- St. Stephen's Church (Boston, Massachusetts)
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St. Stephen's ChurchSt. Stephen's Church, Boston
Location: Boston, MA Coordinates: 42°21′56.21″N 71°3′10.11″W / 42.3656139°N 71.0528083°WCoordinates: 42°21′56.21″N 71°3′10.11″W / 42.3656139°N 71.0528083°W Built: 1804 Architect: Bulfinch, Charles Architectural style: Early Republic, Other Governing body: Private NRHP Reference#: 75000300 [1] Added to NRHP: April 14, 1975 St. Stephen's Church (Catholic), formerly New North Church, is located at 401 Hanover Street in the North End of Boston, Massachusetts. It is the last remaining church in Boston designed by Charles Bulfinch.
Contents
Design and construction
The church, made of red brick with white pilasters on the façade and topped by a clock tower and a belfry, was originally designed as the second edifice of the New North Religious Society, a Congregationalist group. Its cornerstone was laid on September 23, 1802, and the building dedicated on May 2, 1804. Three days later the Columbian Centinel wrote:
“ The exterior is in a bold and commanding style; the front is decorated with stone pilasters of a composed order; a series of attic pilasters over them, a tower and a cupola, terminated with a handsome vane, about 100 feet from the foundation. The inside is a perfect square of 72 feet; two ranges of dorick columns under the galleries, and Corinthian over them, support the ceiling, which rises in an arch of moderate elevation in the centre. ” Bulfinch’s specifications show that the church was designed nearly square, with inside dimensions of 70’ (length) x 72’. A transverse section exhibits roof framing similar to that of Holy Cross Church. Some of the timber of the old church (built 1714, rebuilt 1730) was used, and when the Bulfinch building was restored in 1964-65, the underpinning was found to be entirely sound. However, the roof was less skillfully constructed, and severe leakage was arrested only after the pitch was sharpened and the whole covered with imported slate a few years after dedication.
The church cost $26,570, nearly all of which was raised by the sale of pews. Charles Shaw judged it “a commodious brick building”,[2] while William Bentley, who thought it took too long to build, nevertheless commended its “good style”.[3]
Transitions
Unitarian
Like many Boston congregations of the time, New North went over to Unitarianism, and from 1813 to 1849, Rev. Dr. Francis Parkman (1788-1852), an eloquent preacher and father of historian Francis Parkman, was its minister. By 1822 the church was complaining that “the young gentlemen who have married wives in other parts of the town have found it difficult to persuade them to become so ungenteel as to attend worship in the North End”;[4] Parkman himself preferred to live in the vicinity of Bowdoin Square.[5]
Catholic
In 1862, with the North End’s composition greatly changed by an influx of Irish Catholics, the church was sold to Bishop Fitzpatrick of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Boston and renamed St. Stephen’s. In the conversion the weathervane was removed, a peak built over the original domed cupola in the manner of Holy Cross Church, and a cross and clock added. Either at this time or after the fire of 1897, the arched windows in the altar were blocked up and other changes made in the interior. When Hanover Street was widened in 1870 the edifice was moved back 16 feet and raised more than 6 feet above the original foundation.
The parish closed in 1992. The Church is now the home church for the Missionary Society of St. James the Apostle.
Restoration
In 1964 Cardinal Cushing authorized the restoration of the church, including the lowering of the building upon its original foundation and the reconstruction of the Bulfinch cupola. Chester F. Wright was architect for the rebuilding and the work was done by Isaac Blair & Co., the same firm that had raised and moved the church almost a century earlier. During the restoration a careful search was made for evidence of the original work, and in the process the old copper-covered dome was found beneath the false cap and the side entrance doors, complete with hardware, were discovered bricked up in the porch. George E. Ryan wrote of the restoration work:
“ By summer’s end, 1965, St. Stephen’s Church...had been moved a total of 25 feet – up, down, and backwards – in a history that began more than 160 years ago. The first move, about 12 feet back, was effected about 1870 when the city widened Hanover Street. The second, shortly afterwards, when a growing population of Irish Catholics in the North End ran out of space in the main church auditorium and literally “scooped out” a lower church by raising the building 6½ feet and “inserting” another level. The third move – a modern project that restored the venerable edifice to its 1804 condition – dropped St. Stephen’s down again, back to the ground-level dictated by...Bulfinch.[6] ” The interior is not entirely faithful to the Bulfinch design, although the pulpit and pews are copied from originals long held in a Billerica church. The brownstone pilasters in the façade were meant to be painted white to simulate marble, as in a number of surviving houses on Beacon Hill.
Kennedy connections
At one time, Mayor John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald was a parishioner of St. Stephen’s; his daughter Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy was baptized here in 1890, and her funeral was held here in 1995.
Notes
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2007-01-23. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html.
- ^ Shaw, Charles. A Topographical and Historical Description of Boston (Boston, 1817).
- ^ Diary of William Bentley, III, 50.
- ^ Quoted at M. A. DeWolfe Howe, Boston Landmarks (New York, 1946), p. 69.
- ^ Whitehill, Walter Muir and Kennedy, Lawrence W. Boston: A Topographical History, p. 113. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press, 2000.
- ^ Ryan, George E. St. Stephen's Church, Boston, Mass. Boston: St. Stephen's Church, 1966. Ryan's numbers differ somewhat from Kirker's.
References
- Kirker, Harold. The Architecture of Charles Bulfinch, pp. 168–172. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1969.
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- North End, Boston
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