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3854 Flad Avenue
(at 39th Street)
St. Louis, Missouri
63110
www.stmargaretstl.org
Christmas has special meaning to the parish of St. Margaret of Scotland.
The parish's first mass was celebrated in a rented store building on
Christmas Day, 1899, and the first mass in the present building (then
unfinished) was exactly seven years later. The day is commemorated in
the large Nativity mural behind the main altar. A related image of Mary
and the infant Jesus is seen in the first statue to the left.
The statue to the right in contrasting marbles represents St. Margaret
of Scotland. She is also depicted in stained glass in the balcony
window. The historical St. Margaret was a member of the Saxon ruling
family of England, born about 1045 while her parents were in exile from
the Danes. They returned during the reign of her great-uncle, Edward the
Confessor, but fled the Norman invasion in 1066. Seeking refuge in
Scotland, they met King Malcolm Canmore, the victor in Shakespeare's
Macbeth. He married Margaret a few years later. Their joint reign
became a milestone in the development of Scotland, with Malcolm
consolidating the country and Margaret introducing continental standards
of Christianity and culture. They died within days of each other in
1093. Three of their sons succeeded to the throne of Scotland, while
their daughter Matilda became the progenitor of the kings of England
through her marriage to Henry I. Margaret was declared a saint in 1250
and patroness of Scotland in 1673.

The church is one of at least six parish churches designed by architects
Barnett, Haynes & Barnett in the first decade of the twentieth century,
while they were working on the New Cathedral. The others are St. Rose of
Lima at Goodfellow and Maple, St. Ann at Page and Whittier, St. Mark the
Evangelist at Page and Academy, Our Lady of Visitation at Taylor and
Evans, and Immaculate Conception at Lafayette and Longfellow. All are
still standing, although the first three are no longer Catholic. St.
Margaret's shares with several of them a dominant corner tower and a
broad worship space under a beamed ceiling unsupported by columns.
Outside, St. Margaret's is Gothic in style, and the windows have simple
pointed arches of the Early Gothic inset with the more ornamental
parallel tracery of the Perpendicular or English Late Gothic. Beginning
in 1925 and continuing for the next 13 years, the original wood altars
and plaster statues inside were replaced by marble and mosaics under the
direction of the Daprato Company of Pietrasanta, Italy. Murals above the
altar depict the Transfiguration and Ascension. Windows by the Emil Frei
Art Glass Company of St. Louis show the miracles of Jesus, starting with
the Marriage at Canna at the left front.
A
second round of decorations in the 1940s included the present pews. By
that time, the parish had nearly 2,600 households. Today, with 450
families, a grade school, and many community activities, St. Margaret's
remains an important anchor to the Shaw neighborhood.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
Exterior photos by Roger Hill
Interior photo by Beth Tuttle
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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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