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1220 N. 11th
Street
Columbus Square
St. Louis, Missouri 63106
www.shrineofstjoseph.org
King David plays his harp and St. Cecilia holds her organ on one hip in
the windows lighting the choir loft at The Shrine of St. Joseph. They
are appropriate symbols of the musical tradition of which the Chamber
Chorus was part in the years leading to the group's fortieth anniversary
season in 1995. The richness of St. Joseph's acoustic may be heard on
the Chorus's first two compact discs, Choral Masterpieces and
Vox Pop.
St. Joseph's goes back to 1846, when it was established by the Jesuits
of nearby St. Louis University (then at 9th and Washington) as the
second of the city's German ethnic parishes (the first was
St. Mary of
Victories). The first building faced 11th Street. The present interior
was added in 1866 at right angles to the original building by Thomas
Wayring Walsh and James Smith. Walsh later designed the new campus for
St. Louis University. The front of the church was designed by Adolphus
Druiding and dates from 1881. Its towers originally were topped by
dome-like cupolas.
By the turn of the century, the neighborhood had become the worst in the
city, and as it gave way to urban renewal, the church came very close to
demolition. Its survival is a tribute to the efforts of its
congregation, who leased the church from the Roman Catholic archdiocese
in 1980, and raised more than a million dollars for restoration.
Followers of the Chamber Chorus were able to watch for several seasons
as the great interior space was cleaned and repainted under the
direction of architect Ted Wofford to a condition commensurate with its
magnificent Baroque architectural lines.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
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The Saint Louis Chamber Chorus
PO Box 11558, Clayton, MO 63105
636.458.4343
stlchamberchorus@gmail.com
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© 1955-2009 The Saint Louis Chamber
Chorus
Amanda Verbeck, Web Designer & Administrator
John Wahlers, Web Engineer
Roger Hill, Web Archivist
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