated parish and used an old college hall as a temporary church. Curran continued raising funds to buy back the church during the Great Famine in Ireland, eventually succeeding and taking the deed in his own name.[19]

Planning edit

By the early 1840s, the number of Catholics in the Diocese of New York had increased to 200,000.[7][20] As a result, several additional dioceses were created in New York state. Most of New York state's Catholics at the time were Irish.[7] The Diocese of New York was made an archdiocese by Pope Pius IX on July 19, 1850.[21] Bishop John Joseph Hughes was raised to the level of archbishop soon afterward.[11][21] As early as 1850, Hughes determined that the growing Archdiocese of New York needed a large cathedral to replace the older cathedral in Lower Manhattan.[22][23][24] At the time, the Fifth Avenue site was still relatively rural.[25][26] The site faced the gardens of Columbia University to the west,[27] but the surrounding area was otherwise characterized by rocks and unopened streets.[25] Even so, Hughes believed the site would grow into a populous business area.[28]

In 1853, Hughes announced that he had hired the firm Renwick & Rodrigue to design a cathedral on Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets.[23] One partner in the firm, William Rodrigue, was Hughes's brother-in-law.[29][30] The other partner, James Renwick Jr., was largely responsible for designing the new St. Patrick's Cathedral.[23][29] Renwick spent three years in Europe to look for design influences for New York City's new Catholic cathedral.[31] He took particular inspiration from the unfinished Cologne Cathedral.[31][32] Renwick & Rodrigue originally planned a larger cathedral than the structure that was ultimately built. Hughes requested in 1857 that the firm reduce the dimensions of the new cathedral.[25][33] To make way for the clergy's and archbishop's residences, the ambulatory was removed from the plans.[33][34] The area behind the apse would have contained a chapel dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, but this was removed entirely.[35] The numerous heavy buttresses in the design were also removed.[31]

Plans for the cathedral were finalized in 1858.[23][36] To raise money for the effort, Hughes asked wealthy Catholics in the Archdiocese of New York to subscribe to a building fund for the new cathedral. One hundred and three subscribers donated $1,000 apiece,[23][37] and two subscribers were non-Catholics.[37] The first construction contracts for the new Fifth Avenue cathedral were issued in June 1858. The new St. Patrick's Cathedral was to take up the entire block bounded by Fifth and Madison Avenues between 50th and 51st Streets. The front facade on Fifth Avenue would have three large entrances, and the northwest and southwest corners of the cathedral would be topped by an octagonal spire. The interior was to be designed in a cruciform layout.[38][39][40] The cathedral was to be built in the Gothic Revival style.[41][42] In addition, an archbishop's house and a chapel would face Madison Avenue.[42] At the time, there were numerous hospitals, asylums, and other public institutions along the nearby section of Fifth Avenue.[43][38]

Construction edit

Initial work and hiatus edit

 
Exterior elevation drawing of the western facade, by James Renwick, architect

On August 15, 1858, the cornerstone was laid just south of the diocese's orphanage.[44][45] Archbishop Hughes laid the cornerstone in front of 100,000 spectators near the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 50th Street, though the precise location remains unclear.[46] That October, the architects presented cost estimates for making the cathedral out of white marble, brown freestone, olive freestone, or granite.[47] The white marble was the most expensive of the four options, with a projected cost of $850,000, and James Hall and William Joyce offered to supply the marble.[48][b] Even so, Renwick recommended that St. Patrick's be constructed of white marble, citing its durability and beauty.[23][48] The archdiocese formed a Bureau of Contracts, which first met in December 1858.[36]

The bureau awarded the marble contract to Hall and Joyce in March 1859; at the time, the work was supposed to be finished before January 1, 1867. The cost estimate of $867,500 for the entire cathedral (equivalent to $23,782,337 in 2023) was unusually low for a project of that size.[40] Construction progressed for two years after the cornerstone was laid.[23][26] The work consisted of laying stone blocks for the foundation, each weighing between one and four tons.[41] The foundation was excavated to a maximum depth of 20 feet (6.1 m), where it was laid on solid rock.[24][41][49] The excavations were relatively small because the underlying layer of bedrock was shallow,[50] rising nearly to the surface near the transept on Fifth Avenue.[24][49] White-marble walls were then constructed above the foundation.[41] By January 1860, the cathedral had been erected to about 7 feet (2.1 m) above ground level.[51] Work was slightly delayed by a stonecutters' strike that March.[52][53]

The walls had reached the water table when all $73,000 in funds had been exhausted.[26] As a result, in August 1860, Hughes decided to suspend all work on the new cathedral.[54][55] When work was suspended, the walls had been built to an average height of 12 feet (3.7 m) above ground.[41] The onset of the American Civil War in 1861 prevented the resumption of work for several years.[23][24][26] Hughes died in January 1864 before the work could resume.[26][56] John McCloskey was appointed to succeed Hughes as archbishop.[57][58] McCloskey created a plan to finance the construction of the new St. Patrick's Cathedral.[26]

Completion edit

By mid-1866, work had again resumed and the walls had been built to 20 feet (6.1 m) above ground. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that the interior "looks like a large field" and said the cathedral would be "worthy to be regarded as one of the wonders of the Republic".[42] Some $100,000 was spent on the Catholic cathedral in 1867,[59] and the constituent churches of the Archdiocese of New York promised to spend $100,000 a year until the cathedral was complete.[60] Most funding for the cathedral came from the parishioners of these churches, who were mainly poor Irish immigrants. An editorial in the New York World described the cathedral as being constructed "not of the superfluity of wealth, but for the most part out of the offerings of poverty".[61]

The cathedral's masonry was laid during summer as the stonework could not be laid in the cold.[50] By late 1870, the marble walls had been built to a height of 54 feet (16 m) and the transept was finished.[50][62] The entrance on Fifth Avenue, measuring 70 feet (21 m) tall, had also been finished.[62] Over a hundred workers were busy quarrying marble from Pleasantville, north of New York City. The marble was transported down to New York City via the Harlem Railroad, where a branch track led to the new cathedral's site.[50] The construction of the new cathedral drew relatively little interest for New York City's non-Catholic population,[63] though several commentators praised the cathedral's design.[31] An anonymous author for the Real Estate Record and Guide wrote that the new St. Patrick's Cathedral was the "most gorgeous ecclesiastical edifice on this continent", though the critics perceived the buttresses on the north and south sides of the facade as "altogether unnecessary".[64] A reporter for the New York World, probably Montgomery Schuyler, wrote in 1871 that the cathedral would be "one of the leading ecclesiastical structures in the world".[31]

The trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral borrowed $300,000 from the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank for the new cathedral in 1874. The trustees gave the bank a first mortgage on the cathedral and site as collateral for the loan.[65] By late 1875, the roof had been covered with slate and all of the walls were finished, except for a small portion along Fifth Avenue.[66] The trustees borrowed another $100,000 from the Emigrant Bank in 1876.[65] Late that year, temporary scaffolding was erected so the interior could be plastered and decorated. Almost all the stained glass had been delivered and was being glazed; four of these windows had been exhibited at the Centennial Exposition. Only one worker had been killed during the construction process, according to the American Architect and Building News, due to his own carelessness.[67] McCloskey made contracts for furnishings in 1874 and again in 1878.[58]

On November 29, 1877, the incomplete St. Patrick's Cathedral was opened for public viewing.[68][31] A one-month-long fundraiser for the cathedral commenced on October 22, 1878.[69][70] In its first three weeks, the fundraiser had an average daily attendance of between ten and eleven thousand.[71] The fair ran for 36 nights and attracted about 250,000 total visitors when it closed on November 30.[72][73] Forty-five parishes of the Archdiocese of New York had exhibits at the fair.[73] The fundraiser sought to raise $200,000 for the cathedral,[69] but it ultimately netted $173,000.[23][73] Several months elapsed before the cathedral was readied for its dedication in early 1879.[74]

Opening and late 19th century edit

 
Stereoscopic view of the cathedral's appearance prior to the installation of spires

The new St. Patrick's Cathedral opened on May 25, 1879.[75][76][77] Thirty-five bishops and six archbishops attended the dedication.[75][77][78] St. Patrick's was met with a generally positive reception from the media.[61] The Baltimore Sun, for example, called it the "finest church edifice on the American continent".[79] Not all critics spoke of the cathedral positively; journalist Clarence Cook authored a criticism that architectural historian Robert A. M. Stern characterized as being "underpinned with religious and ethnic bigotry".[61] Cook perceived the facade as being full of "clumsy repetition", and he wrote of the interior: "Words cannot express the paltry character of the internal finish of this vaunted structure."[80] The new St. Patrick's Cathedral and Temple Emanu-El comprised the first non-Protestant houses of worship on the midtown section of Fifth Avenue.[81] At the time, the cathedral was far removed from the developed portions of the city.[82] The first bishop consecrated in the new cathedral was the Michael J. O'Farrell of Trenton, New Jersey, who became the first bishop of the Diocese of Trenton.[83]

The cathedral's parish originally extended from Seventh Avenue to the East River between 46th and 59th Streets, and the section between Madison and Sixth Avenues extended to 42nd Street.[84][85] In 1880, the section between Third Avenue and the East River was split to the parish of St. John the Evangelist.[84][86] During the early 1880s, Renwick designed the archbishop's house and rectory on Madison Avenue.[87] The Real Estate Record and Guide reported in December 1881 that Renwick had been hired to build a rectory at the southwest corner of Madison Avenue and 51st Street.[88] Shortly afterward, Renwick filed plans for a four-story marble rectory on the site,[89] to be built by E. D. Connoly & Son and P. Walsh.[90] The archbishop's house was completed the same year.[86] The rectory was completed on May 8, 1884.[86] A critic for the Real Estate Record characterized the rectory and archbishop's house as having "absurd" dormer windows in their mansard roofs.[91] A memorial marble pulpit was manufactured in Italy and installed in the cathedral in October 1885. The money for the pulpit came from the clergy of the archdiocese, who had offered Cardinal McCloskey $10,000 for his golden jubilee and commissioned the pulpit after he had declined the prize.[92]

A lack of funding precluded spires from being installed when the cathedral was completed.[31][79] By late 1885, spires were planned to be installed at a cost of $190,000.[93][94] Renwick filed plans for the cathedral spires in September 1885,[94][95] and the contract was awarded to George Mann & Co. of Baltimore.[96] Excavation of the stone commenced in January 1886 and the spires were constructed starting that September.[97] The last stones of the spires were erected in October 1888, at which point the cathedral was considered completed.[98][99] At the time several hundred niches remained to be filled with figures, and ten chapels did not have their altars yet.[99] At 329.5 feet (100.4 m),[100][101][a] the spires were the tallest structures in New York City.[101] The Evening World said the construction of the spires "completes a notable ornament to the city".[103] Within a year, the cathedral was surpassed in height by the New York World Building, whose spire rose to 349 feet (106 m).[104] The funding shortages at the building's completion had also required that a "temporary" plaster and wood ceiling be installed atop the cathedral,[79] rather than the marble or brick ceiling that Renwick had conceived.[79][100] The cathedral never replaced the plaster-and-wood ceiling.[100][105][106]

After the spires were finished, the trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral decided that bells should be installed in one tower. No arrangements had yet been made for the bells because parts of the project, such as interior design, remained incomplete.[107] The cathedral tested a set of four bells in the north tower in July and August 1889 to determine the tower's acoustic properties.[108][109] The altar of the Holy Family was consecrated at the cathedral in 1893.[110] A set of bells for the cathedral was manufactured in the United States. After the archbishop consecrated them, the bells were found to be defective and were never hung in the belfry. In 1895, the cathedral ordered a second set of bells to be made by the Paccards in France.[111] The new bells were blessed by Archbishop Michael Corrigan on August 15, 1897, though they had not been installed yet.[112][113] The framework for the bells was installed in the north tower the next month.[114] At the time of completion, St. Patrick's had more bells than any other church in the city, with 19; by comparison, Trinity Church had ten bells and Grace Church had nine.[115] Also in 1897, the Spiritual Sons of De La Salle funded a new altar for the cathedral.[116]

20th century edit

Lady chapel and consecration edit

 
1913 photograph of the cathedral

Margaret A. Kelly, widow of banker Eugene Kelly, died in 1899 and left $200,000 to the cathedral for the construction of a Lady chapel, on the condition that the chapel not be constructed until after her death.[117][118] Kelly's sons pledged additional funds for the chapel as necessary.[119] The next year, the trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral held an architectural design competition for the chapel, east of the cathedral's apse. The trustees received submissions from American, Canadian, French, and British architects before giving the commission to Charles T. Mathews of New York City.[120][121] After traveling to Europe to study architectural influences, Mathews prepared plans for the chapel by September 1900.[120][121] Work on the Lady chapel began in July 1901.[122]

Archbishop Corrigan was simultaneously paying off the debt on the cathedral with the intention of consecrating it after all the debts were paid off in 1908. This date was the centennial of the Archdiocese of New York's founding and the 50-year anniversary of the groundbreaking ceremony. However, he died in 1902 before the consecration or the retirement of the debt.[123][124] Following a construction delay of more than one year, the Lady chapel was nearly complete by early 1905.[125] The first Mass in the Lady chapel took place in Christmas 1906,[126] but the interior furnishings were not complete until 1908.[127] The chapel cost $800,000 in total.[128]

Additional changes to the cathedral took place in the first decade of the 20th century. These included the construction of an altar to St. Michael on the left side of the Lady chapel, as well as an altar to St. Joseph on the right side. By 1907, a movable bronze screen was to be installed at the transept, and the temporary wooden floor dating from the cathedral's construction was planned to be replaced with a permanent marble floor.[128] The bronze screens were a gift to celebrate the archdiocese's centennial,[129] which almost every archbishop in the United States celebrated at the cathedral in April 1908.[130] The Lady chapel was originally outfitted with transparent windows,[131] though its stained-glass windows were manufactured in Europe starting in 1909.[127] In the first half of 1910, the cathedral's debt of $800,000 was completely paid off.[132] St. Patrick's Cathedral was consecrated on October 5, 1910, with Archbishop John Murphy Farley officiating.[133][134] By that time, the surrounding area was quickly being developed.[135]

1920s through 1940s edit

 
View from Rockefeller Center

Monsignor Michael J. Lavelle started raising $625,000 from the congregation in 1926 to renovate the cathedral.[136] The next year, Robert J. Reiley was hired to conduct renovations, including replacing the wooden floor with a marble floor.[137] The floor was replaced between April and December 1927. The old organ was also replaced and new stained-glass windows, altar, and pews were being installed in the Lady chapel. The sanctuary was extended approximately 8 feet (2.4 m), the metal communion rail was replaced with a bronze and marble rail, and the wooden throne was replaced with one of marble.[138] Amplifiers,[139][140] wrought-iron doors,[141] and new bronze chandeliers were installed.[142] New pews were also installed,[143] as were two new organs.[144] English stained glass artist and designer Paul Vincent Woodroffe completed the Lady chapel's remaining windows by late 1930.[131][145] With the construction of Rockefeller Center to the west, several trees were planted around the cathedral in 1939 to complement Rockefeller Center's trees.[146]

The cathedral's rectory was closed in April 1940 for the first major renovation in its history,[147] and it reopened that December.[148][149] Archbishop Francis Spellman announced in February 1941 that an anonymous donor had provided funding for a new high altar, to be designed by Charles Maginnis. According to Spellman's announcement, the original high altar had been "architecturally inconsistent" with the cathedral's design ever since the Lady chapel was completed, but a lack of funds had prevented the altar's replacement for four decades.[150][151] The reredos behind the original high altar blocked the view of the Lady chapel from the nave, but the cathedral's trustees wished to avoid this.[152] The old main altar was removed in February 1942[153][154] and the new main altar of St. Patrick's Cathedral was consecrated that May.[155][156] A new altar in the Lady chapel, donated by George J. Gillespie, was also consecrated in May 1942.[157]

The George A. Fuller Company started renovating the exterior in August 1945[158] after blasting for a nearby building dislodged a stone from the facade.[159] The main doorway was narrowed, and some of the projecting Gothic ornamentation was eliminated because they were prone to cracks in New York City's climate, which was characterized by abrupt temperature decreases.[158][160] A bronze cross was placed atop the north tower, replacing the original stone cross there.[161] The project involved 350 workers at its peak.[158] Some funds for the renovation came from a 1946 bequest of $100,000 from radio personality Major Bowes.[162][163] By early 1947, the project was completed except for the Lady Chapel and a set of new entrance doors.[160] An anonymous donor gave the cathedral a $25,000 window, which was designed by Charles J. Connick Associates and unveiled in April 1947.[164] Work began on an interior renovation in mid-1948, with 17 of the cathedral's 19 altars being replaced.[165] Cardinal Francis Spellman blessed the new bronze doors in December 1949.[166][167]

1950s to 1990s edit

 
Detail of the entrance (October 2007)

In 1952, St. Patrick's Cathedral received five gifts. These funded the electrification of the cathedral chimes; an elevator to the main organ; kneeling cushions and guard cords in the pews; and new stained-glass windows.[168] The windows, depicting 12 male and 12 female saints, were installed at the clerestory in 1954. These windows were funded by a bequest by Atlas Portland Cement Company president John R. Morron, who left $200,000 for the archdiocese in his will.[169][170] The cathedral celebrated the 100th anniversary of its cornerstone-laying in 1958.[171] At the time, the cathedral had over three million visitors a year.[135] St. Patrick's celebrated the 50th anniversary of its consecration two years later.[172]

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) considered designating St. Patrick's Cathedral as a New York City landmark in early 1966.[173] Later that year, the LPC designated the cathedral as a New York City Landmark.[2][174] Under Cardinal Terence Cooke's leadership, the interior of St. Patrick's Cathedral was restored starting in 1972.[127] That June, workers placed scaffolding on the cathedral to protect it from damage due to blasting for the construction of Olympic Tower across 51st Street. Afterward, over 100 workers cleaned and painted the interior while the cathedral remained open.[175] The $800,000 project was completed in April 1973.[175][176] The cathedral close, consisting of all structures on the same block as the cathedral, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976.[10][177][178]

