- Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Mobile
The Cathedral-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, is the seat of the
Archbishop of theRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Mobile . The cathedral is named forMary, mother of Jesus , under her title, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception.Located at 2 S. Claiborne St., in downtown Mobile,
Alabama , it is bounded by Dauphin St. on the north; Franklin St. on the west; and Conti St. on the south. The building, laid out in an east-west axis, is convert|164|ft|m|abbr=on. long and convert|90|ft|m|abbr=on. wide. The ceiling is convert|60|ft|m|abbr=on. at its highest point, and its twin towers rise to convert|103|ft|m|abbr=on. The front of the church faces east, toward the direction of theMobile River .History
Mobile’s Cathedral Parish was established on July 20, 1703, by
Jean-Baptiste de la Croix de Chevrières de Saint-Vallier , Bishop of Quebec. Bishop de Saint-Vallier named Father Roulleaux de La Vente, first pastor of the parish church, which was located at the French settlement of Mobile at the citadel of Fort Louis de la Louisiane. [ Higginbotham, Jay, "Old Mobile: Fort Louis de la Louisiane, 1702-1711". (Museum of the City of Mobile, 1977) pp. 106-107. ISBN 0-914334-03-4.] The parish is the first established on the Gulf Coast.When the Mobile settlement was relocated to its present site in 1711, a new parish church was built and was known as Notre Dame de la Mobile (Our Lady of Mobile). [ Hamilton, Peter J., "Colonial Mobile: A Study of Southwestern History", (1897, First National Bank of Mobile, reprint 1952) p. 148.] In 1781, during the Spanish occupation of Mobile, the parish took its current name, Immaculate Conception. [ [http://www.mobilecathedral.org Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception] Retrieved June, 2007.]
Mobile was elevated to a diocese in 1829, and Frenchman,
Michael Portier , was named its first bishop. Bishop Portier’s first “cathedral” was a small wooden structure located in the Old Spanish Burying Ground, site of the present cathedral. Portier soon set out to construct a "real" cathedral.Construction
The cathedral, designed in 1833, by Claude Beroujon, a former seminarian turned architect, is laid out in a Roman
basilica design. Construction began in 1835, but thePanic of 1837 , caused a shortage of funds and delayed progress. The cathedral was consecrated for public worship in 1850, by Bishop Portier, though Beroujon’s design was not yet fully realized. The portico andtowers were to come later.The classical
portico , with eight massivecolumns of the RomanDoric order , was added in the 1870s, under the direction of BishopJohn Quinlan . The two towers were completed in 1884, during the watch of BishopJeremiah O'Sullivan .Stained glass windows
One of the cathedral’s finest attributes is its
stained glass windows. The windows were made inMunich ,Germany byFranz Mayer & Co. , and installed beginning in 1890. The last window was installed in 1910, during the time of BishopEdward Patrick Allen .The twelve main windows, six on the south wall and six on the north wall, are approximately convert|8|ft|m wide and convert|23|ft|m tall. Each window depicts an event involving
Mary in the life of her son,Jesus . The subjects of the south wall windows are "Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception ", the "Presentation of Mary at the Temple", the "Annunciation ", the "Visitation", the "Nativity of Jesus ", and the "Holy Family ". The themes of the north wall are the "Finding of the Child Jesus at the Temple", the "Marriage Feast of Cana", the "Crucifixion of Jesus ", "Pentecost ", the " Assumption of Mary into Heaven", and the "Coronation of Mary, Queen of Heaven".Two large windows flank the portico, one under each of the two towers. The "
Baptism of Jesus " in theRiver Jordan , byJohn the Baptist is the subject of the window in the Reconciliation Room, under the north tower. The window under the south tower, in the stairway to the choir loft, appropriately depicts "St. Cecilia",patron saint of musicians.Smaller windows are found in each of the eight doors in the foyer, behind the cathedral’s main doors, at the church’s front entrance. These depict, from left to right, "St. Augustine of Hippo", "
