Immanuel Lutheran Church
St. Charles was founded by Louis Blanchette in 1765, a year after St. Louis,
but like St. Louis its French origins were submerged by German immigration by the
middle of the 19th century. The first Lutherans arrived in the area in the 1830s,
particularly from the northern states of Hanover and Mecklenburg. They worshiped
at rural churches in the region and at a former Presbyterian building at 3rd and
Madison. Timber from one of these rustic places was used to create the cross that
can still be seen in the Narthex. Dr. C.F.W. Walther, the head of
Trinity Lutheran Church in Soulard, installed Rudolph Lange
as permanent pastor in 1848. A stone building for the formally organized
Immanuel Church was started the next year at 6th and Jefferson, the present site.
It was dedicated early in 1850.
Just 17 years later, the big new brick church was dedicated on Reformation Sunday,
October 29, 1867, the 350th anniversary of Martin Luther’s 95 Theses.
Three services in German and one in English were held that day, and the next day the
Wabash Railroad brought a special train from St. Louis with nine cars filled with the
faithful. The new building on its hilltop site reflected the dominant role of the
congregation in the community, attracting members from a wide area, including northwestern
St. Louis County, where there were no Lutheran churches until much later.
The church spire, visible from across the river, was the only one in St. Charles at
the time. It rose 158 feet, later raised to 176 feet, and in 1912 given
a gold cross 12 feet high. The tower was planned to hold three bells,
the largest inscribed Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott. The tower clocks were
originally created by local machinist Grover C. Parker. Immanuel is one of the
earliest and largest surviving Gothic Revival churches in the region, but it was designed
by an architectural firm from Cleveland, Griese & Weile.
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Some features of the interior are original, including the altar, with its statues of
Mary and John, Moses and Paul. The pulpit is ornamented with figures of the four
Evangelists and Jesus. The font is cast iron, imported from Germany. The whole
church was redecorated in 1922 in anticipation of Immanuel’s 75th anniversary, and the
opalescent art glass windows were installed at that time. New pews were installed
in 1937 and the floor carpeted by the Ladies Aid organizations. New lighting
fixtures date from between 1955 and 1965, and air conditioning arrived in 1972.
Both the school and the administration shifted to English during World War I, and
the congregation has continued to prosper, now occupying a group of buildings spread over
two city blocks, including Immanuel Lutheran School in 1952 by Wischmeyer and Lorenz,
expanded in 1969, the Education and Activities Center by Froese, Maack & Becker
in 1969, the Lutheran Center by Eugene Potente, Jr. of Kenosha in 1982,
and the Fellowship Hall by the Wind Architectural Group in 1998.
February 18, 2007 marked the Chamber Chorus’s first performance at
Immanuel Lutheran Church.
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 17