St. Patrick's Cathedral celebrated the centennial of its opening in May 1979. The cathedral's popularity was attributed to its location in midtown, and about 6,000 people attended Mass on Sundays, ninety percent of whom were visitors.[179] The cathedral's exterior was cleaned the same year.[180][181] Further restoration began in 1984 during the episcopate of Cardinal John O'Connor. As part of the work, most of the roof was replaced, and the entrance steps, doors, and walls were also repaired.[127] The cathedral's two organs were restored in the mid-1990s.[182]

21st century edit

Under Cardinal Edward Egan, another renovation of the cathedral was planned in 2006[183][184] after chunks of rock started falling from the facade.[185] The project was conducted between 2012 and 2015 at a cost of $177 million.[186] The renovation was designed by Murphy Burnham & Buttrick and led by construction manager Structure Tone.[187][188] The renovation involved cleaning the exterior marble, repairing stained-glass windows, painting the ceiling, and replacing the flooring and steps.[184] In addition, the bronze doors were renovated and reinstalled.[189][190] Work was completed by September 17, 2015, before Pope Francis visited the cathedral the next week.[105][106] The scaffolding was removed in July 2016.[191] The cathedral and the renovations were featured on WNET's television program Treasures of New York.[192]

The LPC approved a garage on the 50th Street side of the cathedral in late 2015. The garage was designed to provide a secure entrance for Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan.[193] In 2017, MBB Architects and Structure Tone, Landmark Facilities Group, and P.W. Grosser completed a new geothermal system under St. Patrick's Cathedral, believed to be the largest in New York City.[194][195] The gardens adjoining the cathedral to the north and south were excavated for the system's construction, and they were replanted after installation was complete.[196] The same October, a shrine to the Lebanese Maronite Saint Charbel Makhlouf was dedicated at St. Patrick's Cathedral.[197] The cathedral was temporarily closed for in-person Mass in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City. The pandemic severely reduced the cathedral's finances as much of its income came from donations at Mass and the archdiocese did not fund the cathedral's maintenance.[198] It was reopened for full-capacity worship in May 2021.[199]

Following the rezoning of East Midtown in the late 2010s, the Archdiocese of New York began planning to sell the air rights attached to the cathedral's site.[200][201] In December 2023, Citadel LLC and Vornado Realty Trust agreed to pay as much as $164 million for up to 525,000 square feet (48,800 m2) of the cathedral's air rights, which would be transferred to a site at 350 Park Avenue.[202][203]

Main structure edit

 
Main archway of the cathedral

St. Patrick's Cathedral was designed by James Renwick Jr. with influences from English, French, and German Gothic architecture.[24][31] It is the largest Gothic Revival Catholic cathedral in North America,[204] as well as the first major Gothic Revival cathedral in the United States.[32] St. Patrick's Cathedral was described by CNN in 2020 as being an "essential part of New York City's architectural heritage".[205] The cathedral serves as the seat for the Archdiocese of New York and as a parish church for the archdiocese within Manhattan.[206] Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, over five million people visited the cathedral each year.[198]

The foundation stones are made of blue gneiss granite set within cement mortar.[24] The lowest horizontal course of the facade, as well as the lowest course under all the interior columns. is made of Dix Island granite from Maine.[25][49] The exterior is clad in marble quarried in Lee, Massachusetts, and Pleasantville, New York. The main section of the cathedral is made of Tuckahoe marble.[49][207] Behind the marble blocks are walls made of brick and stone laid in rough masonry, with hollow gaps for ventilation. The blocks were so closely laid that, decades after the cathedral's completion, no cracks had formed in them.[34][49] The side walls are between 3 and 4 feet (0.91 and 1.22 m) thick, and the clerestory walls above the nave are 3 feet thick.[62] Part of the interior is made of artificial Coignet stone.[25] The marble for the spires was sourced from Cockeysville, Maryland,[208] and the roof has 343 finials.[209]

There are 103 windows on the cathedral in total.[68][76][c] The windows are glazed by two thicknesses of sash and glass, set 2 inches (51 mm) apart, to regulate interior temperatures and prevent air drafts. The exterior sashes are glazed with figured glass in lead sash, while the interior sashes are glazed with stained glass.[25][212] The windows of the clerestory were made by Morgan Brothers.[212] The cathedral had been constructed with 57 stained-glass windows: 37 representing scenes from Scripture and 20 representing geometrical shapes.[210][211] Forty-five of the original windows were manufactured by Nicholas Lorin and Henry Ely in France.[213] Other stained glass windows were added later.[169][170] Renwick's original sketches show that the tracery near each window was designed with two grooves: one for stained glass and one for protective glazing.[196]

Location and dimensions edit

St. Patrick's Cathedral is in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. It takes up a full city block bounded by Fifth Avenue to the west, 51st Street to the north, Madison Avenue to the east, and 50th Street to the south. Clockwise from northwest, the cathedral is directly across from Olympic Tower, 11 East 51st Street, and 488 Madison Avenue to the north; the Villard Houses and Lotte New York Palace Hotel to the east; 18 East 50th Street and the Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store to the south; and the International Building of Rockefeller Center to the west.[87] St. Patrick's is directly across from the Atlas statue at the International Building.[214]

St. Patrick's is oriented west–east relative to the street grid and has a cruciform plan. From west to east, the cathedral contains a nave; transepts extending to the north and south; and a sanctuary and apse.[32][62][25] The entire structure measures 332 feet (101 m) long as measured along the exterior buttresses. The cathedral is 174 feet (53 m) wide at the transepts.[215][d] The main facade is oriented west along Fifth Avenue, with two towers measuring 32 feet (9.8 m) wide[34][102] and 329.5 feet (100.4 m) tall,[100][101][a] flanking a central section 105 feet (32 m) wide.[215] To the north and south are planted gardens,[196] which contain ten manholes for the cathedral's subterranean geothermal system.[194] The cathedral's total length is 396.7 feet (120.9 m).[100]

The cathedral's interior was designed to accommodate 14,000 seated guests or 19,000 in total.[76][216] It has a seating capacity for about 2,400 congregants.[217] There are about 300 wooden pews ranging from 10 to 20 feet (3.0 to 6.1 m) wide.[218] The underground geothermal system consists of ten wells, each 2,200 feet (670 m) deep, which could concurrently send hot and cold air to separate sections of the cathedral. The system is capable of producing 3.2 million British thermal units (3.4 GJ) of heat and 2.9 million British thermal units (3.1 GJ) of air conditioning hourly.[194][195] The geothermal system uses a computer to send cool or warm air based on thermostat readings. Heat and cool air are pumped through four water loops.[194]

Western facade edit

Central gable and doors edit

The central portion of the Fifth Avenue facade contains a 156-foot-tall (48 m) gable, which leads into the narthex.[34][102][210] The main entrance is an archway at the base of the gable, measuring 31 feet (9.4 m) wide and 51 feet (16 m) tall.[63] The actual entrance portal is recessed about 12 feet (3.7 m) into the archway and contains the main doors.[76][102] The top of the portal is slightly pointed, with carved spandrel panels on either side.[102] Above is a marble transom bar as well as elaborate floral tracery.[63][102] The portal is flanked by decorative jambs, which in turn are topped by foliage capitals. Atop the jambs are a set of buttresses, which converge to form pointed arches.[102] A gablet rises over the main portal and contains tracery paneling and a shield bearing the arms of the Archdiocese of New York.[76][102]

The main entrance originally contained a pair of square-headed marble doors.[102] The current bronze doors were designed by Charles Maginnis and sculpted by John Angel, and they were installed in 1949.[166][167] Each door is 16.5 by 5.5 feet (5.0 by 1.7 m) and weighs 9,200 pounds (4,200 kg).[189][219] The main doors are generally kept open to welcome visitors; to save energy, a second set of glass pocket doors is installed directly behind.[220] The main doors are decorated with relief sculptures representing three men and three women, with inscriptions indicating their significance to the cathedral and with particular focus on missionary work and assistance for migrants:[167][221]

 
The bronze doors of the cathedral, prior to restoration

Above the central opening is a balustrade made of rich pierced tracery; it contains a row of niches, measuring 7.5 feet (2.3 m) high, for statues.[76][102] These niches are decorated by columns with foliage capitals and gablets, with tracery and finials.[31][222] The niches depict six archangels: Michael, Gabriel, Uriel, Raphael, Chamuel, and Jophiel.[164] Above these niches is a rose window, measuring 26 feet (7.9 m) in diameter and designed by Charles Connick.[31][222] The rose window is blue with red, green, white, and gold panels. The window depicts eight types of leaves at its center, as well as trefoils with white doves.[164] The main gable is carried up to the roof lines, terminating at a cornice with crockets that support a foliated cross.[223][216] On either side of the jambs of the central window are buttresses, terminated by pinnacles, and between these and the buttresses of the tower are rich Gothic panels, terminated by crocketed gablets.[223]

Towers edit

The towers on either side of the central gable measure 32 by 32 feet (9.8 by 9.8 m) at the base and retain this square cross-section to a height of 136 feet (41 m).[63][210][223] The walls of the towers along Fifth Avenue are 12 to 14 feet (3.7 to 4.3 m) thick.[62] The ground story of the towers has portals similar in design to that at the center, but there are shields in the central panel of each gablet. The shield in the left tower has the arms of the United States and the shield in the right tower has the arms of New York.[63][223] The second story, at the same height as the rose window, has molded jambs and tracery and is topped by gablets with tracery. The third story has four small windows on each side, topped by a cornice and pierced battlement. The towers are flanked by massive buttresses decorated with tabernacles, and the tops of the towers' square portions have clustered pinnacles.[224] Above the square cross-sections are octagonal lanterns measuring 54 feet (16 m) tall.[63][210][224] Circular stone stairways and a chime of bells were installed in the towers.[224]

The towers are topped by spires measuring 140 feet (43 m) high.[63][210][224] The spires are composed of two tiers with elaborate molding and tracery; the upper tier of each tower had a foliate finial above it.[224] The spires were also planned with octagonal cross-sections, tapering from a base measuring 32 feet (9.8 m) across to a pinnacle measuring 2 feet (0.61 m) across. Also planned within the spires were floors, constructed at intervals of 20 feet (6.1 m).[94]

Nave edit

 
Stained glass example

The nave is about 164 feet (50 m) long as measured from the Fifth Avenue facade.[25][225] It measures 96 feet (29 m) wide if chapels are not included, or around 120 feet (37 m) wide if the chapels in the side aisles are included.[25][225] The nave consists of a center aisle and two side aisles running west–east. The center aisle is 48 feet (15 m) wide and 112 feet (34 m) high while the side aisles are 24 feet (7.3 m) wide and 54 feet (16 m) high.[49][63] Internally, the nave is divided into seven bays from west to east. The westernmost bay is part of the towers along Fifth Avenue and the easternmost bay is part of the transept. The westernmost bay is 26 feet (7.9 m) wide and the other bays are 23 feet (7.0 m) wide.[25][225] Just inside the entrances within the westernmost bay are busts of Pope Francis, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope John Paul II, and Pope Paul VI, all of whom have previously visited the cathedral.[226]

Thirty-two white marble columns divide the center and side aisles.[215] The marble columns are 5 feet (1.5 m) in diameter and are set up in sections weighing 8 short tons (7.1 long tons; 7.3 t) each.[68] Each column consists of multiple smaller columns: four at the corners, measuring 12 inches (300 mm) in diameter, and eight surrounding the central shaft, measuring 6 inches (150 mm) in diameter. The columns are 35 feet (11 m) tall to the bottom of the arches that support the nave's ceiling. Above the center aisle is a series of groin vaults supported by molded ribs, with foliate bosses at the intersection of each vault.[25][227] The ceiling has holes with diameters of 1.5 inches (38 mm); ropes could be threaded through these holes to allow repairs and cleaning.[228] The side aisles are similar to those at Saint-Ouen Abbey, Rouen, while the columns and ceiling are similar to British models such as Westminster Abbey.[32]

 
Looking east from the nave toward the altar in the sanctuary

The northern and southern facades are divided into five bays, with buttresses and pinnacles between each bay. The lower section of each bay contains an arched window measuring 13.5 feet (4.1 m) wide and 27 feet (8.2 m) wide. Mullions divide each of these windows vertically into three sections, and the top of each window has tracery.[224] Above these windows is the triforium, which is 56 feet (17 m) above the nave floor.[229] Four arches on either side of the nave support the triforium, which is 16 feet (4.9 m) tall. The clerestory level of the nave rises for 38 feet (12 m) above the triforium and contains six bays. Each clerestory window is 14.5 feet (4.4 m) wide and 26 feet (7.9 m) high.[25][228] The top of the clerestory is 104 feet (32 m) above ground.[230]

There are twelve chapels in the side aisles.[84] Located under the side aisles' windowsills, the chapels each measure 14 feet (4.3 m) wide and 18 feet (5.5 m) high.[25][225] The chapels have similar vaulted ceilings to the nave,[25] and each has its their own altars.[77][213] On the northern side-aisle is a dark-wood baptistery on a marble podium,[213] The baptistery was designed by John La Farge.[104] The chapels include one for St. Bernard and St. Bridget.[213] Among the altars are those for Saint Elizabeth, designed by Roman artist Paolo Medici; a Saint Jean-Baptiste de La Salle altar, sculpted by Dominic Borgia; and the Saint Louis and the Saint Michael altars, designed by Tiffany & Co.[231]

Transepts edit

The transepts measure 144 feet (44 m) from north to south.[25][225] The transepts contain entrances facing north on 51st Street and south on 50th Street. These entrances are similar in design to the central gable on Fifth Avenue.[230] As planned, the transept doorways were to measure 26 feet (7.9 m) wide and 43 feet (13 m) high.[216] The large transept window over the 50th Street door represents St. Patrick, while that over the 51st Street door represents the Immaculate Conception.[66][232] The transept windows measure 28 feet (8.5 m) wide by 58 feet (18 m) tall and are divided by mullions into six vertical sections.[66][230] Over each transept window rises a paneled gablet. A row of niches crosses each of the transepts' facades at the eave line. Above this, each facade has a gable with pinnacles and pierced battlements, which in turn is topped by an octagonal pinnacle and foliated cross.[230]

On both sides of either entrance are tall windows. The windows are similar in design to those on the side aisles of the nave.[230] The side windows depict the Four Evangelists.[68] These windows are flanked by octagonal buttresses, which contain spiral stairs leading to the triforium and roofs.[230] The roof at the intersection of the nave and transept contains a central finial 15 feet (4.6 m) high, which is gilded and is decorated with foliage and flowers.[25][212]

Inside the transepts are the Stations of the Cross, which are carved in stone and were manufactured by the Stoltzenberg Company in Roermond, the Netherlands.[233] There are five Stations of the Cross in total.[234] Three of them received prizes from the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893 before they were installed at the cathedral.[235][234] In 1908, bronze screens were installed at both transept entrances, measuring 17 feet (5.2 m) tall and 14 feet (4.3 m) wide. The bronze screens were designed so the transepts' wooden doors could open directly into them. Each screen had six wrought-bronze panels with ornamentation.[129] The south transept contained the Altar of the Sacred Heart, which was made of bronze and had an elaborate tabernacle.[236] The north transept contained the Holy Family altar, made of white Carrara marble and dedicated in 1893.[110][237]

Sanctuary edit

 
Apsidal stained glass windows in the clerestory

The sanctuary floor is raised six steps above the floor of the nave, connected to it via a set of gray marble steps.[238] The sanctuary is 95 feet (29 m) long and measures 124 feet (38 m) wide.[25][210][225] The roof is made of slate, though the clerestory roof has a metal cresting 5.5 feet (1.7 m) high.[212] There is a 15-foot-high (4.6 m) cross at the east end of the roof, which has flowers and foliage ornaments.[25][212]

Ambulatory edit

The ambulatory, or side aisle of the sanctuary, is divided from west to east into three bays, similar to those in the nave. The apse has a convex polygonal wall with five bays, which are divided by buttresses with pinnacles.[230] Each bay of the apse has a window 14.5 feet (4.4 m) wide and 26 feet (7.9 m) high. The windows are divided by mullions into four vertical sections; they are surmounted by paneled gablets with traceries. The walls between the gablets and pinnacles are finished by pierced battlements.[212] The south ambulatory has a marble Pietà sculpture designed by William Ordway Partridge[221] and completed in 1905.[239] The south ambulatory also contains St. Joseph's Altar, which is made of bronze and mosaic.[240] The first four Cardinals' galeros,[e] or brimmed red felt hats, are mounted at the back of the sanctuary;[241] the Catholic Church stopped issuing galeros to its cardinals in 1969.[242]

There are eleven windows on the sanctuary's clerestory, of which six represent sacrifice (three each on the north and south sides).[243] The three windows on the north side represent the sacrifices of Abel, Noe, and Melchisedech, while the three on the south side represent the sacrifices of Abraham, the Paschal Lamb, and the Mount of Calvary.[25][244] The five windows on the convex portion of the apse represent subjects from the history of the Lord.[243] The apsidal windows represent the resurrection of Lazarus, the communion of St. John, the resurrection of Jesus, the giving of the keys of heaven to St. Peter, and Jesus meeting the disciples going to Emmaus.[25][245]

Chancel and high altar edit

The original chancel and high altar, donated by Cardinal McCloskey,[84] were three steps above the sanctuary floor and contained a platform of richly colored marble.[35][246] The altar was made in Rome[84][246] and designed in the Italian Gothic style.[247][248] The altar steps intersected a marble tabernacle inlaid with precious stones and mosaics.[246][248] Three bas-reliefs on the sides and front of the altar were carved in white marble.[210][247] The archbishop's pulpit, on the north side of the altar, was made of wood.[213] In 1885, a Gothic-style octagonal pulpit was installed at the south side of the high altar. Weighing 16 short tons (14 long tons; 15 t) and measuring 14 feet (4.3 m) tall, the pulpit was made mostly of Carrara marble, except for six supporting pillars, which were made of Vienna marble.[92] A heavy marble balustrade with carved panels surrounded the main pulpit, which itself was accessed by six marble steps.[92][249] The altar was compared to a wedding cake when it was first consecrated.[150] In 1930, a 50-foot-long (15 m) marble altar rail was designed by Robert J. Reiley and installed in front of the altar. The rail had carvings of saints.[141]

