St. Ambrose Church
Although St. Louis is a city of immigrants, we have only one distinct ethnic
neighborhood, the Hill. Originating in the 1880s, when Italian immigrants were drawn
to jobs in the clay pits and the brick, refractory, and other clay-related industries in the
area, the Hill developed a network of social and cultural institutions that have remained
resilient across several generations.
The neighborhood even has its own distinguished chronicle,
Immigrants
on the Hill by Gary Ross Mormino, written in 1986 and
reprinted in 2002 by the University of Missouri Press.
St. Ambrose Church was in many ways the crowning achievement of this neighborhood,
built to Italian designs by Italian craftsmen. Even the cornerstone makes the point,
Italian Roman Catholic Church, AD 1925. Although St. Louis Italians came from
both northern and southern Italy, the design is distinctly Lombard the Romanesque, the
11th and 12th-century architectural style of Lombardy, the region around Milan.
Specific features recall the churches of Sant Ambrogio and Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan,
as well as San Zeno in Verona and San Petronio in Bologna. Architect Angelo Corrubia
had studied at Washington University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but often
brought features from his native Italy into his designs, which included houses for successful
Italian businessmen in Clayton and Richmond Heights. (His son, also Angelo Corrubia,
was one of the architects in the conversion of the St. Louis Theatre into Powell
Symphony Hall)
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The overall impression of the interior is a symphony of semicircular shapes, which appear
as the curves of the arcades above the scagliola columns, the bull’s-eye clerestory windows,
the aisle vaulting and the main barrel vault, the triumphal arch, the apse, and the dome of
the baldachino or canopy over the main altar. The marble-lined narthex lists
benefactors to the church and commemorates the visit of the papal legate, Cardinal Bonzano,
who came shortly after the 1926 dedication to give a papal benediction. Statues of
saints along the aisles include the church’s namesake Ambrose, 4th-century bishop of Milan
and mentor to St. Augustine, other Italians including Anthony of Padua, Aloysius Gonzaga,
and the female hermit Rosalia, while the Spanish Teresa of Avila and Dominic find places,
along with the Infant of Prague. Windows include Franciscan images.
The arms of two of our city’s three cardinals surmount the side chapels, Joseph Ritter
on the left and John Glennon on the right.
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Perhaps the most touching link to the community is Rudy Torrini’s statue, The Italian
Immigrants, erected outside the church in 1972.
Although the Chamber Chorus Octet performed here
earlier, we believe the April 15, 2007 performance to be the first by the full choir.
* Note: The address on the interactive map may differ slightly from the
true postal address, for more accurate positioning of the map marker.
Copyright © The Saint Louis Chamber Chorus
Home Page: www.chamberchorus.org
E-Mail: maltworm@inlink.com
Web revision by Roger Hill
(rhill@siue.edu), 2007 May 18