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TRINITY + EPISCOPAL + CHURCH
The Building Designed in 1916 by Kirksville architect Irwin Dunbar (1888 – 1975) and
constructed in 1917, Trinity Episcopal Church is a prime example of an early
twentieth-century religious structure constructed in an eclectic style. It unites both Craftsman style
detailing and the design guidelines popularized in the nineteenth century by
the Cambridge Camden Society, a British organization that advised builders on
the architectural designs for Episcopal parish churches. In recognition of its local historic
and artistic value, Trinity has just been nominated for placement on the
National Register of Historic Places. This structure is the second oldest building in Kirksville in continuous
use as a church.
[1]
The
1917 Trinity Episcopal Church replaced an earlier board and batten Episcopal church
(the old church is seen above in the
photograph on the left; the new church on the right) that had stood on the
same site since 1870. The original
church ran east-west across the two lots it was built on and it was entered
through a porch on the building's north side, facing Harrison Street. A fire damaged the original wooden Trinity
Episcopal Church in March 1907; emergency repairs were effected but the
building remained in such poor condition that the congregation petitioned the
Diocese for a new structure in October 1915. A local committee selected Irwin Dunbar, a member of the
congregation, as architect after an agreement on financing the project was
reached between the Diocese and Trinity. The old church was razed in 1916 and by October of that year, Dunbar had
drawn up plans for a new building. The construction, done by the firm of Eggert and Russell from Kirksville,
moved forward rapidly: the cornerstone for Trinity Episcopal Church was laid in
May 1917 and the completed church was consecrated on 7 November 1917. The building cost $11,555 "with
everything in it"
[2]
and the cost
was split between the Diocese and the mission.
Typical
of his work on other buildings in Kirksville between 1914 and 1917, Irwin
Dunbar's design for Trinity Episcopal Church adeptly combines the spatial needs
of a small congregation with solid craftsmanship and sensible artistic
values. Dunbar achieved this at
Trinity by combining different architectural forms and styles, namely Gothic
Revival and Craftsman. The
exterior and interior arrangement, as well as the furnishings, demonstrate the
building's faithfulness to architectural guidelines laid out in England by the
Cambridge Camden Society during the nineteenth century. As a rural, mid-western outpost of the
Episcopal Church, the Gothic design for the 1917 Trinity helped it project a
particular religious identity. It looks like an Episcopal chapel. But while Trinity Episcopal Church
participates in an established tradition of Gothic Revival churches in the
Diocese of Missouri, it is unique among Episcopal chapels in Eastern Missouri
in its free and graceful mixing of Craftsman and Gothic styles.
Set
in a residential neighborhood, Trinity's scale and Craftsman characteristics
help it blend in with the surrounding bungalow-style domestic architecture. The Craftsman style is evident on both
the building's exterior and interior. The church's horizontal lines are emphasized by its gable roof, the
course of stone between the basement and the main floor and the windows
clustered in threes to create long bands. The deep eaves, purlins, rafters, and rough brick are among the other Craftsman
elements on the exterior. The
meditative, uncluttered feeling of the interior space is achieved through the
trusses, white plaster, extensive use of black walnut, stained glass and good workmanship. The simple stained glass reflects the
economic realities of a small congregation with limited finances in 1917. The remarkable ceiling trusses in the
nave bring together both Craftsman and Gothic Revival aspects (the simple, box
shapes of the former and the desire for an exposed beamed ceiling in the
latter). Trained as an engineer,
Dunbar's use of trusses is also a practical solution for carrying the weight of
the now ninety-year old English-tile roof.
The
Cambridge Camden Society promoted certain Gothic Revival forms and details in
Episcopal churches. These features
are much in evidence at Trinity: namely, the side entrance to the building
through a porch (rather than straight into the church through an entrance
directly in line with the altar) and the lancet and four-centered arch windows
on the exterior. The large
four-centered arch windows, located at either end of the nave and in the
transepts, are really just simplifications of the Perpendicular Gothic style of
architecture, an architectural style the Cambridge Camden Society championed
for Episcopal churches. That
period of Gothic design works well with the square-angled Craftsman features in
our building. The interior
arrangement of the nave and chancel are entirely in keeping with the
recommendations of the Cambridge Camden Society: a center aisle, visible
separation between the nave and sanctuary at both the floor and ceiling levels,
a deep chancel, aumbry and a communion rail.