At the rear of the original high altar was a stylobate with a reredos, or altar screen, measuring 30 feet (9.1 m) long and 10 feet (3.0 m) high.[246] The clergy of the Archdiocese of New York gifted the altar screen,[77][84] which was carved from Poitiers stone in France.[77] The reredos was divided vertically into five parts: a central portion measuring 6 feet (1.8 m) wide, flanked on either side by panels measuring 7.5 feet (2.3 m) and 4.5 feet (1.4 m) wide. The base of the reredos was made of white marble, inlaid with alabaster and decorated with a bas-relief on each side. The reredos was topped by three towers, one at the center and one on each extreme end. The center tower ascended 48 feet (15 m) above the sanctuary floor while the corner towers ascended 18.5 feet (5.6 m) above the sanctuary floor.[246] The center spire had a statue of Christ, while the other spires had statues of St. Peter and St. Paul.[77][246] Between the towers were placed six niches with angels, three on either side of the center spire.[246]

In 1942, the original high altar was removed from St. Patrick's Cathedral and consecrated at Fordham University Church in the Bronx.[250][251] It was replaced with the current high altar, which is made of gray-white Italian marble and topped by a bronze baldachin.[155][156] Maginnis & Walsh designed the high altar. It lacks a tabernacle and a reredos, similarly to other high altars in cathedrals. The altar table measures 4 feet (1.2 m) deep and about 12 feet (3.7 m) long. The baldachin is supported by four piers; it slopes upward to a pinnacle with a statue of Christ the King. The statue is flanked by smaller pinnacles with angelic figures.[152][252] The pulpit is along the south (right) side of the right altar.[221]

Crypt edit

Under the high altar is a crypt in which notable Catholic figures that served the Archdiocese of New York are entombed. It is accessed by a set of doors behind the high altar.[253] Originally, the entrance to the crypt was hidden by a heavy stone slab that required six people to lift. A stone staircase descended to a vault behind a set of slate doors.[254] Large bronze letters with the names of those buried in the crypt are inscribed in the crypt doors.[255] The crypt is about 21 feet (6.4 m) long and 10 feet (3.0 m) high, with a width of 10 feet (3.0 m) between the rows of coffins on either side. The crypt is square in plan except for a ventilating pipe at the southeast corner.[254] It has space to bury either 24[256] or 42 people.[236][254]

The crypt's interments include all nine past deceased Archbishops of New York:

 
The bas relief above the main entrance in 2016

Other interments include:

Fulton J. Sheen, Auxiliary Bishop of New York from 1951 to 1965 and later Bishop of Rochester, was interred in the crypt in 1979.[278] During the late 2010s, the Archdiocese of New York and his relatives were involved in a three-year court dispute to keep his remains at St. Patrick's Cathedral. On June 27, 2019, Sheen's remains were disinterred from St. Patrick's and transferred to St. Mary's Cathedral in Peoria, Illinois, where he had been ordained.[279][280]

Cathedral close edit

Lady chapel edit

 
Map of the cathedral close of St. Patrick's Cathedral in 1916. At right are depicted (from top to bottom) the rectory, Lady chapel, and archbishop's residence.

The Lady chapel, designed by Charles T. Mathews, is east of the apse, facing along Madison Avenue.[87] It was designed in a 13th-century Gothic style. The rear wall of the apse was partly removed in the first decade of the 20th century to allow the construction of an ambulatory around the choir's outer wall.[120][121] The removed section of the apse's wall became part of Our Lady of Lourdes Church at that time.[281][282] The chapel was designed with a roof and belfry made of green bronze, as well as walls surrounded by statues. The walls of the chapel were designed to be plain at the bottom, becoming progressively more elaborately designed at the top.[120][121] Several gargoyles were designed as decoration for the chapel's exterior.[283] The chapel contains fifteen stained-glass windows depicting the mysteries of the rosary, five each for glorious, joyful, and sorrowful scenes. The Lady chapel has nine tall windows, as well as two side chapels with three windows each.[131]

The chapel is separated from the apse by a 48-foot-tall (15 m) glass wall that rests on a 23-foot-wide (7.0 m) glass beam. The glass wall is designed with a minimalist bronze frame.[220][284] The interior of the Lady chapel was designed with carved stonework. The original altar, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, had a high carved reredos, a mosaic floor, and a blue color scheme.[120][121] The altar was replaced in 1942. The new altar is reached by three brown-marble steps. It consists of a white-marble reredos, an altar table, with a multicolored inlaid marble frontal named "Annunciation" designed by Hildreth Meiere,[285] and a statue of the Lady on top.[157] Under the Lady chapel is a crypt for the Kelly family, which had paid for the chapel.[131]

Rectory edit

The rectory (originally the Vicar General's house[89]) is at the southwest corner with 51st Street, on the northeastern section of the cathedral close.[87][126] It carries the address 460 Madison Avenue.[87] The Gothic-style building is three and a half stories high[2] and is clad with Tuckahoe stone and white marble.[89][90] As designed, it covers a lot measuring 54 by 47 feet (16 by 14 m). The basement was originally designed as the kitchen, laundry, and servants' quarters. The first floor had a hall clad with marble tiles; the reception and dining rooms were on the left and two parlors were on the right of the hall. The second and third floors were designed as bedrooms. White oak and black walnut was used throughout the building. The rectory had ceilings of 14 feet (4.3 m) on the first and second floors, 12 feet (3.7 m) on the third floor, and 12 feet (3.7 m) on the fourth.[89] It had 30 rooms in total.[148]

The rectory was substantially unchanged from its early-1880s construction until 1940. A new window was installed on the southern facade at ground level; new plumbing, electric wiring, an elevator, and a telephone switchboard were installed; and the curtains were replaced.[148] The two first-floor parlors were converted into four offices and a waiting room, and the upper stories were divided into smaller bedrooms and studies.[149] The rectory retained some original design features such as its black-walnut fireplace mantels.[148]

In 1920, the rectory also hosted the marriage of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald.[253]

Archbishop's residence edit

 
Archbishop's Residence
 
Plaque commemorating Pope Paul VI's visit to the cathedral in 1965.

The archbishop's residence is at the northwest corner with 50th Street, occupying the southeastern section of the cathedral close.[87][126] It carries the address 452 Madison Avenue.[87] The archbishop's residence covers 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2).[286][287] The Gothic-style building is three and a half stories high and is also clad with white marble.[2] A plaque commemorating Pope Paul VI's 1965 visit to the cathedral[288] is mounted on the facade.[289]

As of 2015, Cardinal Dolan shares the archbishop's house with three other priests.[287] On the third floor is a chapel for John the Apostle. The right-side wall has a plaque measuring 18 by 12 inches (460 by 300 mm) with a holy water font made of silver. The Assumption of Mary, flanked by cherubs, is depicted atop the holy water font. The font was given by Pope Paul VI to Cardinal Cooke in 1971.[290]

Staff edit

As of 2023, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan is the archbishop of St. Patrick's Cathedral,[291] having served in this position since 2009.[292] Since November 2021, Enrique Salvo has served as the rector of the cathedral.[293] In addition, Rev. Andrew King is the master of ceremonies, and Rev. Donald Haggerty, Rev. Arthur Golino, and Rev. Ed Dougherty are also on staff. Rev. Stephen Ries serves as Cardinal Dolan's Priest Secretary.[294]

The director of music is Jennifer Pascual.[295] The associate directors of music, who also serve as organists, are Daniel Brondel[296] and Michael Hey.[297] In addition, Robert M. Evers is the Music Administrator and Programs Editor.[294]

Bells edit

There are nineteen bells at St. Patrick's Cathedral.[298][299] The bells were created by the firm of Messrs. Paccard in France and installed in 1897.[300][301] They hang in the northern tower of St. Patrick's Cathedral 180 feet (55 m) above ground.[298][302] Since there are fewer than 23 bells, the minimum needed to be able to ring two octaves, they hang in a chime instead of a carillon. A 1983 New York Times article reported that the chime was rung every day at 8 a.m., noon, and 6 p.m. Additionally, on Sundays, the chime was rung every 15 minutes between 10 a.m. and noon and every 15 minutes between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.[303]

Originally, the bells were powered by a compressed air mechanism in the basement.[304] Pressing a key on the keyboard in the sacristy would activate an electric signal, which in turn would release the compressed air to ring each bell.[305][306] According to The New York Times, St. Patrick's bells were the first to be operated by compressed air.[306] Until 1952, the bells could also be rung using tracker action; the bell-ringer would pull a 110-foot-long (34 m) rod between the lever and clapper of each bell.[298]

Each of the bells was donated by a different person or organization. The name of the bell, its donor, and the figure of the crucifixion is carved on each respective bell.[113]

Name Tone Approximate Weight[f] Donor[113]
St. Patrick B♭ 6,608 pounds (2,997 kg) Congregation of St. Patrick's Cathedral
Blessed Virgin[g] C 4,626 pounds (2,098 kg) John B. Manning
St. Joseph D 3,260 pounds (1,480 kg) Joseph J. O'Donohue
Holy Name E♭ 2,693 pounds (1,222 kg) Holy Name Society
St. Michael E 2,319 pounds (1,052 kg) M. C. Coleman
St. Anne F 1,956 pounds (887 kg) Henry McAleenan
St. Elizabeth G 1,357 pounds (616 kg) Marquise di San Marzano
St. Augustine of Hippo A♭ 1,163 pounds (528 kg) Augustin Daly
St. Anthony of Padua A 971 pounds (440 kg) I. L. Fox
St. Agnes B♭ 802 pounds (364 kg) Lydia Fox
St. John the Evangelist B 668 pounds (303 kg) John D. Crimmins
St. Bridget C 574 pounds (260 kg) Perry and Catherine I. Minister
St. Francis Xavier C♯ 476 pounds (216 kg) Congregation of St. Francis Xavier Church
St. Peter D 402 pounds (182 kg) George B. Coleman
St. Cecilia E♭ 345 pounds (156 kg) Mrs. Thomas I. Ryan
St. Helena E 286 pounds (130 kg) Leonora and Agnes Keyes
St. Alphonsus Liguori F 241 pounds (109 kg) Mary A. Mills
St. Thomas Aquinas F♯ 204 pounds (93 kg) Thomas Kelly
St. Godfrey G 173 pounds (78 kg) Children of Godfrey Amend

Organs edit

 
Organ manual for the Gallery Organ

St. Patrick's Cathedral has two pipe organs with more than 9,000 pipes, 206 stops, 150 ranks, and 10 divisions between them.[144] The two organs are the Gallery Organ, completed in 1930, and the Chancel Organ, completed in 1928; both were manufactured by George Kilgen & Son. Since the mid-1990s, the two organs have been able to operate as a single unit.[182][307] The two organs are controlled by twin 5-manual drawknob consoles and have 207 registers, 116 stops, and 142 ranks between them.[144]

The Chancel Organ is in the north ambulatory of the sanctuary, adjoining the Chapel of St. Joseph.[144][307] It originally had three manuals, which controlled four divisions. The Chancel Organ originally had 46 registers, 18 stops, and 18 ranks.[144] There were 1,480 pipes, placed inside an oak case with Gothic-style carvings.[307] The Gallery Organ is in the western part of the nave below the Fifth Avenue rose window, as well as in the triforium near the south transept.[144][307] The Gallery Organ had a four-manual stopkey console with 157 registers and 114 ranks.[144] There were 7,855 pipes; the shortest measured 0.5 inches (13 mm) long and the longest, 32 feet (9.8 m) long, crossed the triforia.[307]

Organ history edit

The first organ was built by George Jardine & Son and installed in 1879.[210] It was composed of four manuals, 51 stops, and 56 ranks.[144] In 1880, J.H. & C.S. Odell installed an organ in the chancel[210] with 2 manuals, 20 stops and 23 ranks.[144]

George Kilgen & Son designed the two current organs after Pietro Yon was hired to the music staff in the late 1920s.[144][307] The Chancel Organ was dedicated on January 30, 1928,[308] while the Gallery Organ was dedicated on February 11, 1930.[309] Tonal modifications were made in the 1940s and 1950s, and additional renovations occurred in the 1970s and 1980s.[307] In 1993, while John-Michael Caprio was music director, a major restoration of the organs commenced, and the old three-manual consoles were replaced with twin five-manual consoles.[182] The Peragallo Pipe Organ Company removed the cathedral's organ for cleaning in early 1994.[310] The next year, the Chancel Organ was restored.[182] The restoration was completed after the Echo Organ in the triforium was restored.[307] All the organs of the cathedral were removed from the cathedral during the 2012–2015 restoration, and were restored, cleaned and re-voiced by the Peragallo Company before being reinstalled in 2015.[311]

Directors of music edit

In the first nine decades of St. Patrick's Cathedral's history, it only had four music directors.[307][312] The first organist and director of music at the current St. Patrick's Cathedral was William F. Pecher, who had been hired at the Old Cathedral in 1862 and served at the current cathedral from 1879 to his death in 1904.[313][314] Afterward, Jacques C. Ungerer served as the director of music until 1929. He was succeeded by Pietro Yon, who at the time was an assistant director.[307] When Yon suffered a stroke in 1943, Dr. Charles Marie Courboin was temporarily appointed to Yon's position.[315][316] Yon died the same year[317] and Courboin served as music director until 1970.[318]

The cathedral's fifth music director, John Grady, served as a music director and organist from 1970 to his death in 1990.[319] Grady was succeeded by John-Michael Caprio, who also served until his death, in 1997.[320] Four people served as directors over the following six years: John C. West (1997–1999), Robert Long (1999–2001), Don Stefano Concordia (2001), and Johannes Somary (2001–2003).[307] Since 2003, Jennifer Pascual has served as the music director,[295] being the first woman to hold this position.[321]

Incidents edit

 
Facade detail (September 2006)

Over the years, St. Patrick's Cathedral has been targeted by bombings and threats:

  • On October 13, 1914, a bomb exploded on the northwest corner of the cathedral. It tore an 18-inch hole in the floor. One injury was reported: a boy whose head was grazed by a flying piece of metal.[322][323]
  • In March 1915, Italian anarchists Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone of the Bresci Circle were arrested for attempting to detonate a bomb in the cathedral.[324]
  • In January 1951, a letter threatened that a bomb would be set off at a Sunday Mass, but the Mass continued without any disruption.[325] Another, telephoned bomb threat occurred in June 1953.[326]
  • On April 18, 2019, just two days after a fire damaged the Notre-Dame de Paris, a 37-year-old New Jersey man carrying a pair of full two-gallon cans of gasoline, two bottles of lighter fluid, and two extended butane lighters was arrested after attempting to enter the cathedral.[327] The man was a philosophy professor at nearby Seton Hall University who suffered from schizophrenia.[328][329]

In addition, there have been numerous instances of vandalism:

Other incidents have included:

  • A 2020 report by the Vatican accepted earlier reports that the laicized Cardinal Theodore McCarrick committed acts of sex abuse at the cathedral between 1971 and 1972.[334][335]
  • On September 21, 1988, a mentally ill man killed an usher and seriously injured an officer before being fatally shot.[336]
  • On December 10, 1989, ACT UP, a pressure group that advocates for AIDS awareness, led a demonstration of 4,500 people outside the cathedral as part of their Stop the Church campaign. About 130 infiltrated the church and disrupted the Mass, forcing Cardinal John O'Connor to abandon his sermon.[337][338]
  • In 2002, "shock jocks" Opie and Anthony held a promotion that encouraged listeners of their radio show to have sex in risky places. Two listeners were caught in a vestibule of the church doing so; they were arrested, along with comedian Paul Mecurio.[339]
  • On February 15, 2024, a funeral service was held for LGBTQ activist Cecilia Gentili, during which eulogies were delivered, which were denounced as irreverent and the behavior by attendees was denounced as sacrilegious and scandalous by the New York Archdiocese. Cardinal Dolan ordered a Mass of Reparation to be offered in reparation for the incident.[340]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c A less precise measurement of 330 feet (100 m) is given by several sources.[98][34][102]
  2. ^ Albert stone would have cost $800,000, Belleville stone would have cost $805,000, and Dorchester stone would have cost $830,000.[48]
  3. ^ Some sources prior to the cathedral's expansion gave a figure of 70 windows.[210][211]
  4. ^ Harper's gives a different measurement of 330 feet (100 m) for the outside length and 172 feet (52 m) for the width at the transept.[216]
  5. ^ Those belonging to John McCloskey, John Murphy Farley, Patrick Joseph Hayes, and Francis Spellman.[241]
  6. ^ Weight is rounded to the nearest pound according to St. Patrick's website.[298] Compressed Air gives slightly different weight notations for all of these bells.[302]
  7. ^ Also originally named Our Lady's[302]