Our Lady of Mount Carmel ", the "Presentation of Mary at the Temple", "St. Louis IX, King of France", "St. Patrick ", "Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception", "St. Agnes of Rome, Virgin & Martyr ", and the "Most Sacred Heart of Jesus". Above the four middle doors is theHoly Spirit window. [Buck, Sharon V., "The Stained Glass Windows of Mobile's Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception", "The Stained Glass Quarterly", (Stained Glass Association of America, Fall 1997).] [Lipscomb, Oscar H., "Mobile’s Cathedral, 1850-2004", (Mobile: Archdiocese of Mobile, 2005)]
= Fire and other daOver the course of time, the cathedral experienced its share of disasters, including an explosion, a
fire , an airplane hit, andhurricane s.On May 25, 1865, a
Union Army ammunition depot exploded, killing some 300 persons, and burning much of Mobile. The windows and sashes on the north side of the cathedral were blown in by the explosion. Fortunately, there were no services being held in the cathedral at the time.During
World War II , a pilot-in-training, flying low, clipped one of the towers, resulting in damage.Disaster struck on March 19, 1954, when a homeless man, seeking shelter in the church, caused a fire that destroyed the sanctuary. The church still stood, but the interior suffered damage from fire,
smoke , and water from thefirefighter s’ attempt to control the blaze.Repair, renovation and restoration
After the 1954 fire, Bishop
Thomas Joseph Toolen had the damaged stained glass windows sent to the Franz Meyer workshops in Munich for repair. Here the craftsmen used the original drawings as a guide in their restoration efforts. He replaced the fire-damagedcathedra andpulpit with new ones made of mahogany. A replacement organ, built by theWicks Organ Company , was installed and is in use today. At this time, Toolen added a massivebronze baldachin above the altar, supported by four marble columns.In the 1970s, Bishop
John L. May made modifications to the sanctuary in compliance with the 1970, "General Instruction of the Roman Missal." [http://www.ewtn.com/library/CURIA/GIRMALL.HTM#III] The altar was moved forward and the altar rails were removed. The cathedra was moved to its present location on the south end of the sanctuary facing the congregation. At this time, Bishop May also added a bronze representation of the Risen Christ above the baldachin and a largecrucifix over thetabernacle .Archbishop Oscar Lipscomb led the most recent restoration effort earlier this decade. Under his direction, the cast iron fence was restored and repaired, and the cathedral exterior was cleaned and repaired. An interior overhaul, executed by
Conrad Schmitt Studios , included acoffer ceiling above the main aisle. The coffers are decorated with alternating gold-leafedfleur-de-lis andshamrock , symbolically representing theTrinity , as well as the contributions of the French and Irish religious to the life of the Archdiocese. New lighting and a new color scheme brightens the interior. White marble flooring was installed in the aisles and the heart pine floors under the pews were refinished. Embedded in the marble floor of the main aisle are thecoats-of-arms of the Mobile bishops and archbishops. A mural of theTree of Jesse was installed above the pipe organ.Basilica designation
In 1962,
Pope John XXIII elevated the cathedral to a minor basilica, a title bestowed, only by the pope, on churches of historical and spiritual importance. A basilica is entitled to have its own coat-of-arms. Other basilica insignia include Pope John XXIII's personal coat-of-arms installed above the cathedral entrance, the yellow and red "umbracullum" (umbrella) and "tintinnabulum " (bell) in the sanctuary.Gallery
A gallery of photographs taken October 23, 1936, for the
Historic American Building Survey . Note the interior as it looked before the fire of 1954.Notes
References
* Lipscomb, Oscar H. (2005). " [http://www.michaelmastro.com/cathedral/book_site.html Mobile’s Cathedral, 1850-2004.] " Mobile: Archdiocese of Mobile
* [http://mobilecathedral.org Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception official web page]
* Photographs from the book "Mobile's Cathedral" by Archbishop Oscar H. Lipscomb designed and photographed by Michael Mastro. [http://www.michaelmastro.com/cathedral/book_site.html]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.