Piety Hill Musings

The ramblings of the Rector of St. John's Church in the city of Detroit. Piety Hill refers to the old name for our neighborhood. The neighborhood has changed a great deal in the over 165 years we have been on this corner (but not our traditional biblical theology) and it is now known for the neighboring theatres, the professional baseball and football stadiums and new hockey/basketball arena.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Detroit, Michigan, United States

Monday, November 18, 2019

160 years and counting - Rector's Rambling for November 17, 2019


Today is the 160th Anniversary of the dedication of the Chapel of St. John’s in what was then the rural outskirts, outside of the City of Detroit.
It is hard for us to fathom that when the chapel, and then the church, were constructed, this was out in the country.  Our founder, Henry Porter Baldwin, purchased this land to build a church – it was an apple orchard at the time!  Future Governor/Senator Baldwin had built his country estate house where I-75 is located across Woodward Avenue.  He surmised that Detroit would grow in this direction and he wanted the Episcopal Church to be planted here for those already living out in the country, and those to come soon thereafter.
The book Fifty Years of St. John’s Church (1909) records for us:
The cornerstone was laid by Bishop McCroskey on Tuesday afternoon, April 19, 1859, with nine other clergy present. … And now the Chapel was nearing completion.  Two meetings were held in the Sunday School room of St. Paul’s and one in the unfinished Chapel, “to practice in congregational singing,” on which very rightly great stress was laid; and on Thursday morning, November 17, 1859, the congregation assembled for the first time for their common worship, on the occasion of the Consecration of St. John’s Chapel.  With the Bishop and the Rector were twelve other clergy. … At Evening Prayer the same day, the Rector ministered the first Baptism in the parish, to Louis Alden Grelling (see photo above of the original parish register).
By the time the chapel opened it was already too small.  Two weeks later the Vestry voted: Resolved that in view of the fact that every seat in the Chapel is already rented, and that there is a large demand for additional seats, it is desirable that efforts should be made for the immediate erection of a Church seating about one thousand persons.
With it’s passage, Gov. Baldwin donated $17,000 to start the project, the other $10,000 to be donated by  parishioners!