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Cultural Resource Information System (CRIS)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. November 7, 2014. Retrieved July 20, 2023.
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patrick, cathedral, midtown, manhattan, cathedral, predecessor, current, parish, lower, manhattan, patrick, cathedral, patrick, cathedralis, catholic, cathedral, midtown, manhattan, neighborhood, york, city, seat, archbishop, york, well, parish, church, cathed. For the cathedral s predecessor and a current parish in Lower Manhattan see St Patrick s Old Cathedral St Patrick s Cathedralis a Catholic cathedral in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City It is the seat of the Archbishop of New York as well as a parish church The cathedral occupies a city block bounded by Fifth Avenue Madison Avenue 50th Street and 51st Street directly across from Rockefeller Center Designed by James Renwick Jr it is the largest Gothic Revival Catholic cathedral in North America St Patrick s CathedralView of the cathedral from the south on Fifth AvenueLocation631 Fifth Avenue Manhattan New York U S CountryUnited StatesDenominationCatholic ChurchTraditionLatin ChurchWebsiteSt Patrick s CathedralHistoryStatusCathedralDedicationSaint PatrickDedicatedOctober 5 1910Earlier dedicationMay 25 1879ConsecratedOctober 5 1910ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveArchitect s James Renwick Jr Architectural typeChurchStyleDecorated Neo GothicSpecificationsCapacity2 400Length396 7 feet 120 9 m Number of spires2Spire height329 6 feet 100 5 m a MaterialsTuckahoe marbleBells19 29 122 73 lb 13 209 85 kg AdministrationArchdioceseArchdiocese of New YorkDeanerySouth ManhattanClergyArchbishopTimothy Cardinal DolanRectorVery Rev Enrique SalvoLaityDirector of musicJennifer Pascual D M A Organist s Daniel BrondelMark PacoeOCIA coordinatorSueanne NilsenSt Patrick s Cathedral ComplexU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkNew York State Register of Historic PlacesNew York City Landmark No 0267Coordinates40 45 31 N 73 58 35 W 40 75861 N 73 97639 W 40 75861 73 97639Area2 acres 0 81 ha Built1878NRHP reference No 76001250NYSRHP No 06101 000367NYCL No 0267Significant datesAdded to NRHPDecember 8 1976 3 Designated NHLDecember 8 1976 4 Designated NYSRHPJune 23 1980 1 Designated NYCLOctober 19 1966 2 The cathedral was constructed starting in 1858 to accommodate the growing Archdiocese of New York and to replace St Patrick s Old Cathedral Work was halted in the early 1860s during the American Civil War the cathedral was completed in 1878 and dedicated on May 25 1879 The archbishop s house and rectory were added in the early 1880s both designed by James Renwick Jr and the spires were added in 1888 A Lady chapel designed by Charles T Mathews was constructed from 1901 to 1906 The cathedral was consecrated on October 5 1910 after all its debt had been paid off Extensive restorations of the cathedral were conducted several times including in the 1940s 1970s and 2010s St Patrick s Cathedral is clad in marble and has several dozen stained glass windows It measures 332 feet 101 m long with a maximum width of 174 feet 53 m at the transepts The bronze doors that form the cathedral s main entrance on Fifth Avenue are flanked by towers with spires rising 329 5 feet 100 m The northern tower contains nineteen bells and the interior has two pipe organs Inside is a nave flanked by several chapels two transepts a chancel and apse and a crypt East of the apse are the rectory Lady chapel and archbishop s residence facing Madison Avenue The cathedral is a New York City designated landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Contents 1 History 1 1 Early site history 1 2 Planning 1 3 Construction 1 3 1 Initial work and hiatus 1 3 2 Completion 1 4 Opening and late 19th century 1 5 20th century 1 5 1 Lady chapel and consecration 1 5 2 1920s through 1940s 1 5 3 1950s to 1990s 1 6 21st century 2 Main structure 2 1 Location and dimensions 2 2 Western facade 2 2 1 Central gable and doors 2 2 2 Towers 2 3 Nave 2 4 Transepts 2 5 Sanctuary 2 5 1 Ambulatory 2 5 2 Chancel and high altar 2 6 Crypt 3 Cathedral close 3 1 Lady chapel 3 2 Rectory 3 3 Archbishop s residence 4 Staff 5 Bells 6 Organs 6 1 Organ history 6 2 Directors of music 7 Incidents 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editThe Diocese of New York was founded by Pope Pius VII in 1808 5 6 7 St Patrick s was founded shortly afterward to serve New York City s small but growing Catholic population which could no longer fit in St Peter s Church 6 A site was selected on Mulberry Street in what is now Lower Manhattan and St Patrick s Old Cathedral was dedicated in 1815 8 9 At the time there were 15 000 Catholics in the diocese 7 Early site history edit In March 1810 the Rev Father Anthony Kohlmann bought the land on which the present cathedral stands The site was bounded by what is now Fifth Avenue on the west 51st Street on the north Madison Avenue to the east and 50th Street on the south 10 11 The Jesuit community built a college on the site which at the time was north of New York City proper 12 It contained a fine old house which was fitted with a chapel of St Ignatius 13 In 1813 the Jesuits sold the lot to the Diocese of New York The school closed in 1814 and the diocese gave the property to Dom Augustin LeStrange the abbot of a community of Trappists who were fleeing persecution by French authorities In addition to a small monastic community they looked after orphans With the downfall of Napoleon the Trappists returned to France in 1815 but the neighboring orphanage was maintained by the diocese into the late nineteenth century 14 In 1828 trustees of St Patrick s St Peter s and St Mary s met to discuss the feasibility of establishing a burial ground at Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets 15 The trustees bought the property in 1829 but did not use it as a cemetery 16 17 Bishop John Dubois reopened the chapel in 1840 for Catholics employed at the Deaf and Dumb Asylum and in the general neighborhood A modest frame church was built for the parish of St John the Evangelist and dedicated in 1841 by the Rev John Hughes administrator of the diocese 16 18 Tickets were sold to the dedication to ease the parish s debt but the mortgage was foreclosed upon and in 1844 the church was sold at auction 18 The church s pastor the Rev Felix Larkin was said to have died from stress as a result 19 The Rev Michael A Curran was appointed to raise funds for the devastated parish and used an old college hall as a temporary church Curran continued raising funds to buy back the church during the Great Famine in Ireland eventually succeeding and taking the deed in his own name 19 Planning edit By the early 1840s the number of Catholics in the Diocese of New York had increased to 200 000 7 20 As a result several additional dioceses were created in New York state Most of New York state s Catholics at the time were Irish 7 The Diocese of New York was made an archdiocese by Pope Pius IX on July 19 1850 21 Bishop John Joseph Hughes was raised to the level of archbishop soon afterward 11 21 As early as 1850 Hughes determined that the growing Archdiocese of New York needed a large cathedral to replace the older cathedral in Lower Manhattan 22 23 24 At the time the Fifth Avenue site was still relatively rural 25 26 The site faced the gardens of Columbia University to the west 27 but the surrounding area was otherwise characterized by rocks and unopened streets 25 Even so Hughes believed the site would grow into a populous business area 28 In 1853 Hughes announced that he had hired the firm Renwick amp Rodrigue to design a cathedral on Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets 23 One partner in the firm William Rodrigue was Hughes s brother in law 29 30 The other partner James Renwick Jr was largely responsible for designing the new St Patrick s Cathedral 23 29 Renwick spent three years in Europe to look for design influences for New York City s new Catholic cathedral 31 He took particular inspiration from the unfinished Cologne Cathedral 31 32 Renwick amp Rodrigue originally planned a larger cathedral than the structure that was ultimately built Hughes requested in 1857 that the firm reduce the dimensions of the new cathedral 25 33 To make way for the clergy s and archbishop s residences the ambulatory was removed from the plans 33 34 The area behind the apse would have contained a chapel dedicated to the Blessed Virgin but this was removed entirely 35 The numerous heavy buttresses in the design were also removed 31 Plans for the cathedral were finalized in 1858 23 36 To raise money for the effort Hughes asked wealthy Catholics in the Archdiocese of New York to subscribe to a building fund for the new cathedral One hundred and three subscribers donated 1 000 apiece 23 37 and two subscribers were non Catholics 37 The first construction contracts for the new Fifth Avenue cathedral were issued in June 1858 The new St Patrick s Cathedral was to take up the entire block bounded by Fifth and Madison Avenues between 50th and 51st Streets The front facade on Fifth Avenue would have three large entrances and the northwest and southwest corners of the cathedral would be topped by an octagonal spire The interior was to be designed in a cruciform layout 38 39 40 The cathedral was to be built in the Gothic Revival style 41 42 In addition an archbishop s house and a chapel would face Madison Avenue 42 At the time there were numerous hospitals asylums and other public institutions along the nearby section of Fifth Avenue 43 38 Construction edit Initial work and hiatus edit nbsp Exterior elevation drawing of the western facade by James Renwick architectOn August 15 1858 the cornerstone was laid just south of the diocese s orphanage 44 45 Archbishop Hughes laid the cornerstone in front of 100 000 spectators near the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 50th Street though the precise location remains unclear 46 That October the architects presented cost estimates for making the cathedral out of white marble brown freestone olive freestone or granite 47 The white marble was the most expensive of the four options with a projected cost of 850 000 and James Hall and William Joyce offered to supply the marble 48 b Even so Renwick recommended that St Patrick s be constructed of white marble citing its durability and beauty 23 48 The archdiocese formed a Bureau of Contracts which first met in December 1858 36 The bureau awarded the marble contract to Hall and Joyce in March 1859 at the time the work was supposed to be finished before January 1 1867 The cost estimate of 867 500 for the entire cathedral equivalent to 23 782 337 in 2023 was unusually low for a project of that size 40 Construction progressed for two years after the cornerstone was laid 23 26 The work consisted of laying stone blocks for the foundation each weighing between one and four tons 41 The foundation was excavated to a maximum depth of 20 feet 6 1 m where it was laid on solid rock 24 41 49 The excavations were relatively small because the underlying layer of bedrock was shallow 50 rising nearly to the surface near the transept on Fifth Avenue 24 49 White marble walls were then constructed above the foundation 41 By January 1860 the cathedral had been erected to about 7 feet 2 1 m above ground level 51 Work was slightly delayed by a stonecutters strike that March 52 53 The walls had reached the water table when all 73 000 in funds had been exhausted 26 As a result in August 1860 Hughes decided to suspend all work on the new cathedral 54 55 When work was suspended the walls had been built to an average height of 12 feet 3 7 m above ground 41 The onset of the American Civil War in 1861 prevented the resumption of work for several years 23 24 26 Hughes died in January 1864 before the work could resume 26 56 John McCloskey was appointed to succeed Hughes as archbishop 57 58 McCloskey created a plan to finance the construction of the new St Patrick s Cathedral 26 Completion edit By mid 1866 work had again resumed and the walls had been built to 20 feet 6 1 m above ground The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that the interior looks like a large field and said the cathedral would be worthy to be regarded as one of the wonders of the Republic 42 Some 100 000 was spent on the Catholic cathedral in 1867 59 and the constituent churches of the Archdiocese of New York promised to spend 100 000 a year until the cathedral was complete 60 Most funding for the cathedral came from the parishioners of these churches who were mainly poor Irish immigrants An editorial in the New York World described the cathedral as being constructed not of the superfluity of wealth but for the most part out of the offerings of poverty 61 The cathedral s masonry was laid during summer as the stonework could not be laid in the cold 50 By late 1870 the marble walls had been built to a height of 54 feet 16 m and the transept was finished 50 62 The entrance on Fifth Avenue measuring 70 feet 21 m tall had also been finished 62 Over a hundred workers were busy quarrying marble from Pleasantville north of New York City The marble was transported down to New York City via the Harlem Railroad where a branch track led to the new cathedral s site 50 The construction of the new cathedral drew relatively little interest for New York City s non Catholic population 63 though several commentators praised the cathedral s design 31 An anonymous author for the Real Estate Record and Guide wrote that the new St Patrick s Cathedral was the most gorgeous ecclesiastical edifice on this continent though the critics perceived the buttresses on the north and south sides of the facade as altogether unnecessary 64 A reporter for the New York World probably Montgomery Schuyler wrote in 1871 that the cathedral would be one of the leading ecclesiastical structures in the world 31 The trustees of St Patrick s Cathedral borrowed 300 000 from the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank for the new cathedral in 1874 The trustees gave the bank a first mortgage on the cathedral and site as collateral for the loan 65 By late 1875 the roof had been covered with slate and all of the walls were finished except for a small portion along Fifth Avenue 66 The trustees borrowed another 100 000 from the Emigrant Bank in 1876 65 Late that year temporary scaffolding was erected so the interior could be plastered and decorated Almost all the stained glass had been delivered and was being glazed four of these windows had been exhibited at the Centennial Exposition Only one worker had been killed during the construction process according to the American Architect and Building News due to his own carelessness 67 McCloskey made contracts for furnishings in 1874 and again in 1878 58 On November 29 1877 the incomplete St Patrick s Cathedral was opened for public viewing 68 31 A one month long fundraiser for the cathedral commenced on October 22 1878 69 70 In its first three weeks the fundraiser had an average daily attendance of between ten and eleven thousand 71 The fair ran for 36 nights and attracted about 250 000 total visitors when it closed on November 30 72 73 Forty five parishes of the Archdiocese of New York had exhibits at the fair 73 The fundraiser sought to raise 200 000 for the cathedral 69 but it ultimately netted 173 000 23 73 Several months elapsed before the cathedral was readied for its dedication in early 1879 74 Opening and late 19th century edit nbsp Stereoscopic view of the cathedral s appearance prior to the installation of spires The new St Patrick s Cathedral opened on May 25 1879 75 76 77 Thirty five bishops and six archbishops attended the dedication 75 77 78 St Patrick s was met with a generally positive reception from the media 61 The Baltimore Sun for example called it the finest church edifice on the American continent 79 Not all critics spoke of the cathedral positively journalist Clarence Cook authored a criticism that architectural historian Robert A M Stern characterized as being underpinned with religious and ethnic bigotry 61 Cook perceived the facade as being full of clumsy repetition and he wrote of the interior Words cannot express the paltry character of the internal finish of this vaunted structure 80 The new St Patrick s Cathedral and Temple Emanu El comprised the first non Protestant houses of worship on the midtown section of Fifth Avenue 81 At the time the cathedral was far removed from the developed portions of the city 82 The first bishop consecrated in the new cathedral was the Michael J O Farrell of Trenton New Jersey who became the first bishop of the Diocese of Trenton 83 The cathedral s parish originally extended from Seventh Avenue to the East River between 46th and 59th Streets and the section between Madison and Sixth Avenues extended to 42nd Street 84 85 In 1880 the section between Third Avenue and the East River was split to the parish of St John the Evangelist 84 86 During the early 1880s Renwick designed the archbishop s house and rectory on Madison Avenue 87 The Real Estate Record and Guide reported in December 1881 that Renwick had been hired to build a rectory at the southwest corner of Madison Avenue and 51st Street 88 Shortly afterward Renwick filed plans for a four story marble rectory on the site 89 to be built by E D Connoly amp Son and P Walsh 90 The archbishop s house was completed the same year 86 The rectory was completed on May 8 1884 86 A critic for the Real Estate Record characterized the rectory and archbishop s house as having absurd dormer windows in their mansard roofs 91 A memorial marble pulpit was manufactured in Italy and installed in the cathedral in October 1885 The money for the pulpit came from the clergy of the archdiocese who had offered Cardinal McCloskey 10 000 for his golden jubilee and commissioned the pulpit after he had declined the prize 92 A lack of funding precluded spires from being installed when the cathedral was completed 31 79 By late 1885 spires were planned to be installed at a cost of 190 000 93 94 Renwick filed plans for the cathedral spires in September 1885 94 95 and the contract was awarded to George Mann amp Co of Baltimore 96 Excavation of the stone commenced in January 1886 and the spires were constructed starting that September 97 The last stones of the spires were erected in October 1888 at which point the cathedral was considered completed 98 99 At the time several hundred niches remained to be filled with figures and ten chapels did not have their altars yet 99 At 329 5 feet 100 4 m 100 101 a the spires were the tallest structures in New York City 101 The Evening World said the construction of the spires completes a notable ornament to the city 103 Within a year the cathedral was surpassed in height by the New York World Building whose spire rose to 349 feet 106 m 104 The funding shortages at the building s completion had also required that a temporary plaster and wood ceiling be installed atop the cathedral 79 rather than the marble or brick ceiling that Renwick had conceived 79 100 The cathedral never replaced the plaster and wood ceiling 100 105 106 After the spires were finished the trustees of St Patrick s Cathedral decided that bells should be installed in one tower No arrangements had yet been made for the bells because parts of the project such as interior design remained incomplete 107 The cathedral tested a set of four bells in the north tower in July and August 1889 to determine the tower s acoustic properties 108 109 The altar of the Holy Family was consecrated at the cathedral in 1893 110 A set of bells for the cathedral was manufactured in the United States After the archbishop consecrated them the bells were found to be defective and were never hung in the belfry In 1895 the cathedral ordered a second set of bells to be made by the Paccards in France 111 The new bells were blessed by Archbishop Michael Corrigan on August 15 1897 though they had not been installed yet 112 113 The framework for the bells was installed in the north tower the next month 114 At the time of completion St Patrick s had more bells than any other church in the city with 19 by comparison Trinity Church had ten bells and Grace Church had nine 115 Also in 1897 the Spiritual Sons of De La Salle funded a new altar for the cathedral 116 20th century edit Lady chapel and consecration edit nbsp 1913 photograph of the cathedralMargaret A Kelly widow of banker Eugene Kelly died in 1899 and left 200 000 to the cathedral for the construction of a Lady chapel on the condition that the chapel not be constructed until after her death 117 118 Kelly s sons pledged additional funds for the chapel as necessary 119 The next year the trustees of St Patrick s Cathedral held an architectural design competition for the chapel east of the cathedral s apse The trustees received submissions from American Canadian French and British architects before giving the commission to Charles T Mathews of New York City 120 121 After traveling to Europe to study architectural influences