Alterations to Trinity's exterior have been
restricted to the east elevation where a flat roof and brick parapet were
replaced with an inclined roof in 1998-99. The two primary facades, the west and north elevations,
retain all their 1917 qualities. On the interior, the arrangement, materials and furnishings of the nave
and chancel are essentially untouched. Moreover, the prominent incorporation of three wooden pews and a
processional cross from the nineteenth-century Trinity Episcopal Church,
Kirksville, perceptibly tie the furnishings of this 1917 structure to its 1870 predecessor
and strengthen our building's association with the clergy and parishioners who have
served and worshipped on this site since the late nineteenth century.
[3]
The Building and The Diocese In 1871 the Diocese of Missouri adopted
a distinction between parishes (autonomous congregations) and missions
(dependent on the Diocese). In an evangelizing
effort to spread the Gospel and develop branches of the Episcopal Church, several
missions where opened across Missouri in the early 1870s.
[4]
Trinity Episcopal Church was just such
an establishment. The greatest
growth in the Episcopal Church in Missouri coincided with the state and
Kirksville's greatest population growth, 1870 to 1900. Trinity Episcopal Church was founded as
a missionary station in 1870. The
small, wooden, Gothic-styled church erected in Kirksville was constructed as
part of a larger parish that covered seven counties in Northeast Missouri and the
1870 Trinity resembled those buildings constructed at other mission churches in
northern Missouri in the early 1870s, for example, at Clarksville, Pike County
and at Louisiana, Pike County. All
three of these resemble the wooden churches for missions too poor to afford an
architect that appeared in Richard Upjohn's Upjohn's
Rural Architecture (1852).
In
1870, Trinity Episcopal Church represented a remote outpost in the Episcopal
missionary field of northern Missouri. At first, Kirksville was a missionary station dependent on the Gothic
splendor of St. Jude's, Monroe City (seen
below in the photograph below) for a supply minister on horseback. Moreover, the modest Gothic board and
batten church built in Kirksville in 1870, was consecrated three years later by
the Rev. Mr. Scheetz, the architect of St. Jude's and still its rector in the
1870s. In consequence, the 1870
Gothic Revival church in Kirksville is indirectly tied to one of the strongest
advocates of Gothic Revival architecture in northern Missouri.
[5]
The model of the small English parish church advocated
by the Cambridge Camden Society continued to be the design source for Gothic
Revival churches in the Diocese of Missouri throughout the late
nineteenth-century: for instance at Trinity Episcopal Church (1858) in
Hannibal, Marion County and its remodeling in 1899; St. Paul's Church (1880),
Palmyra, Marion County; Church of the Redeemer (1893), St. Louis City; and Calvary
Church (1899), Columbia, Boone County. Architects and building committees in the Diocese of
Missouri continued to employ Gothic Revival in the twentieth century as seen at
St. James in Macon, Macon County built in 1901 and St. John's, St. Louis City
in 1907. Even the Episcopal churches
in the Diocese constructed immediately before or at the same time as Trinity -- St. Michael and St. George
(1913-1929); Epiphany Chapel (1917); St Mary's (1918) -- continued the trend of
Gothic-inspired designs. In fact,
St. Michael and St. George, a massive Gothic church in St. Louis, represents
the climax of proper ecclesiological design in the Diocese. Trinity's place in the architectural
development of the Diocese's chapels is important: at the time of its construction,
Trinity was participating in an almost sixty-year old Gothic Revival tradition
for Episcopal churches in Eastern Missouri.
[6]
Trinity's incorporation of Cambridge
Camden principles, therefore, helped it demonstrate an architectural style
immediately identifiable as Episcopalian. Likewise, Trinity's rural location at the very edge of the Diocese made
its use of Gothic a critical decision in establishing its identity and
heritage.
