St. John's Cathedral (Los Angeles)

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St. John's Cathedral
St. John's Episcopal Church, Los Angeles.JPG
St. John's Cathedral (Los Angeles) is located in California
St. John's Cathedral (Los Angeles)
Location 514 W. Adams Blvd
Los Angeles, California
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1925
Architect Davis, Walter and Pierpont; Hanson, Luis
Architectural style Romanesque Revival
NRHP Reference # 00000425[1]
LAHCM # 516
Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 5, 2000
Designated LAHCM January 22, 1991[2]

St. John's Cathedral is an Episcopal church near downtown Los Angeles that serves as both a parish church and the cathedral church of the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, an area covering five-and-a-half counties. Though St. John's was formed in 1890, the current Romanesque Revival architectural style church was built in 1925. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

Early history

St. John's was founded in 1890. The Los Angeles Times reported on the groundbreaking ceremony in a front-page story:

Quite a large number of interested people assembled on foot and in carriages at the corner of Figueroa and Adams streets, at 4 p.m. yesterday, to witness the laying of the corner-stone of St. John's Episcopal Church. The clergy, in their vestments, preceded by the vestry of the parish, came on the grounds in procession, opening the service as they approached the building site. ... St. John's is to be a tasteful Gothic structure of brick, with stone facings, and wood, capable of seating 150 people. It is placed on the lot as to admit of the erection of a larger structure in the near future.[3]

The original neo-Gothic church was consecrated in June 1894.[4]

George Davidson

In 1913, George Davidson became rector of St. John's, a position he held until 1951. Davidson led the church during a period of growth, as membership rose from 400 to 2,300.[5] He was also a member of the faculty at USC for 14 years, served as president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), and was one of the first organizers of the city's Community Chest drives.[6] When Davidson retired in 1951 at age 71, more than 1,000 people attended his final service at St. John's.[5] At the time, he said, "In all humility, I express my gratitude. My prayers are for St. John's and may His blessing be upon all its loyal members who have raised its standard high. ... The joys and sorrows, the achievements and failures, the happiness and loneliness of many people during the years have been so woven into the fabric of my life that it is difficult for me to express adequately the mingling feelings of my heart in this solemn hour."[5] Davidson died in July 1967 in Los Angeles.[7]

New church building

By 1920, St. John's had outgrown the existing church structure, and a contest to design the new church was won by brothers Pierpont and Walter Davis. The Davis brothers designed the church in an Italian neo-Romanesque style modeled after the 11th-century church of San Pietro in Tuscania, about 75 miles northwest of Rome.[8]

The new church opened in 1924, after two years of construction, and was consecrated in 1925. The Los Angeles Times reported that the last service in the old church was "rife with tender memories" and an "added charm and reverence pervaded the occasion."[9] When the new church opened the following week, the Times called it "one of the most beautiful and costly edifices in the country."[10] Another report noted: "Critics declare it the most beautiful in Los Angeles."[11] Built at a cost of $650,000, the church was described at the time as a "close copy of an Italian church of the sixth century in built at Toscanella."[10]

The church's walls are made of reinforced concrete two-and-a-half feet thick clear to the roof, and the structure is 69 feet from floor to ceiling.[11] The wood-beamed ceiling is a reproduction of a church ceiling from the 11th century at San Miniato, near Florence.[11] The altar is made of Italian marble, and the triptych was carved by Oberammergau workmen.[11] The interior includes a stained glass window featuring Martin Luther King, Jr., installed in 1977. Other windows include a Romanesque rose window. Another striking feature of the church is found in the gold mosaics on the chapel walls. One mosaic depicts the Virgin Mary and Christ child modeled after a 13th-century mosaic at the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta in Torcello, Italy. There is also a mosaic of Jesus as judge, holding a Bible and giving a blessing, a 12th-century convention.[8]

At the time the new church opened in 1924, St. John's had 2,000 communicants on its membership list and was the largest Episcopal church west of Chicago.[11]

In 1947, The Seven Angels mosaics were added to the church at a cost of $150,000. The figures of the angels, each eight feet high and holding a musical instrument, were made of Italian marble with gold mosaic and stand in arched panels. The mosaics were created in Italy by five artists who spent two years working on them.[12]