Mathews prepared plans for the chapel by September 1900 120 121 Work on the Lady chapel began in July 1901 122 Archbishop Corrigan was simultaneously paying off the debt on the cathedral with the intention of consecrating it after all the debts were paid off in 1908 This date was the centennial of the Archdiocese of New York s founding and the 50 year anniversary of the groundbreaking ceremony However he died in 1902 before the consecration or the retirement of the debt 123 124 Following a construction delay of more than one year the Lady chapel was nearly complete by early 1905 125 The first Mass in the Lady chapel took place in Christmas 1906 126 but the interior furnishings were not complete until 1908 127 The chapel cost 800 000 in total 128 Additional changes to the cathedral took place in the first decade of the 20th century These included the construction of an altar to St Michael on the left side of the Lady chapel as well as an altar to St Joseph on the right side By 1907 a movable bronze screen was to be installed at the transept and the temporary wooden floor dating from the cathedral s construction was planned to be replaced with a permanent marble floor 128 The bronze screens were a gift to celebrate the archdiocese s centennial 129 which almost every archbishop in the United States celebrated at the cathedral in April 1908 130 The Lady chapel was originally outfitted with transparent windows 131 though its stained glass windows were manufactured in Europe starting in 1909 127 In the first half of 1910 the cathedral s debt of 800 000 was completely paid off 132 St Patrick s Cathedral was consecrated on October 5 1910 with Archbishop John Murphy Farley officiating 133 134 By that time the surrounding area was quickly being developed 135 1920s through 1940s edit nbsp View from Rockefeller CenterMonsignor Michael J Lavelle started raising 625 000 from the congregation in 1926 to renovate the cathedral 136 The next year Robert J Reiley was hired to conduct renovations including replacing the wooden floor with a marble floor 137 The floor was replaced between April and December 1927 The old organ was also replaced and new stained glass windows altar and pews were being installed in the Lady chapel The sanctuary was extended approximately 8 feet 2 4 m the metal communion rail was replaced with a bronze and marble rail and the wooden throne was replaced with one of marble 138 Amplifiers 139 140 wrought iron doors 141 and new bronze chandeliers were installed 142 New pews were also installed 143 as were two new organs 144 English stained glass artist and designer Paul Vincent Woodroffe completed the Lady chapel s remaining windows by late 1930 131 145 With the construction of Rockefeller Center to the west several trees were planted around the cathedral in 1939 to complement Rockefeller Center s trees 146 The cathedral s rectory was closed in April 1940 for the first major renovation in its history 147 and it reopened that December 148 149 Archbishop Francis Spellman announced in February 1941 that an anonymous donor had provided funding for a new high altar to be designed by Charles Maginnis According to Spellman s announcement the original high altar had been architecturally inconsistent with the cathedral s design ever since the Lady chapel was completed but a lack of funds had prevented the altar s replacement for four decades 150 151 The reredos behind the original high altar blocked the view of the Lady chapel from the nave but the cathedral s trustees wished to avoid this 152 The old main altar was removed in February 1942 153 154 and the new main altar of St Patrick s Cathedral was consecrated that May 155 156 A new altar in the Lady chapel donated by George J Gillespie was also consecrated in May 1942 157 The George A Fuller Company started renovating the exterior in August 1945 158 after blasting for a nearby building dislodged a stone from the facade 159 The main doorway was narrowed and some of the projecting Gothic ornamentation was eliminated because they were prone to cracks in New York City s climate which was characterized by abrupt temperature decreases 158 160 A bronze cross was placed atop the north tower replacing the original stone cross there 161 The project involved 350 workers at its peak 158 Some funds for the renovation came from a 1946 bequest of 100 000 from radio personality Major Bowes 162 163 By early 1947 the project was completed except for the Lady Chapel and a set of new entrance doors 160 An anonymous donor gave the cathedral a 25 000 window which was designed by Charles J Connick Associates and unveiled in April 1947 164 Work began on an interior renovation in mid 1948 with 17 of the cathedral s 19 altars being replaced 165 Cardinal Francis Spellman blessed the new bronze doors in December 1949 166 167 1950s to 1990s edit nbsp Detail of the entrance October 2007 In 1952 St Patrick s Cathedral received five gifts These funded the electrification of the cathedral chimes an elevator to the main organ kneeling cushions and guard cords in the pews and new stained glass windows 168 The windows depicting 12 male and 12 female saints were installed at the clerestory in 1954 These windows were funded by a bequest by Atlas Portland Cement Company president John R Morron who left 200 000 for the archdiocese in his will 169 170 The cathedral celebrated the 100th anniversary of its cornerstone laying in 1958 171 At the time the cathedral had over three million visitors a year 135 St Patrick s celebrated the 50th anniversary of its consecration two years later 172 The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission LPC considered designating St Patrick s Cathedral as a New York City landmark in early 1966 173 Later that year the LPC designated the cathedral as a New York City Landmark 2 174 Under Cardinal Terence Cooke s leadership the interior of St Patrick s Cathedral was restored starting in 1972 127 That June workers placed scaffolding on the cathedral to protect it from damage due to blasting for the construction of Olympic Tower across 51st Street Afterward over 100 workers cleaned and painted the interior while the cathedral remained open 175 The 800 000 project was completed in April 1973 175 176 The cathedral close consisting of all structures on the same block as the cathedral was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976 10 177 178 St Patrick s Cathedral celebrated the centennial of its opening in May 1979 The cathedral s popularity was attributed to its location in midtown and about 6 000 people attended Mass on Sundays ninety percent of whom were visitors 179 The cathedral s exterior was cleaned the same year 180 181 Further restoration began in 1984 during the episcopate of Cardinal John O Connor As part of the work most of the roof was replaced and the entrance steps doors and walls were also repaired 127 The cathedral s two organs were restored in the mid 1990s 182 21st century edit Under Cardinal Edward Egan another renovation of the cathedral was planned in 2006 183 184 after chunks of rock started falling from the facade 185 The project was conducted between 2012 and 2015 at a cost of 177 million 186 The renovation was designed by Murphy Burnham amp Buttrick and led by construction manager Structure Tone 187 188 The renovation involved cleaning the exterior marble repairing stained glass windows painting the ceiling and replacing the flooring and steps 184 In addition the bronze doors were renovated and reinstalled 189 190 Work was completed by September 17 2015 before Pope Francis visited the cathedral the next week 105 106 The scaffolding was removed in July 2016 191 The cathedral and the renovations were featured on WNET s television program Treasures of New York 192 The LPC approved a garage on the 50th Street side of the cathedral in late 2015 The garage was designed to provide a secure entrance for Cardinal Timothy M Dolan 193 In 2017 MBB Architects and Structure Tone Landmark Facilities Group and P W Grosser completed a new geothermal system under St Patrick s Cathedral believed to be the largest in New York City 194 195 The gardens adjoining the cathedral to the north and south were excavated for the system s construction and they were replanted after installation was complete 196 The same October a shrine to the Lebanese Maronite Saint Charbel Makhlouf was dedicated at St Patrick s Cathedral 197 The cathedral was temporarily closed for in person Mass in 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic in New York City The pandemic severely reduced the cathedral s finances as much of its income came from donations at Mass and the archdiocese did not fund the cathedral s maintenance 198 It was reopened for full capacity worship in May 2021 199 Following the rezoning of East Midtown in the late 2010s the Archdiocese of New York began planning to sell the air rights attached to the cathedral s site 200 201 In December 2023 Citadel LLC and Vornado Realty Trust agreed to pay as much as 164 million for up to 525 000 square feet 48 800 m2 of the cathedral s air rights which would be transferred to a site at 350 Park Avenue 202 203 Main structure edit nbsp Main archway of the cathedral St Patrick s Cathedral was designed by James Renwick Jr with influences from English French and German Gothic architecture 24 31 It is the largest Gothic Revival Catholic cathedral in North America 204 as well as the first major Gothic Revival cathedral in the United States 32 St Patrick s Cathedral was described by CNN in 2020 as being an essential part of New York City s architectural heritage 205 The cathedral serves as the seat for the Archdiocese of New York and as a parish church for the archdiocese within Manhattan 206 Prior to the COVID 19 pandemic over five million people visited the cathedral each year 198 The foundation stones are made of blue gneiss granite set within cement mortar 24 The lowest horizontal course of the facade as well as the lowest course under all the interior columns is made of Dix Island granite from Maine 25 49 The exterior is clad in marble quarried in Lee Massachusetts and Pleasantville New York The main section of the cathedral is made of Tuckahoe marble 49 207 Behind the marble blocks are walls made of brick and stone laid in rough masonry with hollow gaps for ventilation The blocks were so closely laid that decades after the cathedral s completion no cracks had formed in them 34 49 The side walls are between 3 and 4 feet 0 91 and 1 22 m thick and the clerestory walls above the nave are 3 feet thick 62 Part of the interior is made of artificial Coignet stone 25 The marble for the spires was sourced from Cockeysville Maryland 208 and the roof has 343 finials 209 There are 103 windows on the cathedral in total 68 76 c The windows are glazed by two thicknesses of sash and glass set 2 inches 51 mm apart to regulate interior temperatures and prevent air drafts The exterior sashes are glazed with figured glass in lead sash while the interior sashes are glazed with stained glass 25 212 The windows of the clerestory were made by Morgan Brothers 212 The cathedral had been constructed with 57 stained glass windows 37 representing scenes from Scripture and 20 representing geometrical shapes 210 211 Forty five of the original windows were manufactured by Nicholas Lorin and Henry Ely in France 213 Other stained glass windows were added later 169 170 Renwick s original sketches show that the tracery near each window was designed with two grooves one for stained glass and one for protective glazing 196 Location and dimensions edit St Patrick s Cathedral is in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City It takes up a full city block bounded by Fifth Avenue to the west 51st Street to the north Madison Avenue to the east and 50th Street to the south Clockwise from northwest the cathedral is directly across from Olympic Tower 11 East 51st Street and 488 Madison Avenue to the north the Villard Houses and Lotte New York Palace Hotel to the east 18 East 50th Street and the Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store to the south and the International Building of Rockefeller Center to the west 87 St Patrick s is directly across from the Atlas statue at the International Building 214 St Patrick s is oriented west east relative to the street grid and has a cruciform plan From west to east the cathedral contains a nave transepts extending to the north and south and a sanctuary and apse 32 62 25 The entire structure measures 332 feet 101 m long as measured along the exterior buttresses The cathedral is 174 feet 53 m wide at the transepts 215 d The main facade is oriented west along Fifth Avenue with two towers measuring 32 feet 9 8 m wide 34 102 and 329 5 feet 100 4 m tall 100 101 a flanking a central section 105 feet 32 m wide 215 To the north and south are planted gardens 196 which contain ten manholes for the cathedral s subterranean geothermal system 194 The cathedral s total length is 396 7 feet 120 9 m 100 The cathedral s interior was designed to accommodate 14 000 seated guests or 19 000 in total 76 216 It has a seating capacity for about 2 400 congregants 217 There are about 300 wooden pews ranging from 10 to 20 feet 3 0 to 6 1 m wide 218 The underground geothermal system consists of ten wells each 2 200 feet 670 m deep which could concurrently send hot and cold air to separate sections of the cathedral The system is capable of producing 3 2 million British thermal units 3 4 GJ of heat and 2 9 million British thermal units 3 1 GJ of air conditioning hourly 194 195 The geothermal system uses a computer to send cool or warm air based on thermostat readings Heat and cool air are pumped through four water loops 194 Western facade edit Central gable and doors edit The central portion of the Fifth Avenue facade contains a 156 foot tall 48 m gable which leads into the narthex 34 102 210 The main entrance is an archway at the base of the gable measuring 31 feet 9 4 m wide and 51 feet 16 m tall 63 The actual entrance portal is recessed about 12 feet 3 7 m into the archway and contains the main doors 76 102 The top of the portal is slightly pointed with carved spandrel panels on either side 102 Above is a marble transom bar as well as elaborate floral tracery 63 102 The portal is flanked by decorative jambs which in turn are topped by foliage capitals Atop the jambs are a set of buttresses which converge to form pointed arches 102 A gablet rises over the main portal and contains tracery paneling and a shield bearing the arms of the Archdiocese of New York 76 102 The main entrance originally contained a pair of square headed marble doors 102 The current bronze doors were designed by Charles Maginnis and sculpted by John Angel and they were installed in 1949 166 167 Each door is 16 5 by 5 5 feet 5 0 by 1 7 m and weighs 9 200 pounds 4 200 kg 189 219 The main doors are generally kept open to welcome visitors to save energy a second set of glass pocket doors is installed directly behind 220 The main doors are decorated with relief sculptures representing three men and three women with inscriptions indicating their significance to the cathedral and with particular focus on missionary work and assistance for migrants 167 221 nbsp The bronze doors of the cathedral prior to restoration St Joseph patron of the Church top left St Patrick patron of this Church top right St Isaac Jogues Martyr first Catholic priest in New York middle left St Frances X Cabrini mother of the immigrant middle right St Kateri Tekakwitha lily of the Mohawks bottom left Mother Elizabeth Seton daughter of New York bottom right Above the central opening is a balustrade made of rich pierced tracery it contains a row of niches measuring 7 5 feet 2 3 m high for statues 76 102 These niches are decorated by columns with foliage capitals and gablets with tracery and finials 31 222 The niches depict six archangels Michael Gabriel Uriel Raphael Chamuel and Jophiel 164 Above these niches is a rose window measuring 26 feet 7 9 m in diameter and designed by Charles Connick 31 222 The rose window is blue with red green white and gold panels The window depicts eight types of leaves at its center as well as trefoils with white doves 164 The main gable is carried up to the roof lines terminating at a cornice with crockets that support a foliated cross 223 216 On either side of the jambs of the central window are buttresses terminated by pinnacles and between these and the buttresses of the tower are rich Gothic panels terminated by crocketed gablets 223 Towers edit The towers on either side of the central gable measure 32 by 32 feet 9 8 by 9 8 m at the base and retain this square cross section to a height of 136 feet 41 m 63 210 223 The walls of the towers along Fifth Avenue are 12 to 14 feet 3 7 to 4 3 m thick 62 The ground story of the towers has portals similar in design to that at the center but there are shields in the central panel of each gablet The shield in the left tower has the arms of the United States and the shield in the right tower has the arms of New York 63 223 The second story at the same height as the rose window has molded jambs and tracery and is topped by gablets with tracery The third story has four small windows on each side topped by a cornice and pierced battlement The towers are flanked by massive buttresses decorated with tabernacles and the tops of the towers square portions have clustered pinnacles 224 Above the square cross sections are octagonal lanterns measuring 54 feet 16 m tall 63 210 224 Circular stone stairways and a chime of bells were installed in the towers 224 The towers are topped by spires measuring 140 feet 43 m high 63 210 224 The spires are composed of two tiers with elaborate molding and tracery the upper tier of each tower had a foliate finial above it 224 The spires were also planned with octagonal cross sections tapering from a base measuring 32 feet 9 8 m across to a pinnacle measuring 2 feet 0 61 m across Also planned within the spires were floors constructed at intervals of 20 feet 6 1 m 94 Nave edit nbsp Stained glass example The nave is about 164 feet 50 m long as measured from the Fifth Avenue facade 25 225 It measures 96 feet 29 m wide if chapels are not included or around 120 feet 37 m wide if the chapels in the side aisles are included 25 225 The nave consists of a center aisle and two side aisles running west east The center aisle is 48 feet 15 m wide and 112 feet 34 m high while the side aisles are 24 feet 7 3 m wide and 54 feet 16 m high 49 63 Internally the nave is divided into seven bays from west to east The westernmost bay is part of the towers along Fifth Avenue and the easternmost bay is part of the transept The westernmost bay is 26 feet 7 9 m wide and the other bays are 23 feet 7 0 m wide 25 225 Just inside the entrances within the westernmost bay are busts of Pope Francis Pope Benedict XVI Pope John Paul II and Pope Paul VI all of whom have previously visited the cathedral 226 Thirty two white marble columns divide the center and side aisles 215 The marble columns are 5 feet 1 5 m in diameter and are set up in sections weighing 8 short tons 7 1 long tons 7 3 t each 68 Each column consists of multiple smaller columns four at the corners measuring 12 inches 300 mm in diameter and eight surrounding the central shaft measuring 6 inches 150 mm in diameter The columns are 35 feet 11 m tall to the bottom of the arches that support the nave s ceiling Above the center aisle is a series of groin vaults supported by molded ribs with foliate bosses at the intersection of each vault 25 227 The ceiling has holes with diameters of 1 5 inches 38 mm ropes could be threaded through these holes to allow repairs and cleaning 228 The side aisles are similar to those at Saint Ouen Abbey Rouen while the columns and ceiling are similar to British models such as Westminster Abbey 32 nbsp Looking east from the nave toward the altar in the sanctuary The northern and southern facades are divided into five bays with buttresses and pinnacles between each bay The lower section of each bay contains an arched window measuring 13 5 feet 4 1 m wide and 27 feet 8 2 m wide Mullions divide each of these windows vertically into three sections and the top of each window has tracery 224 Above these windows is the triforium which is 56 feet 17 m above the nave floor 229 Four arches on either side of the nave support the triforium which is 16 feet 4 9 m tall The clerestory level of the nave rises for 38 feet 12 m above the triforium and contains six bays Each clerestory window is 14 5 feet 4 4 m wide and 26 feet 7 9 m high 25 228 The top of the clerestory is 104 feet 32 m above ground 230 There are twelve chapels in the side aisles 84 Located under the side aisles windowsills the chapels each measure 14 feet 4 3 m wide and 18 feet 5 5 m high 25 225 The chapels have similar vaulted ceilings to the nave 25 and each has its their own altars 77 213 On the northern side aisle is a dark wood baptistery on a marble podium 213 The baptistery was designed by John La Farge 104 The chapels include one for St Bernard and St Bridget 213 Among the altars are those for Saint Elizabeth