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9030 Clayton Road (at McKnight)
Richmond Heights, Missouri
63117
www.2ndbc.org
Second Baptist Church of St. Louis was founded in 1833 but traces its
origins to the First Baptist Church founded in 1818. Second Baptist has
had five homes, each a notable design of its era. The fourth was the
monumental Italian Gothic complex at Kingshighway and Washington built
in 1908 and now part of the "Holy Corners" historic district. The
present building is, by contrast, so restrained externally as to be
almost invisible. Its achievement is its interior, a memorable
environment created out of the simplest modern elements, brick, glass,
and birch. Frederick Dunn (1905-1984), who designed it in 1956, was then
in the midst of his second architectural career. His first had begun in
1936, when the Minnesota native came to St. Louis to form a partnership
with Charles Nagel, whom he had met at Yale. The work of Nagel & Dunn,
which struck contemporaries as daringly modern, was always grounded in
traditional styles, particularly late Georgian, and today compares
favorably with the best of the post-modern movement. Their most
acclaimed work was St. Mark’s (Episcopal) Church on Clifton Avenue near
Nottingham, today designated a St. Louis landmark. After serving in the
war, Nagel became a successful museum director, while Dunn embraced the
International Style, practicing at first on his own and later in
partnership with the younger Nolan Stinson; Dunn himself moved to New
York in 1963. Their design for the National Council of State Garden
Clubs, located on Magnolia Avenue in Shaw’s Garden, recently received a
25-year award from the American Institute of Architects. It uses the
same soft pink "Chicago common" brick seen here.
The nine windows were painted in enamel, rather than pieced, by St.
Louis artist Siegfried Reinhardt and executed by Emil Frei. They
represent the Sermon on the Mount and the Beatitudes. Associated with
these themes are four aspects of Jesus and other biblical images,
including Job’s sufferings, Paul’s conversion, the Good Samaritan, and
the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican.
The Chamber Chorus sang its Scandinavian Christmas program here,
December 21 and 22, 1996, and subsequently recorded its fourth compact
disc from the choir gallery,
A Spanish
Christmas.
The church house, which is more visible than the church, was built about
1868 by a dentist, Henry Barron and his wife Elizabeth McCutchan, on
part of her family’s estate. They lost it to foreclosure in 1876, and a
later owner, Dr. Wilbur Carpenter of the Bryant & Stratton Business
College, suffered the same fate in 1915. The Ionic portico, which
obscures the original Italianate style of the house, was added about
1920 for Levi Wade Childress, president of the Columbia Transfer Company
and Laclede Gas.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
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