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Marble Collegiate Church
Church in Manhattan, New York
Church in Manhattan, New York
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Marble Collegiate Reformed Church |
| image | Marble Church NYC.jpg |
| caption | Marble Collegiate Church |
| location | Manhattan, New York City, New York |
| coordinates | |
| locmapin | Lower Manhattan#New York City#New York#USA |
| built | 1851 |
| architect | Samuel A. Warner |
| architecture | Romanesque Revival |
| added | April 9, 1980 |
| refnum | 80002699 |
| designated_other2_name | New York City Landmark |
| designated_other2_date | January 11, 1967 |
| designated_other2_abbr | NYCL |
| designated_other2_link | New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission |
| designated_other2_color | #ffe978 |
| designated_other1 | New York State Register of Historic Places |
| designated_other1_num_position | bottom |
| designated_other1_number | 06101.000088 |
| designated_other1_abbr | NYSRHP |
| designated_other1_date | June 23, 1980 |
The Marble Collegiate Church, founded in 1628, is one of the oldest continuous Protestant congregations in North America. The congregation, which is part of two denominations in the Reformed tradition—the United Church of Christ and the Reformed Church in America—is located at 272 Fifth Avenue at the corner of West 29th Street in the NoMad neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was built in 1851–54 and was designed by Samuel A. Warner in Romanesque Revival style with Gothic trim. The façade is covered in Tuckahoe marble, for which the church, originally called the Fifth Avenue Church, was renamed in 1906.
The building was designated a New York City landmark in 1967,
History
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The church congregation was founded in 1628 as the Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church and was affiliated with the Dutch Reformed Church, a Calvinist church in the Netherlands. During its first 150 years, Marble shared its ministers with the other Collegiate congregations as they developed in the city. This pooling of pastoral ministry was abandoned in 1871. The name "Collegiate" remains as part of the heritage of the four such churches in New York City, and they participate in an administrative unit that oversees physical properties and investments held in common. The other congregations are Middle Collegiate, West End Collegiate, and Fort Washington Collegiate.
Norman Vincent Peale, author of The Power of Positive Thinking, served as senior minister from 1932 to 1984. Under Peale's ministry Marble's influence reached national levels and it became known as "America's Hometown Church". On November 19, 1961, Lucille Ball married her second husband Gary Morton in the church. Following Peale's fifty-two year ministry, Arthur Caliandro served 25 years as the fifth senior minister of Marble Church. In all, he served 42 years on the pastoral staff. During Caliandro's tenure, MarbleVision, the media ministry of Marble Church, was founded, its first woman minister was ordained, and the first women elders received. In addition, the church added its first new stained-glass window in almost 100 years. In 2009, Michael B. Brown, former pastor of Centenary United Methodist Church in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, succeeded Caliandro as senior minister.
The church takes an LGBT-welcoming, open and affirming approach to same-gender relationships and non-cisgender identities. This includes the performing of same-sex marriage ceremonies, a designated queer fellowship (GIFTS), annual participation in the NYC Pride parade and sermons and material on the church website encouraging a historical-critical view of Scripture in opposition to the conservative belief in Biblical Inerrancy.
Pastors
- Daniel A. Poling, 1922–1939
- Norman Vincent Peale, 1932–1984
- Arthur Caliandro, 1984–2009
- Michael B. Brown, 2009–2018
- Michael Bos, 2018–
Stained glass
The nave of Marble Church has ten windows measuring 25 x 5 ft (6.72 x 1.52m). Each window has two semi-circular topped lancets divided by a masonry colonette set within a larger semi-circular arch, characteristic of Romanesque architecture. The windows are punctuated by free-hanging upper galleries.
When the church first opened in 1854, the windows were clear glazed. In 1891 these were replaced with a simple geometric design of blue-green and amber diamond shaped panes. Senior Minister Dr Burrell wanted to fill the nave with a series of windows depicting scenes from the bible although it was over a century before his aspirations were fully realized.
Frederick Wilson (1858–1932)
The first narrative window to be installed in 1900 depicts Joshua Leading the Israelites by Frederick Wilson. Dublin born Wilson was raised in Liverpool and London. English census records from the late 1870s record him working as a stained-glass artist.
In 1892 he and his wife emigrated to the United States. From 1893 to 1923 he was employed by the Tiffany Studios, creating over 500 windows and glass mosaics making him by far their most prolific artist. A second Wilson window, Moses and the Burning Bush (1901), was installed the following year. Both windows display elements of the American opalescent style pioneered by Tiffany Studios.
