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4501 Westminster Place (at Taylor)
St. Louis, Missouri 63108
www.secondchurch.net
Founded in 1838, Second Presbyterian Church started in a Greek Revival
building at 5th & Walnut, and moved in 1867 to a Gothic Revival one in
fashionable Lucas Place, now 17th and Locust. Their third building, here
in the West End, was another stylistic departure. Its design derives
from the 1874-1877 Trinity Church on Copley Square in Boston, which was
for a time the most popular building in America. H.H. Richardson based
the dramatic octagonal tower at the crossing of the church on the old
cathedral at Salamanca in Spain, dating from the twelfth century.
Richardson, the most influential architect of his era, designed three
houses in St. Louis, and his daughter Julia married St. Louisan George
Shepley. Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge, Richardson’s successor firm,
designed the chapel of the new Second Presbyterian complex in 1896.
Three years after the construction of the Chapel, the German immigrant
Theodore Link (1850-1923) was asked to design the main church. Trained
in Heidelberg and Paris, Link had worked in 1875 as a draftsman on the
design of Forest Park. He became famous for his 1891 design for St.
Louis’s Union Station, which identified him with the muscular,
rock-faced Romanesque style Richardson had popularized. His extensive
later practice included buildings in many other styles, including the
Arts & Crafts Wednesday Club (now The Learning Center) across the
street, the Ionic St. John’s Methodist Church on Kingshighway (opposite
the former home of Second Baptist Church,
whose replacement is another past venue of the Chamber Chorus), and the
Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson.
Kurt Landberg’s renovation in 1986-87 adjusted the lighting and wall
colors of the interior to highlight the glass, one of the artistic
glories of St. Louis. Eleven of the windows are by the studios of Louis
Comfort Tiffany, and several are signed. The first six were installed in
1900, with the remainder added into the 1920s. They exhibit all the
hallmarks of his style, including chunky or swirling surfaces,
irregularities of color employed as part of the design, and plating of
two or three layers of glass for depth and richness. A few non-Tiffany
windows can be seen near the entry. The chapel, through the doors to the
left, was remodeled when LaBeaume & Klein added the large education wing
around it in 1931. This was the setting chosen to record the Chamber
Chorus's third compact disc,
A Chamber Christmas,
since it has an extraordinarily live acoustic and is isolated from
extraneous noise by a series of ‘buffer’ rooms.
Although the Chamber Chorus rehearsed here for a season in the late
1980s, and recorded the compact disc of Christmas carols in the chapel,
the group has only performed one concert in the church, on October 6,
1996.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
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