The
Building and Mission at Kirksville Although
the Kirksville business community constituted the core of Trinity's membership
in its beginning, the congregation has long had strong connections with Truman
students, staff and faculty. In
1923, for example, 120 Truman students attended Trinity. Historically Trinity also has a strong
connection with St. James, Macon. The Rev. Dr. Ethelbert Talbot from St James served as our priest on
three separate occasions – 1872-1874; 1878-1881; 1883-1887. Moreover, our current baptismal font
came to us from St. James, Macon upon that church's closure.
As
early as 1903, Trinity's priest, the Rev. Mr. George Preston, found the " old
frame structure which is not, and cannot be made comfortable and is wholly
inadequate." However, his plan to
"begin at once to build a modest building of brick and stone" never
happened. Instead a fire in 1907
damaged the roof, making the chapel even worse. Nonetheless, the congregation continued to meet in a poorly
repaired structure for several years. In September 1915, the Rev. Mr. Rufus DeLancy Putney
was appointed vicar of Trinity, the first priest to serve there since 1910; he
found the
building beyond repair and sought and obtained permission for a new church. The timing was
deliberate. The Diocese pledged
monies for the rehabilitation and maintenance of Kirksville as a missionary
station for four years succeeding 1914, the same year Irwin Dunbar graduated
from the University of Missouri, moved to Kirksville, began practice as an
architect and started attending Trinity Episcopal Church. Given the combination of a decrepit
building, an experienced architect in the congregation, a congregation willing
to move forward, monies promised from the Diocese, and a new priest, Putney
wasted no time. His petition for a
new church came one month after assuming his duties at Trinity.
The 1916 Diocesan Convention received a report of Trinity's
progress under The Rev. Mr. Putney's leadership from Bishop Johnson. He noted that a contract for
construction of a new church in Kirksville had been let. Of this amount, $5500 would be paid by
the Diocese and the remainder from pledges by members of the church. Two groups from the congregation oversaw Trinity's
construction: the Building Committee and the Finance Committee. The membership of both groups is a
who's who of early twentieth-century Kirksville commerce. The two
committees that oversaw the building and funding of the new building consisted
of:
The Building Committee:
Mr. Robert Clark
Mr. Irwin Davis
Mr. James E. Goodwin
Mr. T.W. Gorrell
Mrs. J.M. Kennedy
Mr. B.H. Stephenson
The Finance Committee:
Mrs. C.C. Givens
Mr. James E. Goodwin
Mr. T.W. Gorrell
Mr. H.A. Kellogg
Mrs. Allan D. Osenaugh
Mr. B.H. Stephenson
Prof. J.S. Stokes
While the new church was under construction, services were held at
the Elks Club, the Princess Theater (now Sieren's Palace. Dunbar had just designed this building
for Mrs J.M. Kennedy, a member of the Building Committee), and a funeral home.
On 14 May 1917 the cornerstone of the new brick church with its
undercroft for parish activities was laid by the Right Rev. Bishop Johnson
assisted by the Rev. Mr. Rufus Putney. Six months later Bishop Johnson returned to Kirksville and on 7 November
1917, Trinity Episcopal Church was consecrated by Bishop Johnson assisted by the
Rev. Mr. Putney and some of the clergy of the Northern Convocation.
The
departure of the Rev. Mr. L.C. Sherburne as Trinity's priest in 1926 was a blow
to the congregation. Because of
outstanding debt, declining attendance and lack of clergy, the Diocese authorized
Trinity's closure and deconsecrated the church in 1928. In 1929, Diocesan Convention
ordered mission property at Kirksville sold. Fortunately for Trinity, the onset of the Great Depression coincided
with the deconsecration; there were no buyers for dormant churches located in the
rural outposts of the Diocese. In 1939 several members of Trinity went to St. Louis to
request the Right Rev. Bishop Scarlett to re-open the church, which he
did. The Rev. Mr. J. Presly Pound,
St. James, Macon, took charge and held services here semi-monthly. Once again, Trinity Kirksville owed its
resurrection to Macon clergy.
Since the 1940s Trinity has remained open as a mission church, its congregation has slowly but steadily grown and it has been an active participant in Kirksville's religious life. Some examples of the relation between Trinity and various communities are its opening a day care service in 1960, reactivating the Canterbury Club, for college and medical students in 1961, making and selling incredible Easter eggs, helping Hope's Kitchen and the Kirksville Food Pantry, and supporting Victim Support Services and Habitat for Humanity.