designed by Roman artist Paolo Medici a Saint Jean Baptiste de La Salle altar sculpted by Dominic Borgia and the Saint Louis and the Saint Michael altars designed by Tiffany amp Co 231 Transepts edit The transepts measure 144 feet 44 m from north to south 25 225 The transepts contain entrances facing north on 51st Street and south on 50th Street These entrances are similar in design to the central gable on Fifth Avenue 230 As planned the transept doorways were to measure 26 feet 7 9 m wide and 43 feet 13 m high 216 The large transept window over the 50th Street door represents St Patrick while that over the 51st Street door represents the Immaculate Conception 66 232 The transept windows measure 28 feet 8 5 m wide by 58 feet 18 m tall and are divided by mullions into six vertical sections 66 230 Over each transept window rises a paneled gablet A row of niches crosses each of the transepts facades at the eave line Above this each facade has a gable with pinnacles and pierced battlements which in turn is topped by an octagonal pinnacle and foliated cross 230 On both sides of either entrance are tall windows The windows are similar in design to those on the side aisles of the nave 230 The side windows depict the Four Evangelists 68 These windows are flanked by octagonal buttresses which contain spiral stairs leading to the triforium and roofs 230 The roof at the intersection of the nave and transept contains a central finial 15 feet 4 6 m high which is gilded and is decorated with foliage and flowers 25 212 Inside the transepts are the Stations of the Cross which are carved in stone and were manufactured by the Stoltzenberg Company in Roermond the Netherlands 233 There are five Stations of the Cross in total 234 Three of them received prizes from the World s Columbian Exposition in 1893 before they were installed at the cathedral 235 234 In 1908 bronze screens were installed at both transept entrances measuring 17 feet 5 2 m tall and 14 feet 4 3 m wide The bronze screens were designed so the transepts wooden doors could open directly into them Each screen had six wrought bronze panels with ornamentation 129 The south transept contained the Altar of the Sacred Heart which was made of bronze and had an elaborate tabernacle 236 The north transept contained the Holy Family altar made of white Carrara marble and dedicated in 1893 110 237 Sanctuary edit nbsp Apsidal stained glass windows in the clerestory The sanctuary floor is raised six steps above the floor of the nave connected to it via a set of gray marble steps 238 The sanctuary is 95 feet 29 m long and measures 124 feet 38 m wide 25 210 225 The roof is made of slate though the clerestory roof has a metal cresting 5 5 feet 1 7 m high 212 There is a 15 foot high 4 6 m cross at the east end of the roof which has flowers and foliage ornaments 25 212 Ambulatory edit The ambulatory or side aisle of the sanctuary is divided from west to east into three bays similar to those in the nave The apse has a convex polygonal wall with five bays which are divided by buttresses with pinnacles 230 Each bay of the apse has a window 14 5 feet 4 4 m wide and 26 feet 7 9 m high The windows are divided by mullions into four vertical sections they are surmounted by paneled gablets with traceries The walls between the gablets and pinnacles are finished by pierced battlements 212 The south ambulatory has a marble Pieta sculpture designed by William Ordway Partridge 221 and completed in 1905 239 The south ambulatory also contains St Joseph s Altar which is made of bronze and mosaic 240 The first four Cardinals galeros e or brimmed red felt hats are mounted at the back of the sanctuary 241 the Catholic Church stopped issuing galeros to its cardinals in 1969 242 There are eleven windows on the sanctuary s clerestory of which six represent sacrifice three each on the north and south sides 243 The three windows on the north side represent the sacrifices of Abel Noe and Melchisedech while the three on the south side represent the sacrifices of Abraham the Paschal Lamb and the Mount of Calvary 25 244 The five windows on the convex portion of the apse represent subjects from the history of the Lord 243 The apsidal windows represent the resurrection of Lazarus the communion of St John the resurrection of Jesus the giving of the keys of heaven to St Peter and Jesus meeting the disciples going to Emmaus 25 245 Chancel and high altar edit The original chancel and high altar donated by Cardinal McCloskey 84 were three steps above the sanctuary floor and contained a platform of richly colored marble 35 246 The altar was made in Rome 84 246 and designed in the Italian Gothic style 247 248 The altar steps intersected a marble tabernacle inlaid with precious stones and mosaics 246 248 Three bas reliefs on the sides and front of the altar were carved in white marble 210 247 The archbishop s pulpit on the north side of the altar was made of wood 213 In 1885 a Gothic style octagonal pulpit was installed at the south side of the high altar Weighing 16 short tons 14 long tons 15 t and measuring 14 feet 4 3 m tall the pulpit was made mostly of Carrara marble except for six supporting pillars which were made of Vienna marble 92 A heavy marble balustrade with carved panels surrounded the main pulpit which itself was accessed by six marble steps 92 249 The altar was compared to a wedding cake when it was first consecrated 150 In 1930 a 50 foot long 15 m marble altar rail was designed by Robert J Reiley and installed in front of the altar The rail had carvings of saints 141 At the rear of the original high altar was a stylobate with a reredos or altar screen measuring 30 feet 9 1 m long and 10 feet 3 0 m high 246 The clergy of the Archdiocese of New York gifted the altar screen 77 84 which was carved from Poitiers stone in France 77 The reredos was divided vertically into five parts a central portion measuring 6 feet 1 8 m wide flanked on either side by panels measuring 7 5 feet 2 3 m and 4 5 feet 1 4 m wide The base of the reredos was made of white marble inlaid with alabaster and decorated with a bas relief on each side The reredos was topped by three towers one at the center and one on each extreme end The center tower ascended 48 feet 15 m above the sanctuary floor while the corner towers ascended 18 5 feet 5 6 m above the sanctuary floor 246 The center spire had a statue of Christ while the other spires had statues of St Peter and St Paul 77 246 Between the towers were placed six niches with angels three on either side of the center spire 246 In 1942 the original high altar was removed from St Patrick s Cathedral and consecrated at Fordham University Church in the Bronx 250 251 It was replaced with the current high altar which is made of gray white Italian marble and topped by a bronze baldachin 155 156 Maginnis amp Walsh designed the high altar It lacks a tabernacle and a reredos similarly to other high altars in cathedrals The altar table measures 4 feet 1 2 m deep and about 12 feet 3 7 m long The baldachin is supported by four piers it slopes upward to a pinnacle with a statue of Christ the King The statue is flanked by smaller pinnacles with angelic figures 152 252 The pulpit is along the south right side of the right altar 221 Crypt edit Under the high altar is a crypt in which notable Catholic figures that served the Archdiocese of New York are entombed It is accessed by a set of doors behind the high altar 253 Originally the entrance to the crypt was hidden by a heavy stone slab that required six people to lift A stone staircase descended to a vault behind a set of slate doors 254 Large bronze letters with the names of those buried in the crypt are inscribed in the crypt doors 255 The crypt is about 21 feet 6 4 m long and 10 feet 3 0 m high with a width of 10 feet 3 0 m between the rows of coffins on either side The crypt is square in plan except for a ventilating pipe at the southeast corner 254 It has space to bury either 24 256 or 42 people 236 254 The crypt s interments include all nine past deceased Archbishops of New York John Joseph Hughes Archbishop 1850 1864 interred 1883 257 258 John McCloskey Archbishop 1864 1885 interred 1885 259 Michael Augustine Corrigan Archbishop 1885 1902 interred 1902 260 John Murphy Farley Archbishop 1902 1918 interred 1918 261 Patrick Joseph Hayes Archbishop 1919 1938 interred 1938 262 263 Francis Joseph Spellman Archbishop 1939 1967 interred 1967 264 Terence James Cooke Archbishop 1968 1983 interred 1983 265 266 John Joseph O Connor Archbishop 1984 2000 interred 2000 267 268 Edward Michael Egan Archbishop 2000 2009 interred 2015 269 270 nbsp The bas relief above the main entrance in 2016 Other interments include Michael J Lavelle Cathedral Rector 1887 1939 and Vicar General interred 1939 271 272 Joseph F Flannelly Cathedral Rector 1939 1969 and Auxiliary Bishop 1948 1969 273 interred 1973 274 John Maguire Coadjutor Archbishop 1965 1980 275 276 interred 1989 274 Pierre Toussaint interred 1990 274 at the time of his interment the only Catholic layperson to be interred at the cathedral 277 Fulton J Sheen Auxiliary Bishop of New York from 1951 to 1965 and later Bishop of Rochester was interred in the crypt in 1979 278 During the late 2010s the Archdiocese of New York and his relatives were involved in a three year court dispute to keep his remains at St Patrick s Cathedral On June 27 2019 Sheen s remains were disinterred from St Patrick s and transferred to St Mary s Cathedral in Peoria Illinois where he had been ordained 279 280 Cathedral close editLady chapel edit nbsp Map of the cathedral close of St Patrick s Cathedral in 1916 At right are depicted from top to bottom the rectory Lady chapel and archbishop s residence The Lady chapel designed by Charles T Mathews is east of the apse facing along Madison Avenue 87 It was designed in a 13th century Gothic style The rear wall of the apse was partly removed in the first decade of the 20th century to allow the construction of an ambulatory around the choir s outer wall 120 121 The removed section of the apse s wall became part of Our Lady of Lourdes Church at that time 281 282 The chapel was designed with a roof and belfry made of green bronze as well as walls surrounded by statues The walls of the chapel were designed to be plain at the bottom becoming progressively more elaborately designed at the top 120 121 Several gargoyles were designed as decoration for the chapel s exterior 283 The chapel contains fifteen stained glass windows depicting the mysteries of the rosary five each for glorious joyful and sorrowful scenes The Lady chapel has nine tall windows as well as two side chapels with three windows each 131 The chapel is separated from the apse by a 48 foot tall 15 m glass wall that rests on a 23 foot wide 7 0 m glass beam The glass wall is designed with a minimalist bronze frame 220 284 The interior of the Lady chapel was designed with carved stonework The original altar dedicated to the Virgin Mary had a high carved reredos a mosaic floor and a blue color scheme 120 121 The altar was replaced in 1942 The new altar is reached by three brown marble steps It consists of a white marble reredos an altar table with a multicolored inlaid marble frontal named Annunciation designed by Hildreth Meiere 285 and a statue of the Lady on top 157 Under the Lady chapel is a crypt for the Kelly family which had paid for the chapel 131 Rectory edit The rectory originally the Vicar General s house 89 is at the southwest corner with 51st Street on the northeastern section of the cathedral close 87 126 It carries the address 460 Madison Avenue 87 The Gothic style building is three and a half stories high 2 and is clad with Tuckahoe stone and white marble 89 90 As designed it covers a lot measuring 54 by 47 feet 16 by 14 m The basement was originally designed as the kitchen laundry and servants quarters The first floor had a hall clad with marble tiles the reception and dining rooms were on the left and two parlors were on the right of the hall The second and third floors were designed as bedrooms White oak and black walnut was used throughout the building The rectory had ceilings of 14 feet 4 3 m on the first and second floors 12 feet 3 7 m on the third floor and 12 feet 3 7 m on the fourth 89 It had 30 rooms in total 148 The rectory was substantially unchanged from its early 1880s construction until 1940 A new window was installed on the southern facade at ground level new plumbing electric wiring an elevator and a telephone switchboard were installed and the curtains were replaced 148 The two first floor parlors were converted into four offices and a waiting room and the upper stories were divided into smaller bedrooms and studies 149 The rectory retained some original design features such as its black walnut fireplace mantels 148 In 1920 the rectory also hosted the marriage of F Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald 253 Archbishop s residence edit nbsp Archbishop s Residence nbsp Plaque commemorating Pope Paul VI s visit to the cathedral in 1965 The archbishop s residence is at the northwest corner with 50th Street occupying the southeastern section of the cathedral close 87 126 It carries the address 452 Madison Avenue 87 The archbishop s residence covers 15 000 square feet 1 400 m2 286 287 The Gothic style building is three and a half stories high and is also clad with white marble 2 A plaque commemorating Pope Paul VI s 1965 visit to the cathedral 288 is mounted on the facade 289 As of 2015 update Cardinal Dolan shares the archbishop s house with three other priests 287 On the third floor is a chapel for John the Apostle The right side wall has a plaque measuring 18 by 12 inches 460 by 300 mm with a holy water font made of silver The Assumption of Mary flanked by cherubs is depicted atop the holy water font The font was given by Pope Paul VI to Cardinal Cooke in 1971 290 Staff editAs of 2023 update Cardinal Timothy M Dolan is the archbishop of St Patrick s Cathedral 291 having served in this position since 2009 292 Since November 2021 Enrique Salvo has served as the rector of the cathedral 293 In addition Rev Andrew King is the master of ceremonies and Rev Donald Haggerty Rev Arthur Golino and Rev Ed Dougherty are also on staff Rev Stephen Ries serves as Cardinal Dolan s Priest Secretary 294 The director of music is Jennifer Pascual 295 The associate directors of music who also serve as organists are Daniel Brondel 296 and Michael Hey 297 In addition Robert M Evers is the Music Administrator and Programs Editor 294 Bells editThere are nineteen bells at St Patrick s Cathedral 298 299 The bells were created by the firm of Messrs Paccard in France and installed in 1897 300 301 They hang in the northern tower of St Patrick s Cathedral 180 feet 55 m above ground 298 302 Since there are fewer than 23 bells the minimum needed to be able to ring two octaves they hang in a chime instead of a carillon A 1983 New York Times article reported that the chime was rung every day at 8 a m noon and 6 p m Additionally on Sundays the chime was rung every 15 minutes between 10 a m and noon and every 15 minutes between 5 p m and 7 p m 303 Originally the bells were powered by a compressed air mechanism in the basement 304 Pressing a key on the keyboard in the sacristy would activate an electric signal which in turn would release the compressed air to ring each bell 305 306 According to The New York Times St Patrick s bells were the first to be operated by compressed air 306 Until 1952 the bells could also be rung using tracker action the bell ringer would pull a 110 foot long 34 m rod between the lever and clapper of each bell 298 Each of the bells was donated by a different person or organization The name of the bell its donor and the figure of the crucifixion is carved on each respective bell 113 Name Tone Approximate Weight f Donor 113 St Patrick B 6 608 pounds 2 997 kg Congregation of St Patrick s Cathedral Blessed Virgin g C 4 626 pounds 2 098 kg John B Manning St Joseph D 3 260 pounds 1 480 kg Joseph J O Donohue Holy Name E 2 693 pounds 1 222 kg Holy Name Society St Michael E 2 319 pounds 1 052 kg M C Coleman St Anne F 1 956 pounds 887 kg Henry McAleenan St Elizabeth G 1 357 pounds 616 kg Marquise di San Marzano St Augustine of Hippo A 1 163 pounds 528 kg Augustin Daly St Anthony of Padua A 971 pounds 440 kg I L Fox St Agnes B 802 pounds 364 kg Lydia Fox St John the Evangelist B 668 pounds 303 kg John D Crimmins St Bridget C 574 pounds 260 kg Perry and Catherine I Minister St Francis Xavier C 476 pounds 216 kg Congregation of St Francis Xavier Church St Peter D 402 pounds 182 kg George B Coleman St Cecilia E 345 pounds 156 kg Mrs Thomas I Ryan St Helena E 286 pounds 130 kg Leonora and Agnes Keyes St Alphonsus Liguori F 241 pounds 109 kg Mary A Mills St Thomas Aquinas F 204 pounds 93 kg Thomas Kelly St Godfrey G 173 pounds 78 kg Children of Godfrey AmendOrgans edit nbsp Organ manual for the Gallery Organ St Patrick s Cathedral has two pipe organs with more than 9 000 pipes 206 stops 150 ranks and 10 divisions between them 144 The two organs are the Gallery Organ completed in 1930 and the Chancel Organ completed in 1928 both were manufactured by George Kilgen amp Son Since the mid 1990s the two organs have been able to operate as a single unit 182 307 The two organs are controlled by twin 5 manual drawknob consoles and have 207 registers 116 stops and 142 ranks between them 144 The Chancel Organ is in the north ambulatory of the sanctuary adjoining the Chapel of St Joseph 144 307 It originally had three manuals which controlled four divisions The Chancel Organ originally had 46 registers 18 stops and 18 ranks 144 There were 1 480 pipes placed inside an oak case with Gothic style carvings 307 The Gallery Organ is in the western part of the nave below the Fifth Avenue rose window as well as in the triforium near the south transept 144 307 The Gallery Organ had a four manual stopkey console with 157 registers and 114 ranks 144 There were 7 855 pipes the shortest measured 0 5 inches 13 mm long and the longest 32 feet 9 8 m long crossed the triforia 307 Organ history edit The first organ was built by George Jardine amp Son and installed in 1879 210 It was composed of four manuals 51 stops and 56 ranks 144 In 1880 J H amp C S Odell installed an organ in the chancel 210 with 2 manuals 20 stops and 23 ranks 144 George Kilgen amp Son designed the two current organs after Pietro Yon was hired to the music staff in the late 1920s 144 307 The Chancel Organ was dedicated on January 30 1928 308 while the Gallery Organ was dedicated on February 11 1930 309 Tonal modifications were made in the 1940s and 1950s and additional renovations occurred in the 1970s and 1980s 307 In 1993 while John Michael Caprio was music director a major restoration of the organs commenced and the old three manual consoles were replaced with twin five manual consoles 182 The Peragallo Pipe Organ Company removed the cathedral s organ for cleaning in early 1994 310 The next year the Chancel Organ was restored 182 The restoration was completed after the Echo Organ in the triforium was restored 307 All the organs of the cathedral were removed from the cathedral during the 2012 2015 restoration and were restored cleaned and re voiced by the Peragallo Company before being reinstalled in 2015 311 Directors of music edit In the first nine decades of St Patrick s Cathedral s history it only had four music directors 307 312 The first organist and director of music at the current St Patrick s Cathedral was William F Pecher who had been hired at the Old Cathedral in 1862 and served at the current cathedral from 1879 to his death in 1904 313 314 Afterward Jacques C Ungerer served as the director of music until 1929 He was succeeded by Pietro Yon who at the time was an assistant director 307 When Yon suffered a stroke in 1943 Dr Charles Marie Courboin was temporarily appointed to Yon s position 315 316 Yon died the same year 317 and Courboin served as music director until 1970 318 The cathedral s fifth music director John Grady served as a music director and organist from 1970 to his death in 1990 319 Grady was succeeded by John Michael Caprio who also served until his death in 1997 320 Four people served as directors over the following six years John C West 1997 1999 Robert Long 1999 2001 Don Stefano Concordia 2001 and Johannes Somary 2001 2003 307 Since 2003 Jennifer Pascual has served as the music director 295 being the first woman to hold this position 321 Incidents edit nbsp Facade detail September 2006 Over the years St Patrick s Cathedral has been targeted by bombings and threats On October 13 1914 a bomb exploded on the northwest corner of the cathedral It tore an 18 inch hole in the floor One injury was reported a boy whose head was grazed by a flying piece of metal 322 323 In March 1915 Italian anarchists Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone of the Bresci Circle were arrested for attempting to detonate a bomb in the cathedral 324 In January 1951 a letter threatened that a bomb would be set off at a Sunday Mass but the Mass continued without any disruption 325 Another telephoned bomb