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129 Woods Mill Road
Manchester, Missouri 63011
www.manchesterumc.org
If Methodists had cathedrals, Manchester United Methodist would have a
good claim to being one. Its new building, seating 1,300 people, is a
visual landmark for miles as seen from the west and serves the largest
congregation of the denomination in the State of Missouri.
The congregation, like the town of Manchester itself, probably began
shortly after the state legislature moved to Jefferson City in 1825,
when the new road was laid out to link Market Street in St. Louis with
the new state capital. The Rev. Samuel G. Patterson reported in 1837
that he was preaching at Manchester on the Methodist circuit, and the
church calculated its centennial in 1937 from that event. The present
chapel facing Woods Mill Road was started in 1856 but not completed
until the end of 1859, at a cost totaling $6,389. Its Greek Revival
lines have been modified somewhat by the Beaux Arts porch, presumably
built early in this century. It is listed on the National Register of
Historic Places.
As Manchester evolved after World War II from a rural crossroads to a
modern suburb, the Manchester congregation added an education building
to the west of the chapel in 1964 to designs of Leslie Black and a new
sanctuary four years later by P.J. Hoener and Associates. That is now
the fellowship hall. The present sanctuary was completed in 1998 to the
designs of Doug Kouba, project architect for Gale A. Hill & Associates.
Hill established his firm in 1966, and since then he has designed more
than 300 churches, mostly in eastern Missouri, among them the First
Baptist Church of Jefferson City and St. John’s Lutheran in Ellisville.
The firm’s two-thousand seat Evangelical Free Church recently opened
near here at Weidman and Carman roads. For the Manchester church, Hill
and Kouba wrapped a traditional Georgian (some would say Neo-Georgian)
exterior around a modern interior, defying expectations with an entry at
right angles to the axis of the sanctuary. Inside, the distance from
front to back is not much more than in the 1968 church, but the width is
much greater. On the front platform, all the furnishings are movable,
including the organ console, and the choir seats 150. Rear projection
video screens flank the organ, and slots in the ceiling permit the
direction of theatrical lighting when required. The windows, including
the rose window, have automatic shades.
The name of the church has followed changes in denominational
organization over the decades: first Methodist Episcopal, the American
denomination founded in 1784; then Methodist Episcopal, South from the
national split of 1844 until reunification nearly a century later in
1939. In 1968 a merger with the Evangelical United Brethren Church
created the United Methodist Church. Contrary to the impression of some
foreigners, Manchester United Methodist Church has no affiliation with
Britain’s leading soccer team, Manchester United!
The Chorus first performed here on May 21, 2000.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
Photo by Roger Hill
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