File:S3 upper Frederick Wilson Joshua leads the Israelites(1900).jpg File:S4 upper Frederick Wilson Moses and Burning Bush(1901).jpg File:S3 lower Frederick Wilson Joshua leads the Israelites(1900).jpg File:S4 lower Frederick Wilson Moses and Burning Bush(1901).jpg
Roy Coomber (1930–2016)
Almost 100 years passed before any new narrative windows were installed. A committee was formed to continue Dr Burrell’s vision and commission narrative pieces for the other eight windows. The first, by Coomber depicts the Crucifixion and Pentecost. Coomber (1930–2016) studied Art at Brighton College and worked for Goddard and Gibbs of London. His work is found across South West England.
File:S5 upper Roy Coomber Crucifixion and Pentecost(1998).jpg File:S5 lower Roy Coomber Crucifixion and Pentecost(1998).jpg
Sarah Hall (b 1951)
Senior ministers Arthur Caliandro and Edwin G. Mulder set up a committee to supervise the new narrative nave windows. The committee engaged the services of the Rambusch Decorating Company , founded in 1898. Martin Rambusch took a very proactive role, organising meetings with the Church Board, ministers and members of various committees to get them involved in the selection process. This led to commissioning two windows by Canadian artist, Sarah Hall. Nativity was created in 2000. Peaceful Kingdom the following year.
File:S1 upper Sarah Hall Nativity(2000).jpg File:S2 upper Sarah Hall Peaceable Kingdom(2001).jpg File:S1 lower Sarah Hall Nativity(2000).jpg File:S2 lower Sarah Hall Peaceable Kingdom(2001).jpg
Debora Coombs
The next two windows were by British born artist Debora Coombs, who studied at Edinburgh, Swansea and the Royal College of Art. Coombs moved to America to design an entire scheme of twenty new stained glass windows for St. Mary's Cathedral (Portland, Oregon) described as 'the first jewel in an American crown' Work for the Marble Collegiate on Stilling the Storm began shortly after the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre just three miles away. The window shows human response to crisis, just before calm is restored. Coombs’ mastery of the medium manifests itself in the way the leadlines joining each piece of glass disappear into the composition. Her second window depicts the Sermon on the Mount (2004).
File:N3 upper Debora Coombs Stilling the Storm(2003).jpg File:N2 upper Debora Coombs Sermon on the Mount(2004).jpg File:N3 lower Debora Coombs Stilling the Storm(2003).jpg File:N2 lower Debora Coombs Sermon on the Mount(2004).jpg
Nikki Vogt
When Marble approached Rambusch to suggest an artist for the next windows they recommended their former head designer/glass painter Nikki Vogt. Vogt said becoming a stained-glass artist was a surprise. "It’s not like you decide to pursue it, it finds you, she says." Vogt worked with Rambusch to create two windows Good Samaritan (2006) and Prodigal Son (2007) with Rambusch fabricating and installing the windows.
File:N5 upper Nikki Vogt Good Samaritan(2006).jpg File:N4 upper Nikki Vogt Prodigal son(2007).jpg File:N5 lower Nikki Vogt Good Samaritan(2006).jpg File:N4 lower Nikki Vogt Prodigal son(2007).jpg
Kenneth Crocker
While the two Vogt windows were being manufactured, Rambusch engaged English artist Kenneth Crocker to work on the final window depicting The Creation. As late as 2022, Crocker was working for the Willet Houser Company where he was the designated artist for a new window in the First Presbyterian Church of Tulsa documenting its history.{{cite web |url=https://firstchurchtulsa.org/stories/history-of-the-history-window/2022-06-06
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References
References
- {{NRISref. 2009a
- (November 7, 2014). "Cultural Resource Information System (CRIS)". [[New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation]].
- {{cite nycland, p.80
- {{cite fromatoz, p.140
- Virginia Kurshan, Joan R. Olshansky, and Elizabeth Spencer-Ralph. (August 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: New York SP Marble Collegiate Reformed Church". National Archives and Records Administration.
- "History – Welcome – Marble Collegiate Church".
- Frew, Tim. (2001). "Lucy: A Life in Pictures". [[Barnes & Noble]] Books.
- Hevesi, Dennis. (January 4, 2013). "Arthur Caliandro, Minister at Marble Collegiate, Dies at 79". The New York Times.
- "Dr. Michael Brown – Marble Collegiate Church".
- "Marble {{!}} The Collegiate Churches of New York".
- New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. "Marble Collegiate Church".
- "Stained Glass Windows". Marble Collegiate Church.
- Corning Museum of Glass. "Wilson Frederick 1858–1932". [[Corning Museum of Glass]].
- Cambridge 2000. "Frederick Wilson".
- "Roy Walter Coomber".
- Visit Stained Glass. "Coomber, Roy".
- "Marble Collegiate Church, New York, NY".
- Criddle, R.. (Spring 1991). "Debora Coombs – profile". Stained Glass, The magazine of the British Society of Master Glass-Painters.
- Millard, Richard. (April 1998). "Unique milestone in the history of American stained glass".
- Aubrey, D.. (March 30, 2022). "Creating 'The Creation': Stained-glass art at St. Gregory the Great".
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