threat occurred in June 1953 326 On April 18 2019 just two days after a fire damaged the Notre Dame de Paris a 37 year old New Jersey man carrying a pair of full two gallon cans of gasoline two bottles of lighter fluid and two extended butane lighters was arrested after attempting to enter the cathedral 327 The man was a philosophy professor at nearby Seton Hall University who suffered from schizophrenia 328 329 In addition there have been numerous instances of vandalism In 1944 red paint was splashed on the cathedral The paint was smeared in a pattern similar to the hammer and sickle of a communist party 330 On May 30 2020 during the nationwide protests and riots following the murder of George Floyd Black Lives Matter protesters spray painted pro BLM and anti police slogans on the facade 331 Two people were charged the following month for the crime 332 On New Year s Day 2021 the cathedral was vandalized again with anti police graffiti 333 Other incidents have included A 2020 report by the Vatican accepted earlier reports that the laicized Cardinal Theodore McCarrick committed acts of sex abuse at the cathedral between 1971 and 1972 334 335 On September 21 1988 a mentally ill man killed an usher and seriously injured an officer before being fatally shot 336 On December 10 1989 ACT UP a pressure group that advocates for AIDS awareness led a demonstration of 4 500 people outside the cathedral as part of their Stop the Church campaign About 130 infiltrated the church and disrupted the Mass forcing Cardinal John O Connor to abandon his sermon 337 338 In 2002 shock jocks Opie and Anthony held a promotion that encouraged listeners of their radio show to have sex in risky places Two listeners were caught in a vestibule of the church doing so they were arrested along with comedian Paul Mecurio 339 On February 15 2024 a funeral service was held for LGBTQ activist Cecilia Gentili during which eulogies were delivered which were denounced as irreverent and the behavior by attendees was denounced as sacrilegious and scandalous by the New York Archdiocese Cardinal Dolan ordered a Mass of Reparation to be offered in reparation for the incident 340 See also editList of Catholic cathedrals in the United States List of cathedrals in the United States List of tallest structures built before the 20th century Archdiocese of New York Catholic Archbishops of New York a list of all archbishops of St Patrick s Cathedral List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan from 14th to 59th StreetsReferences editNotes edit a b c A less precise measurement of 330 feet 100 m is given by several sources 98 34 102 Albert stone would have cost 800 000 Belleville stone would have cost 805 000 and Dorchester stone would have cost 830 000 48 Some sources prior to the cathedral s expansion gave a figure of 70 windows 210 211 Harper s gives a different measurement of 330 feet 100 m for the outside length and 172 feet 52 m for the width at the transept 216 Those belonging to John McCloskey John Murphy Farley Patrick Joseph Hayes and Francis Spellman 241 Weight is rounded to the nearest pound according to St Patrick s website 298 Compressed Air gives slightly different weight notations for all of these bells 302 Also originally named Our Lady s 302 Citations edit Cultural Resource Information System CRIS New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation November 7 2014 Retrieved July 20 2023 a b c d Saint Patrick s Cathedral Complex PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission October 19 1966 Retrieved July 28 2019 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service Archived from the original on May 25 2016 Retrieved July 24 2015 National Register Digital Assets National Register of Historic Places National Park Service Archived from the original on July 25 2015 Retrieved July 24 2015 The Archdiocese History The New York Times February 1 1984 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 23 2021 a b Lafort 1914 p 303 a b c d Jackson 2010 p 216 Harpaz Beth J March 13 2019 History Hollywood and a wall at New York s first St Patrick s Cathedral Chicago Tribune Retrieved June 23 2021 McFadden Robert D December 6 2010 Cathedral With a Past Basilica With a Future The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 23 2021 a b Pitts Carolyn St Patrick s Cathedral Lady Chapel Rectory and Cardinal s Residence National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination August 1976 National Park Service a b Lafort 1914 p 304 Lafort 1914 p 276 Lafort 1914 pp 339 340 Farley 1908 p 111 Farley 1908 p 112 a b Farley 1908 p 113 Lafort 1914 pp 304 305 a b Lafort 1914 p 339 a b Lafort 1914 p 340 Stern Mellins amp Fishman 1999 p 314 a b Farley 1908 p 91 Farley 1908 pp 114 115 a b c d e f g h i Lafort 1914 p 305 a b c d e f National Park Service 1976 p 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t St Patrick s Cathedral The Sun May 25 1879 p 6 Retrieved June 25 2021 via newspapers com a b c d e f Farley 1908 p 127 Balfour Alan 1978 Rockefeller Center Architecture as Theater New York McGraw Hill Inc p 8 ISBN 978 0 07003 480 8 St Patrick s Cathedral Turns 100 Tomorrow The New York Times August 14 1958 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b Farley 1908 pp 153 154 Sturges Walter Knight 1981 Renwick Rodrigue and the Architecture of St Patrick s Cathedral N Y C U S Catholic Historian Vol 1 no 2 pp 68 72 ISSN 0735 8318 JSTOR 25153646 a b c d e f g h i j Stern Mellins amp Fishman 1999 p 315 a b c d Federal Writers Project 1939 p 344 a b Farley 1908 p 153 a b c d e National Park Service 1976 p 5 a b Farley 1908 p 163 a b Farley 1908 p 115 a b Farley 1908 p 122 a b The New Catholic Cathedral on Fifth Avenue New York Daily Herald June 30 1858 p 3 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com New York City Attempted Incendiarism in Forty first Supposed Suicide The New York Times July 12 1858 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b Farley 1908 pp 118 119 a b c d e New Buildings in the Metropolis New York Daily Herald August 15 1860 p 8 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com a b c The New Catholic Cathedral in New York Its Size Situation and General Appearance The Brooklyn Daily Eagle June 7 1866 p 4 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com John Peirce Residence PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission June 23 2009 p 2 Retrieved April 28 2021 New York City Police Intelligence A Card Laying the Corner stone of the New St Patrick s Cathedral The New York Times August 11 1858 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 Laying the Corner Stone of the New Catholic Cathedral Address by Archbishop Hughes New York Tribune August 16 1858 p 5 ProQuest 570484519 Roberts Sam October 13 2011 At St Patrick s a Cornerstone That Has Long Eluded Searchers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Farley 1908 p 116 a b c Farley 1908 p 117 a b c d e f Farley 1908 p 155 a b c d Progress of the Work on the FifthAvenue Cathedral The New York Times November 20 1870 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral New York Daily Tribune January 11 1860 p 6 ProQuest 570531955 City Intelligence The New York Times March 30 1860 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 City Intelligence New York Daily Herald April 13 1860 p 10 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com The New Catholic Cathedral Work Suspended by Order of Archbishop Hughes The New York Times August 9 1860 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 The News New York Daily Herald August 8 1860 p 4 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com Smith 1905 p 275 Smith 1905 p 277 a b Farley 1908 p 128 Our Architectural Progress Great Buildings in Progress of Construction Homes of Religion Music and the Drama The Catholic Cathedral of New York and St Ann s Episcopal Church of Brooklyn The New York Times April 5 1868 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 Topics of To day The Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 11 1867 p 2 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com a b c Stern Mellins amp Fishman 1999 p 317 a b c d e Fifth Avenue Cathedral a Description of the Finest Church Edifice as Far as Completed in the United States The Hartford Courant January 19 1871 p 1 ProQuest 553736058 a b c d e f g h The Catholic Cathedral Description of the Edifice The Style of Its Architecture the Beauties of the Interior the Exterior a Work Unfinished in Seventeen Years The New York Times August 24 1875 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 An Architectural Ramble The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 6 no 131 September 17 1870 p 3 via columbia edu a b St Patrick s Cathedral s Debt The New York Times July 2 1880 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2021 a b c St Patrick s Cathedral Progress Made in the Interior Description of the Transept Windows New York Tribune November 26 1875 p 2 ProQuest 572669032 Notes and Clippings American Architecture and Building News Vol 1 November 18 1876 p 376 Retrieved October 20 2023 a b c d Opening the New Cathedral New York Tribune November 30 1877 p 3 ProQuest 572739957 a b The Big Cathedral Fair a Brilliant Opening Last Evening Twenty Thousand Visitors on the First Night addresses by Mayor Ely and Cardinal M closkey Formal Opening of the Fair by the Mayor The New York Times October 23 1878 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 The Great Cathedral Fair Its Formal Opening by the Cardinal New York Tribune October 23 1878 p 5 Retrieved June 24 2021 via newspapers com St Patrick s Great Fair Crowds of Children in the Afternoons New York Tribune November 11 1878 p 3 ProQuest 572758199 The Great Catholic Fair Closing Scenes at the Cathedral Success of the Various Tables New York Tribune November 30 1878 p 3 ProQuest 572780861 a b c Farley 1908 p 129 The Catholic Cathedral Preparing for Its Dedication PDF The New York Times May 18 1879 p 10 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b An Imposing Ceremonial Blessing of the New Roman Catholic Cathedral An Immense Attendance of the Clergy and Laity PDF The New York Times May 26 1879 p 5 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b c d e f St Patrick s Cathedral in New York Dedication of a Magnificent Edifice The Sun Baltimore May 26 1879 p 1 ProQuest 534434626 a b c d e f The New Cathedral Dedication by the Cardinal a Great Multitude Fills the Building and the Neighborhood New York Tribune May 26 1879 p 1 ProQuest 572797988 Farley 1908 pp 130 131 a b c d Thompson Ginger November 24 1996 An awesome place to pray Church St Patrick s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue has drawn visitors through the century from the pope from Rome to city dwellers right across the street The Sun Baltimore p 2A ProQuest 406941196 Cook Clarence February 1879 The New Catholic Cathedral in New York Atlantic Monthly Vol 43 pp 173 177 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Gregory Massengale John Montague 1983 New York 1900 Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890 1915 New York Rizzoli p 109 ISBN 0 8478 0511 5 OCLC 9829395 Duggan Dennis November 2 1978 St Patrick s Marks Hundredth Year Newsday p 6 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com Farley 1908 p 133 a b c d e f Lafort 1914 p 306 Farley 1908 p 150 a b c Farley 1908 p 151 a b c d e f g White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 328 329 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 Out Among the Builders The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 28 no 716 December 3 1881 p 1120 via columbia edu a b c d Vicar general Quinn s New House The New York Times January 26 1882 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2021 a b Buildings Projected The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 29 no 724 January 28 1882 p 89 via columbia edu Some Up Town Buildings The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 33 no 825 January 5 1884 p 2 via columbia edu a b c Howard s Gossip Opening of the New York Opera Season Many of the Brightest Dramatic Stars to Shine This Week A Memorial Marble Pulpit for St Patrick s Cathedral Boston Daily Globe October 19 1885 p 1 ProQuest 493444104 Current Events The Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 4 1885 p 4 Retrieved June 26 2021 via newspapers com a b c Spires for the Cathedral The New York Times September 25 1885 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 26 2021 Alterations New York City The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 36 no 915 September 26 1885 p 1064 via columbia edu Out Among the Builders The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 36 no 913 September 12 1885 p 1000 via columbia edu The Cathedral Spires The Post Star September 11 1886 p 1 Retrieved June 26 2021 via newspapers com a b The Spires Completed The Sun October 5 1888 p 4 Retrieved June 26 2021 via newspapers com a b The Spires Completed but Much Work Still Remains Undone on St Patrick s Cathedral The New York Times October 7 1888 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 26 2021 a b c d e McDonald Martha December 12 2015 The Restoration of St Patrick s Cathedral Traditional Building Retrieved July 30 2021 a b c St Patrick s Cathedral History amp Restoration Facts PDF popefrancisnyc org Archdiocese of New York 2015 Archived from the original PDF on February 2 2017 Retrieved July 4 2016 The spires were finished in 1888 and were the tallest in New York City from 1880 1890 and the second tallest in the United States p 2 Height to the top of the Spires 329 feet 6 inches p 3 a b c d e f g h i j Farley 1908 p 156 Our Highest Spires The Evening World October 8 1888 p 2 Retrieved June 26 2021 via newspapers com a b The Top 10 Secrets of St Patrick s Cathedral in NYC Untapped New York August 24 2015 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b A Gift to New York in Time for the Pope The New York Times September 17 2015 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b The restoration of St Patrick s Cathedral CBS News September 27 2015 Retrieved June 24 2021 Bells of St Patrick s The New York Times December 6 1888 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 26 2021 Cathedral Chimes a Test of Bells in the Tower of St Patrick s Cathedral The New York Times July 23 1889 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 26 2021 Music and Musicians Buffalo Morning Express and Illustrated Buffalo Express July 28 1889 p 10 Retrieved June 26 2021 via newspapers com a b Consecration of the New Altar Several Priests Take Part in the Impressive Ceremonies at St Patrick s Cathedral New York Tribune November 12 1893 p 22 ProQuest 573922855 St Patrick s New Chimes The Sun July 13 1897 p 6 Retrieved June 28 2021 via newspapers com Blessing the Chimes an Interesting Ceremony Performed in St Patrick s Cathedral New York Tribune August 16 1897 p 1 ProQuest 574336260 a b c St Patrick s New Chimes Archbishop Corrigan with Impressive Ceremony Blesses the Cathedral Bells PDF The New York Times August 16 1897 p 5 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Putting Up the Bells The New York Times September 9 1897 p 12 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com The Cathedral Chimes The New York Times August 22 1897 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 New Altar for the Cathedral The New York Times August 14 1897 p 5 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 via newspapers com New Chapel for St Patrick s Mrs Margaret A Kelly Leaves 200 000 for This Purpose New York Tribune April 16 1899 p A2 ProQuest 574592943 Margaret a Kelly s Will Bequests by Widow of Well known New York Banker The Washington Post April 17 1899 p 4 ISSN 0190 8286 ProQuest 144128955 Religious News and Views Plans for New Lady Chapel of St Patrick s Approved The New York Times May 19 1900 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b c d e Plans for the Lady Chapel Building to Be Erected at the Rear of St Patrick s Cathedral New York Tribune September 1 1900 p 7 ProQuest 570915451 a b c d e Religious News and Views Plans for New Lady Chapel of St Patrick s Cathedral The New York Times September 1 1900 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Religious News and Views Work on the Lady Chapel of St Patrick s Cathedral Begun The New York Times July 27 1901 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Religious News and Views Plans for Lifting St Patrick s Cathedral Debt The New York Times June 21 1902 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 To Finish Archbishop s Plans Catholic Clergy and Laity Will Try to Consecrate the Cathedral in 1908 New York Tribune June 21 1902 p 5 ProQuest 571194111 Lady Chapel Nearing Completion New York Tribune April 3 1905 p 9 ProQuest 571557920 a b c Federal Writers Project 1939 p 346 a b c d Historical Timeline St Patrick s Cathedral October 5 1910 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b To Remodel Cathedral Interior of St Patrick s in New York Will Receive Gifts The Sun Baltimore August 27 1907 p 5 ProQuest 537417071 a b Rich Bronze Work is Being Done at St Patrick s Catholic Union and Times April 16 1908 p 1 Retrieved June 28 2021 via newspapers com Full Century in New York Catholics Celebrate Event Splendidly Boston Daily Globe April 29 1908 p 2 ProQuest 501028705 a b c d Kelly to Complete the Lady Chapel Papal Chamberlain Expects to Place Windows in St Patrick s This Fall The New York Times August 3 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Holland s Letter St Patrick s Cathedral May Be Freed From Debt and Consecrated Next October or November Wall Street Journal June 7 1910 p 1 ISSN 0099 9660 ProQuest 129238446 Three Princes of the Catholic Church Participate in Consecration of St Patrick s Cathedral Picture of Remarkable Splendor in New York Cardinals Arrayed in Gold Courier Journal Louisville October 6 1910 p 9 ProQuest 1021546826 Mgr Farley Officiates at the Consecration Princes and Prelates of Church Gather at St Patrick s in Honor of Occasion New York Tribune October 6 1910 p 16 ProQuest 572363691 a b St Patrick s Will Mark Centenary 100th Year Of Its Cornerstone New York Herald Tribune August 9 1958 p 10 ProQuest 1338145850 St Patrick s Plans Big Improvements Marble Floor and 125 000 Organ Included Mgr Lavelle Announces The New York Times November 22 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral To Have Marble Floor New York Herald Tribune June 23 1927 p 37 ProQuest 1113623291 Improvements At St Patrick s To Cost Million Cathedral Lxulersroing Alterations for 50th Anniversary of Dedication in May many Changes in Inferior Famous Old Wooden Throne Yields to One of Marble New York Herald Tribune August 14 1928 p 10 ProQuest 1113606700 Topics of Interest to the Churchgoer New Amplifiers in St Patrick s Cathedral Will Have First Public Test Tomorrow The New York Times August 31 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Topics of Interest to the Churchgoer The Hartford Courant November 17 1929 p A7 ProQuest 557762687 a b St Patrick s to Get Marble Rail Soon Cathedral Altar Decoration Is Parishoner s Gift Figures of 13 Saints on It The New York Times September 7 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 St Patrick s Lights to Be in Use Today 43 New Bronze Chandeliers Are Installed as Part of Embellishment for Jubilee The New York Times March 1 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Organ for St Patrick s To Be Installed Soon Mgr Lavelle Says Cathedral to Have New Pews The New York Times June 10 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Roman Catholic Cathedral of St Patrick New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists August 1 1927 Retrieved June 29 2021 Pagan Evils Held Present Peril by Father Hammer Warns St Patrick s Congregation Selfishness Bars Way to Christian Life Pleads for New Sincerity Last Two Windows for Lady Chapel Near Completion New York Herald Tribune August 4 1930 p 8 ProQuest 1113695268 First of 15 Trees to Surround St Patrick s Cathedral Planted New York Herald Tribune September 29 1939 p 21A ProQuest 1321997881 St Patrick s Plans Rectory Modernization CollectionWill BeTakcn Up April 28 to Build Offices and Replace Equipment New York Herald Tribune April 1 1940 p 12 ProQuest 1261203881 a b c d Rebuilt Rectory Awaits 9 Priests Staff of St Patrick s Returns Today to Modernized Home Victorian Style Kept The New York Times December 10 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b St Patrick s Rectory Modernized Reopens Elevator Switchboard Private Offices Among Additions New York Herald Tribune December 11 1940 p 19 ProQuest 1320115412 a b New High Altar Will Be Erected At St Patrick s Archbishop Spellman Tells Plan for Structure More Fitting in Architecture New York Herald Tribune February 10 1941 p 9 ProQuest 1322000127 Cathedral Altar Is to Be Replaced New Structure at St Patrick s Gift of Anonymous Donor Archbishop Announces The New York Times February 10 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b New