St. Agatha Church
3239 South 9th Street (at Utah)
St. Louis (Soulard), Missouri
In spite of the construction of Interstate 55 and the encroaching
presence of Anheuser-Busch, the little cluster of buildings at the
corner of 9th and Utah has maintained its picturesque appearance
reminiscent of 19th century St. Louis. Saint Agatha's has been here
since its founding in 1871, the fourth south-side German Catholic
parish. (The Chamber Chorus has sung at all the others:
St. Mary of Victories,
Sts. Peter and Paul, and
St. Francis de Sales;
the December 22, 2002 performance marks its first visit to St. Agatha's.)
The original building, dedicated in 1872, was designed by Adolphus
Druiding, a young (born 1839) native of Hannover, Germany. Druiding
provided churches ranging from modest to imposing over a territory
that extended from Buffalo to Green Bay. In St. Louis he designed the
two-towered baroque front for the Shrine of St. Joseph. His 1870 design for
St. John Nepomuk, rebuilt after the 1896 tornado,
is quite similar to St. Agatha, which Druiding had already rebuilt, beginning
in 1884 (cornerstone 1885). In both, he retained the gabled and
buttressed front façades from the earlier buildings. At St. Agatha,
the transept, choir or sanctuary, and sacristy were not completed until 1899.
The general contractor for this work was Joseph Stauder, who was a
practicing architect himself. Stauder designed the parish buildings
here, including the 1892 convent, the 1896 rectory, and the 1908
school. Through Joseph's son Adolph and his grandson Arthur, the
Stauder firm has continued to the present, still specializing in
Catholic institutions. Our Lady of Sorrows and
St. Gabriel's are familiar later examples of their work.
 |
| Christmas 2002 Concert at
St. Agatha Church |
St. Agatha's German affiliation is most apparent in its hall church
design, the side aisles being almost as tall as the nave. The large
bright images of the stained glass are characteristic of the best
work of Emil Frei Studios, which provided 14 windows here in 1905.
Having two separate Nativity scenes, one for the shepherds and one
for the magi, the windows are especially appropriate to a Christmas
concert. Those in the apse behind the altar depict Old Testament
scenes of sacrifice, while the rose windows in the transepts show the
Crucifixion and the Coronation of the Virgin. Thanks to the research
of Mary Margaret Stiritz for her book, St. Louis: Churches and
Synagogues, we know the makers of many of the liturgical furnishings.
Conrad Schmidt of Milwaukee created the high altar, where St. Agatha
presides with her tongs, symbolic of her martyrdom (look it up!).
Lansbeck and Macke of Louisville made the side altars, the left
dedicated to the Virgin and the right to St. Joseph. The mural above
St. Joseph depicts his death, drawn from the ancient but
non-canonical text entitled The History of Joseph the Carpenter.
Fresco artist William Kloer worked here both in 1899 and in 1920,
when a new Pietà shrine by Henry Dreisoerner was installed and the
tile and marble installed in the vestibule.
Copyright © The Saint Louis Chamber Chorus
Home Page: www.chamberchorus.org
E-Mail: maltworm@inlink.com
Web revision by Roger Hill
(rhill@siue.edu), 2006 Jun 14