List
of Clergy
1869 Rev.
Strycker
1870 Rev.
J.A.D. Hughes (also St. Jude, Monroe City MO)
1871 Rev.
William Charles
1872-1874 Rev.
Ethelbert Talbot (also St. James, Macon MO)
1874-1878 Rev. R.E.
Huntington
1878-1881 Rev.
Ethelbert Talbot (also St. James, Macon MO)
1881-1883 Rev. Peter
Wager
1883-1887 Rev.
Ethelbert Talbot (also St. James, Macon MO)
1887-1888 Rev.
Charles Davis
1888-1891 Rev. C.H.
Canfield
1891-1897 Vacant
1897-1900 Rev.
Frederick Chapman
1900-1903 Rev. J.H.
McBride
1903-1905 Rev. George
Preston
1905-1907 Rev. Royal
Kennett Tucker
1907-1909 Rev. D.
Agate (also St. James, Macon MO)
1909-1910 Rev.
Frederick Chapman
1910-1915 Vacant
1915-1918 Rev. Rufus
DeLancy Putney
1918-1919 Rev. Lyman
Howes
1919-1922 Rev. Oscar
Lindstrom (also St. Jude, Monroe City MO)
1922-1926 Rev. L.C.
Sherburne
1926-1939 Vacant
1939-1941 Rev. J.
Priestly Pound (also St. James, Macon MO)
1941-1945 Rev.
Charles Wilson
1945-1950 Rev.
Richard Wheatcroft
1950-1951 Vacant
1951-1952 Rev.
Douglas Atwill
1952-1953 Vacant
1953-1955 Rev. Arthur
Steidemann
1955-1957 Rev. Keith
Kreitner
1957-1974 Rev. Harry
Maurer
1974-1978 Vacant
1978-1982 Rev. Steve
Hayward
1982-1984 Rev. Drew
Kadel
1984-1993 Rev. Ken
Yerkes
1993-1999 Rev.
Jocelyn Bell
1999-2001 Rev.
Charles Granger
2001-2009 Rev.
Wallace Caldwell
2006 Rev. Carrol Davenport, Priest Associate
[1]
The oldest Kirksville building in continuous use as a church
is the A.M.E. Church, now the Bible Missionary Church, at 508 South Main which
dates from 1878.
[2]
Unpublished correspondence between Trinity Episcopal Church, Kirksville, MO
with the Rt. Rev. Frederick Johnson, Bishop of Missouri, dated 1917. Archives of the Diocese of Missouri, St.
Louis, MO.
[3]
In the nave, the church also displays
photographs of the 1870 churchÔøΩs exterior and interior, its 1873 charter from
the Diocese of Missouri and other documents relating to the congregationÔøΩs
founding. Furthermore, Trinity
still possesses the bell (cast by the noted firm of G.W. Coffin & Co.,
Buckeye Bell Foundry, Cincinnati OH) from the 1870 church. Oddly, there is no indication that
Dunbar planned to incorporate the bell into the 1917 church at all.
[4]
By 1886, The Diocese of Missouri had 40
missions, Kirksville being one of them, and 51 parishes.
[5] The Rev. Mr. Scheetz drew the plans for at least four churches in Missouri, all of them Gothic: St. JudeÔøΩs, Monroe City; Trinity, St. James; St. MarkÔøΩs, Butler; and St. PaulÔøΩs, Lee Summit. St. JudeÔøΩs and St. PaulÔøΩs are on the National Register of Historic Places.
[6]
Trinity is among of the last churches in the Diocese of
Missouri to use the Gothic style as well. Six more Gothic churches were built during the 1920s and 1930s. Then, Diocesan architecture shifted: the
next chapels built in the Diocese of Missouri were a show-stopping Art Moderne
(St. MarkÔøΩs, St.Louis County in 1938) and two Georgian Revival engaged axial
tower structures (Grace Church, Clarksville, Pike County in 1940 and St.
PeterÔøΩs, Ladue, St. Louis County in 1949).
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© Trinity Episcopal Church 2011 | 124 N. Mulanix Street, Kirksville, MO 63501 |
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