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1413 N. 20th Street
St. Louis, Missouri 63106
www.stanislauskostka.com
St. Stanislaus Kostka was the first Polish Catholic parish founded in
St. Louis, on May 23, 1880. The present church was built in 1892,
standing in the crowded neighborhood of Irish immigrants known as "Kerry
Patch." Since then that community has come and gone, as has Pruitt-Igoe,
the notorious high-rise public housing project which replaced it. Until
the recent low level redevelopment facing the church, set among fields
of cleared blocks, St. Stanislaus almost had a rural setting in the
midst of a city.
The building, designed by Wessbecher & Hummel (who also designed
Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Hyde Park) on a Greek cross plan, contrast
a dark Romanesque exterior with a brightly lighted Byzantine-influenced
interior. The center of the three saucer domes originally rose higher to
a large lantern, which gave the church a more dramatic profile and
allowed windows, but it had to be lowered for structural reasons in
1913. The mural, called "Golgotha," located behind the altar, is a copy
of the larger painting by Jan Styka that was shown at the 1904 World's
Fair. It was installed in 1928, when the interior was redecorated after
a fire. The windows are by Michael Olszewski. They show Polish saints,
including two by the name of Stanislaus; the church's patron is depicted
above the main altar.
The parish of St. Stanislaus was incorporated under Missouri law in
1891, and the church is owned by the parish rather than by the
archdiocese. The Chamber Chorus performed here twice in the early 1990s:
"A Polish Christmas" on December 15, 1991, and a spring program on April
25, 1993.
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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