Lawrence Carter's "metropolitan church"

From 1958 to 1974, the Rev. E. Lawrence Carter was the rector of St. John's. During his tenure, the surrounding area changed from one of white affluence to racially mixed poverty. "Carter led the church in changing with it, moving from an upper-level parish church controlled by businessmen to what he termed a metropolitan church welcoming leaders of many races and economic backgrounds."[13] In 1973, Carter recalled: "There never was a mass exodus, a confrontation, nothing like that. Just a slow ebbing, a dilution socially, economically, racially."[13] He described his concept of a "metropolitan church" as the need for an urban church "to do the social bit".[13] He noted that "Mainline churches cannot be the church unless they pay attention to the community where they are. The church must be involved in all the areas of life."[13] During his time as rector, Carter founded the St. John's Well Child Center and also worked to aid the homeless.[13]

Doors closed as protest to Vietnam War

File:Reopening of Doors at St. John's in 1973.jpg
Carter officiates from pulpit at left as ceremonial front doors are re-opened after three years. Photo for the Los Angeles Times by Don Cormier

In 1970, Carter drew media attention when he closed the large ceremonial front doors of the church as a protest against the Vietnam War. He noted that the doors were closed "as a sign of our penitence and sorrow, as well as protest. Penitence for our silence and hence our part in the bloodshed. ... Protest that once again our beloved country has chosen guns and bombs instead of other means of reconciliation."[14] The doors remained closed for three years until the war ended. At the April 1973 ceremony at which the doors were reopened, Carter noted, "This is no moment of triumph. We reopen our doors as an affirmation, to a peace ... which will offer mankind a new life on this planet."[14] The ceremony was interspersed with the sounding of a shofar, the ram's horn traditionally used in Jewish services. Though he considered the peace to be no more than an "armistice" enforced by the "terror of nuclear warheads," Carter said that the church "chose this moment to signify our thanksgiving that our bombers no longer rake the ravaged land, that our prisoners of war are finally home and our fighting forces withdrawn (from) an enterprise which drained the spiritual as well as the material resources of our land."[14]

Banner for war dead at St. John's

In recent years, the St. John's community has actively voiced its opposition to the War in Iraq. Each Sunday, the names of each American military person who died in the war is read at the church's servics. A banner at the back of the church has a cross marked for each American death in the war. And during the procession of the palms during Palm Sunday services, members of the congregation carried anti-war protest signs along with their palms.

Designation as procathedral

In October 2007, Bishop J. Jon Bruno announced that St. John's had been named the procathedral of the Diocese of Los Angeles, with the cathedral functions to be shared with the Cathedral Center of St. Paul in Echo Park. Larger diocesan liturgical functions are carried out at St. John's while all other diocesan offices and functions are located at St. Paul's. The dedication was held in February, 2008.[8]

The Very Rev. Canon Mark Kowalewski, rector of St. John's, noted that the changes were the culmination of years of conversations.[8] He noted that when the current church was first built in the 1920s, its first rector, Fr. Davidson had wanted it to become the diocesan cathedral.

Rectors

  • The Rev. H. O. Judd, May 6, 1890–May 1891
  • The Rev. Benjamin Walter Rogers Tayler, December 13, 1891–April 17, 1903
  • The Rev. Lawrence B. Ridgely, May 31, 1903–April 23, 1905
  • The Rev. Lewis Grouverneur Morris, September 10, 1905–October 1912
  • The Rev. George Davidson, April 1913–October 1, 1951
  • The Rev. Ray Holder, December 1951–August 15, 1955
  • The Rev. Robert Quayle Kennaugh, December 1955–1958
  • The Rev. E. Lawrence Carter, 1958–1974
  • The Rt. Rev. William D. Persell, 1973–1982[15][16][17]
  • The Rev. Warner Traynham, 1982?–2001[18]
  • The Very Rev. Canon Mark Kowalewski, 2006–present
  • The Very Rev. Canon Daniel Ade, 2010–present

See also

External links

References

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  18. Mark Kowalewski, Current Dean of St. John's