St. Thomas's Episcopal Church (New Haven, Connecticut)
History
On February 24, 1848, a meeting was held by sixteen lay Episcopalians in New Haven, Connecticut, to discuss the opening of a third Episcopal church in the city. The first services were held in a room that belonged to Center Church on April 23, 1848, where they remained until 1849. The rector purchased a lot on Elm Street that year, and began construction of a temporary chapel. Five months later, the first services were held in the chapel on August 12, 1849. The congregation decided that a new, larger church would be built on the site of the existing chapel, and the last services in the chapel were held on March 12, 1854. One month later, the cornerstone of the new church was laid, with Bishop John Williams in attendance. In the meantime, services were held in Brewster Hall. The completed church was consecrated on April 19, 1855. It was constructed in the English Gothic Revival style out of Portland stone. A parish house was not built until 1888. The cornerstone was laid on May 21, and the building was dedicated on February 3, 1889.
In 1923, the rector proposed that the church relocate to another part of New Haven, as since the founding of the church, Elm Street had become entirely commercial. The congregation purchased a lot on Whitney Avenue, between Odgen and Cliff Streets in 1923. There, a new parish house was constructed in 1931. A new church was constructed there, and consecrated on October 8, 1939.
References
Citations
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 2
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 23
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 26
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 27
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 32
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 33
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 39
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 43
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 62
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 87
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 88
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 89
- ^ Beardsley 1941, p. 98
Sources
- Beardsley, William A. (1941). History of St. Thomas's Episcopal Church, New Haven, Connecticut, 1848–1941 (PDF). New Haven, Connecticut: The Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Company. OCLC 10610775. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 15, 2019. Retrieved December 15, 2019 – via Project Canterbury.