High Altar To Widen View In St Patrick s Gothic Structure t Reveal Lady Chapel From Nave Full Design Made Public New York Herald Tribune March 1 1942 p 24 ProQuest 1259332051 Central Altar s Removal Starts At St Patrick s 3 Story High Structure Part of Cathedral Since 1879 To Be Gone in 3 Weeks New York Herald Tribune February 19 1942 p 16 ProQuest 1264403906 Last Mass Is Said at Cathedral Altar Marble Shrine at St Patrick s to Be Moved to Fordham The New York Times February 16 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b New Main Altar Is Consecrated At St Patrick s 3 1 2 Hour Ceremony Marks Virtual End of Sweeping Alterations in Cathedral New York Herald Tribune May 10 1942 p 35 ProQuest 1256783923 a b Altar Dedicated in St Patrick s Spellman Presides in 3 hour Pageant at Consecration Before 3 000 in Edifice The New York Times May 10 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Altar in Chapel At St Patrick s Is Consecrated Permanent Structure Has Statue of Blessed Virgin as Our Lady of New York New York Herald Tribune April 14 1942 p 17 ProQuest 1263586673 a b c St Patrick s to Get New Rose Window Anonymous Gift to Be Ready by Easter When Facade Is to Be Free of Scaffolds The New York Times February 20 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 The Repairing of St Patrick s Cathedral Makes Progress New York Herald Tribune October 4 1945 p 25 ProQuest 1287100746 a b End of Repairs To St Patrick s Is Within Sight Work on Lady Chapel Will Finish 3 000 000 Job Started 19 Months Ago First 1948 Model Convertible Introduced by Packard New York Herald Tribune March 30 1947 p 33 ProQuest 1268010549 Cross of Bronze Is Put on Spire Of St Patrick s Stone Cross Is Replaced After 57 Years as Work of Renovation Continues New York Herald Tribune December 8 1945 p 14 ProQuest 1322157013 2 400 000 Left In Bowes Will To St Patrick s Cardinal to Allot 100 000 of Bequest at Once for Cathedral s Renovation An English Church Holds a Mass Baptismal Service New York Herald Tribune July 15 1946 p 28 ProQuest 1313645667 Cathedral to Get 100 000 of Legacy Cardinal Allots Part of Fund Left by Major Bowes to Help Pay for St Patrick Repairs The New York Times July 15 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b c St Patrick s Gets New Rose Window Scaffolding Will Be Removed From Front of Cathedral in Time for Easter The New York Times April 2 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 McDowell Rachel K July 8 1948 Renovation Begun Inside St Patrick s 17 of Cathedral s 19 Altars to Be Cleaned and Repaired New Bronze Doors Hung The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2021 a b Five New Doors at St Patrick s Blessed by Cardinal Spellman Blessing the New Bronze Doors at St Patrick s New York Herald Tribune December 24 1949 p 4 ProQuest 1326903819 a b c Dugan George December 24 1949 Cardinal Blesses Cathedral Doors Presides Over Hour Ceremony at Five New Bronze Portals of Fifth Ave Entrance The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Tribute Is Paid To St Patrick s Fund Raisers Bishop Flannelly Recounts Guts in Debts Incurred for Restoration Work New York Herald Tribune August 4 1952 p 7 ProQuest 1323039961 a b St Patrick s Will Install 12 Windows New York Herald Tribune July 12 1954 p 9 ProQuest 1322385806 a b Saints Windows Adorn Cathedral Six of 12 Portraying Virtues in Holy Lives Are Being Put in St Patrick s Clerestory The New York Times July 12 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Dugan George August 16 1958 St Patrick s 100 2 500 Hear Mass The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2021 Cathedral Hails Its Consecration St Patrick s Mass Marks Half a Century Preacher Recalls Heroic Acolytes The New York Times October 10 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 31 Buildings Urged as City Landmarks The New York Times April 28 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 St Patrick s Chosen With St Thomas For Preservation The New York Times November 8 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b O Grady Daniel April 19 1973 Cathedral is the Place to Go New York Daily News p 148 Retrieved June 29 2021 via newspapers com Metropolitan Briefs The New York Times April 19 1973 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral Lady Chapel Rectory and Cardinal s Residence Archived October 22 2007 at the Wayback Machine National Historic Landmark summary listing September 18 2007 National Park Service St Patrick s Cathedral Lady Chapel Rectory and Cardinal s Residence National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination August 1976 National Park Service Centennial Celebration Set At St Patrick s Cathedral Newsday May 11 1979 p 7 Retrieved June 29 2021 via newspapers com Silver Allison October 14 1979 Building Cleaning Washes Off Years The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 St Patrick s gets historic facelift The Post Star August 14 1979 p 16 Retrieved June 29 2021 via newspapers com a b c d Tommasini Anthony December 24 1996 Eyes and Ears Rejoice At a Musical Renewal The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 23 2021 West Melanie Grayce July 13 2015 Repairs Almost Done St Patrick s Cathedral Is Set to Shine Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b St Patrick s Cathedral Gets an Update Fit for the Pope Architect September 11 2015 Retrieved June 29 2021 Jones Bart June 9 2015 Most St Patrick s renovations to be complete before Pope Francis NYC visit Newsday Retrieved June 29 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral In Midtown Manhattan Set To Undergo 177 Million Restoration CBS New York July 7 2012 Retrieved June 24 2021 AIA Names 18 Projects as Best New Architecture in US ArchDaily January 15 2016 Retrieved June 24 2021 Cochran Sam November 11 2015 St Patrick s Cathedral Is Born Anew After a 177 million Restoration Architectural Digest Retrieved June 24 2021 a b St Patrick s Cathedral Shows Off Restored Bronze Doors CBS New York August 14 2013 Retrieved June 29 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral gets saintly door redo with newly restored bronze New York Daily News doors August 14 2013 Retrieved June 29 2021 Majestic Restored St Patrick s Cathedral Unveiled NBC New York July 12 2016 Retrieved June 24 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral Thirteen August 25 2015 Retrieved June 24 2021 Alterations to St Patrick s Cathedral Approved CityLand January 6 2016 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b c d Otterman Sharon March 14 2018 The New Green Pride of St Patrick s Cathedral Is Underground The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2020 a b New geothermal system will heat and cool historic St Patrick s Cathedral The Architect s Newspaper March 14 2017 Retrieved June 24 2021 a b c St Patrick s Cathedral Conservation Renovation and Systems Upgrade by Murphy Burnham amp Buttrick Architect January 15 2016 Retrieved June 30 2021 St Charbel shrine revealed in prominent New York cathedral The Daily Star Newspaper October 29 2017 Archived from the original on June 29 2021 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b Stack Liam July 19 2020 With Tourists Gone St Patrick s Cathedral Pleads for Help The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Catholic Churches In New York City Open To 100 Capacity CBS New York May 23 2021 Retrieved June 29 2021 Gunts Edward February 27 2018 St Patrick s Cathedral planning to sell its air rights The Architect s Newspaper Retrieved December 25 2023 St Patrick s Cathedral prepares for air rights sale Crain s New York Business February 22 2018 Retrieved December 25 2023 Trio pays 164M for St Patrick s Cathedral air rights Crain s New York Business December 11 2023 Retrieved December 25 2023 Citadel Agreed to Buy Air Rights for 350 Park Ave Office Tower The Real Deal December 11 2023 Retrieved December 25 2023 St Patrick s Cathedral Emporis Archived from the original on April 8 2016 Retrieved January 1 2021 Brown Forrest February 17 2020 20 famous buildings in New York City CNN Style CNN Retrieved June 29 2021 Our Parishes Archdiocese of New York January 20 2020 Retrieved June 29 2021 Kaese Diane S Lynch Michael F Autumn 2008 Marble in and Around the City Its Origins and Use in Historic New York Buildings PDF Common Bond Vol 22 no 2 p 7 Baltimore County Marble Building the Towers of St Patrick s Cathedral with It The Sun Baltimore January 22 1887 p 6 ProQuest 534962918 Barron James June 19 2013 Spires at St Patrick s Cathedral Cleaned Up Come Back in View The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2021 a b c d e f g h i j An Imposing Edifice Interior and Exterior Views of St Patrick s Cathedral N Y The Washington Post November 23 1884 p 3 ISSN 0190 8286 ProQuest 137886476 a b Farley 1908 p 181 a b c d e f Farley 1908 p 160 a b c d e Federal Writers Project 1939 p 345 The Titan and the Dictator The New York Public Library February 2 2017 Retrieved June 28 2021 a b c Farley 1908 p 154 a b c d St Patrick s Cathedral in New York Harper s Weekly Vol 13 October 18 1869 p 808 Retrieved June 24 2021 Breen Virginia March 15 2020 An Eerie Quiet at NYC Churches as Clergy Cancel Services THE CITY Retrieved June 29 2021 Hicks Jennifer June 16 2014 New pews for St Patrick s Cathedral Woodshop News Retrieved June 29 2021 NYC s St Pat s cathedral gets restored doors AP NEWS August 14 2013 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b Minimalist Glass Insertions to Improve and Preserve St Patrick s Cathedral Preservation Leadership Forum National Trust for Historic Preservation November 26 2018 Retrieved June 30 2021 a b c Bergman Edward F 2001 The Spiritual Traveler New York City the Guide to Sacred Spaces and Peaceful Places The Spiritual Traveler Series HiddenSpring p 152 ISBN 978 1 58768 003 8 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b Diamonstein Spielvogel Barbaralee 2011 The Landmarks of New York 5th ed Albany New York State University of New York Press pp 194 195 ISBN 978 1 4384 3769 9 a b c d Farley 1908 p 157 a b c d e f Farley 1908 p 158 a b c d e f Farley 1908 p 161 Stoltz Marsha A November 21 2018 Saddle River sculptor s bronze pope busts installed at St Patrick s Cathedral USA Today Retrieved June 29 2021 Farley 1908 pp 161 162 a b Farley 1908 p 162 Federal Writers Project 1939 pp 344 345 a b c d e f g Farley 1908 p 159 Snodgrass M E 2000 Religious Sites in America A Dictionary ABC CLIO p 356 ISBN 9781576071540 Farley 1908 pp 182 185 To Adorn the Cathedral Three of a Set of Stations of the Cross Finished Now in Chicago The New York Times June 23 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b Farley 1908 pp 177 178 Carthy Margaret 1984 A Cathedral of Suitable Magnificence St Patrick s Cathedral New York Michael Glazier p 65 ISBN 978 0 89453 372 3 a b Farley 1908 p 174 Farley 1908 pp 174 175 Farley 1908 pp 162 163 Searl M B 2006 Seeing America Painting and Sculpture from the Collection of the Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester University of Rochester Press p 181 ISBN 978 1 58046 246 4 Farley 1908 p 175 a b Cardinal Spellman s Red Hat Hangs in St Patrick s The New York Times January 3 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Timothy Michael Cardinal Dolan 2012 A Cardinal s Coat of Arms PDF Cathedra Vol 1 no 1 p 3 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b Farley 1908 pp 185 186 Farley 1908 pp 186 190 Farley 1908 pp 190 192 a b c d e f g A Gorgeous Throne and Altar PDF New York Daily Graphic January 8 1876 p 537 Retrieved January 1 2021 via fultonhistory com a b The Altar for the New York Cathedral PDF The New York Times May 7 1875 p 9 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2021 a b Farley 1908 p 173 Federal Writers Project 1939 pp 345 346 Fordham Altar Consecrated on Campus Today Archbishop Spellman Will Lead Church Ceremony at University at 9 A M Fordham Altar To Be Consecrated Today New York Herald Tribune December 19 1942 p 11 ProQuest 1267951454 Consecration of Altar at Fordham University The New York Times December 20 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Cathedral to Use New Altar May 13 First Solemn Pontifical Mass Will Be Celebrated Then Archbishop Reveals The New York Times March 1 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b Schroder Jessa January 28 2017 Hidden secrets of NYC s St Patrick s Cathedral which include an underground crypt and 9 11 graffiti markings New York Daily News Retrieved June 27 2021 a b c Tombs Under the City Catacombs for the Dead Beneath Several Churches PDF The New York Times August 2 1896 p 20 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Mass to Memorialize Mgr Lavelle Wednesday Monthly Service Will Be Held at St Patrick s New York Herald Tribune April 15 1940 p 9A ProQuest 1320019967 The Cardinal s Funeral Impressive Services Held at the Cathedral The New York Times October 16 1885 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Finally Laid at Rest Services Over the Remains of Archbishop Hughes The New York Times January 31 1883 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 New York News Funeral of Archbishop Hughes Slade and Sullivan Fox and Harding Arrested Railroad Directors Chosen The Hartford Courant January 31 1883 p 3 ProQuest 552853964 Thousands Turned Away Great Crowds Gather to View the Dead Cardinal s Body Men and Women Climb Over Fences to Rear Doors of the Episcopal Residences to Obtain Tickets The New York Times October 15 1885 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Leo XIII Mourns for Mgr Corrigan Cardinal Rampolla Sends the Message of the Pope The New York Times May 8 1902 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Entomb Cardinal in the Cathedral Paying the Final Tribute to Cardinal Farley The New York Times September 25 1918 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 350 See Cardinal Hayes Buried Under Altar Steps of Cathedral Apostolic Delegate Performs Blessing at Service in Vault New York Herald Tribune September 10 1938 p 10A ProQuest 1244523365 Cardinal Buried as Church and City Pay Last Homage 74 Prelates With High Public Officials Attend Solemn Rites in Cathedral The New York Times September 10 1938 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Hofmann Paul December 4 1967 Thousands Mourn Spellman at St Patrick s Throngs of Mourners Pass Cardinal Spellman s Bier at St Patrick s Cathedral The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Cardinal Cooke Priest s Priest Buried at St Patrick s Cathedral The Hartford Courant October 11 1983 p A4 ProQuest 547055899 Bell Charles W October 8 1983 Austere goodby to Cooke New York Daily News p 131 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com Howell Ron May 10 2000 Stream of Tourists at St Patrick s Newsday p 29 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com McCarthy Hanna Rosin Colman May 4 2000 Cardinal John J O Connor Dies Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 27 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Schlossberg Tatiana March 9 2015 Crypt at St Patrick s Cathedral Is Made Ready to Receive a Cardinal The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Chicoine Christie L March 11 2015 Cardinal Egan Laid to Rest at St Patrick s Cathedral Catholic New York Retrieved June 27 2021 Mission Sunday Pageant Given At St Patrick s Archbishop Thanks Public for Notes of Sympathy in Death of Mgr Lavelle New York Herald Tribune October 23 1939 p 16 ProQuest 1252306613 Lavelle Is Buried in the Cathedral Prelates of Catholic Church Lesser Clergy and Prominent Laymen Attend Rites The New York Times October 22 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 Joseph F Flannelly 78 Dies Auxiliary Bishop of New York The New York Times May 25 1973 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 a b c Forero Juan May 8 2000 For Cardinal s Funeral Ancient Ritual and Vivid Spectacle The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Steinfels Peter July 8 1989 Archbishop John J Maguire 84 Longtime Spellman Aide Is Dead The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Archbishop John J Maguire 84 of New York Newsday July 8 1989 p 15 Retrieved June 29 2021 via newspapers com English Merle August 29 1999 In the Name of Sainthood Newsday p 241 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com Sheen Rites at St Patrick s The New York Times December 14 1979 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Kaergard Chris June 27 2019 Archbishop Fulton Sheen s remains return to Peoria Peoria Journal Star Peoria Retrieved June 27 2019 Archbishop Sheen s remains moved to Illinois from NY church AP NEWS June 27 2019 Retrieved June 29 2021 A Patchwork Church in New York The Hartford Courant September 22 1903 p 15 ProQuest 555169583 Dunlap David W 2004 From Abyssinian to Zion A Guide to Manhattan s Houses of Worship New York Columbia University Press p 1 ISBN 0 231 12543 7 Gargoyles on Mediaeval and Modern Churches How the Use of These Hideous Creatures Arose to Be Employed on the Lady Chapel of St Patrick s Roman Catholic Cathedral New York Tribune March 20 1904 p C6 ProQuest 571404242 St Patrick s Cathedral Lady Chapel MBB Architects January 16 2020 Retrieved June 30 2021 St Patrick s Cathedral New York NY Lady Chapel altar frontal International Hildreth Meiere Assoc Retrieved January 23 2022 Grunlund Maura May 8 2015 South Shore churches pushed to keep St John Neumann open silive Retrieved June 29 2021 a b The lavish homes of American archbishops CNN August 5 2014 Retrieved June 29 2021 Otis Ginger Adams September 19 2015 Pope Paul VI s 14 hour 1965 NYC visit marks first time a pontiff left Italy for the West New York Daily News Retrieved June 29 2021 25 blocks 25 stops The Journal News December 16 2000 p 44 Retrieved June 29 2021 via newspapers com Edward Cardinal Egan October 16 2008 Blessed Archdiocese of New York Retrieved June 29 2021 His Eminence Timothy Cardinal Dolan St Patrick s Cathedral February 23 2009 Retrieved June 29 2021 Rinuncia Dell Arcivescovo Metropolita di New York U S A e Nomina Del Successore Holy See February 23 2009 Archived from the original on February 28 2009 Father Enrique Salvo Named Rector of St Patrick s Cathedral Catholic New York November 5 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 a b Contact Us St Patrick s Cathedral Retrieved June 30 2021 a b Dr Jennifer Pascual St Patrick s Cathedral Retrieved June 29 2021 Daniel Brondel St Patrick s Cathedral Retrieved June 29 2021 Michael Hey St Patrick s Cathedral Retrieved June 29 2021 a b c d The Cathedral Bells St Patrick s Cathedral March 14 1901 Retrieved June 25 2021 Steel and Iron National Iron and Steel Publishing Company 1901 p 403 One of the Finest St Patrick s Cathedral in New York to Have a Set of Chimes Boston Daily Globe July 12 1897 p 2 ProQuest 498654646 New Bells for St Patrick s Cathedral Largest in the U S The World July 18 1897 p 12 Retrieved June 27 2021 via newspapers com a b c Compressed Air 1898 p 648 Pareles Jon December 23 1983 Church Bells Tintinnabulation Around the City The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 4 2021 Compressed Air 1898 pp 649 650 Compressed Air 1898 p 650 a b Chimes Rung by New Method Compressed Air and Electricity Set St Patrick s Nineteen Bells Pealing The New York Times March 15 1901 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 27 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k The Cathedral Organs St Patrick s Cathedral Retrieved June 29 2021 Music Dedicates St Patrick s Organ Opera Singers Join in Program at Ceremonies in the Cathedral The New York Times January 31 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2021 Cardinal Hayes Dedicates St Patrick Organ Tonight Ready for Dedication Services Tonight in St Patrick s Cathedral New York Herald Tribune February 11 1930 p 25 ProQuest 1114014402 At St Patrick s Cathedral a Restoration to Benefit the Ears The New York Times January 29 1994 p 1 21 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 429426930 St Patricks Cathedral s Gallery Organ Reinstalled After Two Years of Restoration Viewing NYC January 22 2015 Retrieved November 16 2021 Phillips McCandlish August 31 1970 St Patrick s Names Met Organist as Musical Director The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 7 2021 Death of William F Pecher Veteran Organist of St Patrick s Passes Away in Morristown The New York Times February 23 1904 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 7 2021 William F Pecher Dead Organist of St Patrick s Cathedral Expires in Morristown New York Tribune February 23 1904 p 9 Retrieved July 7 2021 via newspapers com Dr Courboin To Be Organist At St Patrick s Will Fill Position During Illness of Pietro Yon Known for Concert Work New St Patrick s Organist New York Herald Tribune October 2 1943 p 6 ProQuest 1289081384 Gets St Patrick s Post Dr C M Courboin Is Named Organist During Yon s Illness The New York Times October 2 1943 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 7 2021 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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