Boy's Choir of Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne, late 1930s
1 2019-05-05T23:37:29-07:00 Erika Mann 5455e1a7748f5964f1814c21caf1072e3f05f299 31022 1 Boy's Choir of Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne, late 1930s. The photograph was taken in the main chancel of the church. All are unidentified. plain 2019-05-05T23:37:29-07:00 Trinity Episcopal Archives 1930s Choir Erika Mann 5455e1a7748f5964f1814c21caf1072e3f05f299This page is referenced by:
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The Nave
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The evolution of Trinity's Nave
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The Nave is the term applied to the interior of the church, the full area where the congregation sits. It is separated at the front steps by an area called the Chancel, where the priests, organist, and choir members sit during the service. The area immediately around the altar is called the Sanctuary, which is divided by the communion rail. This area is typically reserved for the priests, acolytes, and chalice bearers.
The nave of Trinity has undergone a number of decorations and color schemes since the church was completed in 1866. The original design is unknown. Undoubtedly the rafters were varnished in dark wood tones, and there were three stained glass windows on the sanctuary wall near and behind the altar that were later blocked off. Initially, there was no altar - only a wooden table known as the Holy Table, which was probably placed in the sanctuary area. The original pulpit design is also unknown but may have been constructed of wood. The baptismal font may date from this early period, but the brass angel on top was a later addition. The marble altar made its appearance in 1874 as a gift from Lavina (Ewing) Bond in memory of her late husband, Charles Douglass Bond. It contained five carved crosses, symbolizing the five wounds of Christ. Considered Anglo-Catholic, it was controversial in its day and reflected the growing appreciation for Anglo-Catholic theology by the rector at the time, the Rev. Colin Campbell Tate.
Between 1892 and 1893, the nave underwent a major redecoration during the rectorate of the Rev. Alexander W. Seabrease. The J. and R. Lamb Company of New York, a major supplier of church fixtures, was hired to redesign the inside, and company artists painted numerous stencils were throughout. An Alpha-Omega symbol appeared at the top of the central arch. William Rockhill Nelson, the famed editor of the Kansas City Star newspaper, donated an ornate brass pulpit in honor of his parents in 1893. A reredos was installed for the first time in this same period commemorating the service of the Rev. Joseph S. Large and given by his children. It featured a painting of Christ as the Good Shepherd set within a gilded frame.
In 1924-25, the church underwent the most significant redecoration in its history. The vestry and the rector, the Rev. Louis N. Rocca, hired the architectural firm of Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue of New York to design the church as a fifteenth century English oratory. All of the rafters were painted white, and the walls were painted in rich hues of red, blue, and gold. Large, intricately-painted crosses, were painted on the chancel ceiling, and all of the brass fixtures were "antiqued" with applique. The reredos was replaced with a new painting by Charles Telford Paullin of New York, featuring the risen Christ surrounded by angels in a Byzantine design.
A rood screen and rood cross were added in the 1920s, both of which changed dramatically the chancel's appearance. Some parishioners liked the new style while others found it overwhelming and not in keeping with the overall church design. During the 1940s and 1950s, the nave was repainted various times, toning down the Goodhue designs but still keeping the nave colorful.
In 1962, the nave was repainted again when a new reredos was installed, this one designed by Leslie Nobbs of New York City. The half dome of the chancel ceiling was painted blue, and the rafters were still painted.
During the 1970s and 1980s, two major efforts were undertaken to restore the church and repair the roof, which had begin to sag. Workmen discovered that the roof had never been properly anchored to the walls and could have collapsed at any time. During this period the rafters were stripped of paint and restored to a natural wood look. Those in the main ceiling are constructed of pine. The applique was stripped from the brass and the walls painted in more neutral colors to accentuate the stained glass windows.
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Music and Choir
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Music at Trinity Episcopal Church through the Years
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The earliest documented organ of any church in Fort Wayne is a small instrument of four stops owned by Trinity Church in 1848 and installed in its first edifice at the corner of Berry and Harrison streets. In 1867, the parish hired John Marklove of Utica, New York, to build a new organ for the newly-built church edifice, completed and installed by the time of the consecration in 1868. Henry Pilcher’s Sons of Louisville, Kentucky, installed a new organ in 1892, when the church introduced a vested choir of men and boys. Both the Marklove and Pilcher instruments were located on the right side of the chancel directly under the pipes. The Pilcher organ reportedly still exists as a part of St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Plymouth, Indiana.
In 1948, the parish contracted the Wicks Organ Company of Illinois to build yet another new organ with two manuals and twenty-two ranks, which was installed on the left side of the chancel. Under the supervision of organist Darwin Leitz in 1969, a new three-manual console was built by the Austin Organ Company.
Years of patchwork repairs of the main organ followed until 2015, when the parish installed the Alice C. Thompson Pipe Organ, built as Opus 136 by Cornell Zimmer Organ Builders of Denver, North Carolina. A dedicatory bulletin stated that “the organ’s rebuilding was so extensive that it can be considered a brand new organ.” The handcrafted console of quarter-sawn oak and walnut, contains state-of-the-art technology. All of the previous organ’s mechanical, electrical, and wind systems have been completely refurbished and updated, ensuring both its longevity and reliability for years to come, and upholding the parish’s longstanding musical tradition. The new organ would not have been possible without a generous gift from the estate of Alice Thompson and many other donors.
The trumpet pipes on the north wall of the nave, located on either side of the Great Window, are known as “Trompette en Chamade.” Added in 1980, the pipes resulted from the gifts of several parishioners and other community leaders: Helen M. O’Connor, Alfred J. Zacher, Darwin P. Leitz, and Fr. and Mrs. C. Corydon Randall. Memorials included thanksgivings for Robert Burns, Jack E. Shideler, Anthony P. Douloff, and George N. Tsiguloff. The trumpets allow for the playing of a great variety of ecclesiastical and classical music literature and are played frequently during wedding processions.
The history of Trinity's choir is less well documented. In the 1850s, the church likely had an unvested quartet of two men and two women who would sign hymns from the rear or gallery of the church. In 1863, the Rev. Stephen H. Battin established Trinity's first choir at a cost of $30. No information exists to show whether it was vested or unvested or how large it was. The $30 was used to pay soloists. Beginning in the 1870s under the rectorate of the Rev. Colin Campbell Tate, the church made another attempt to have a choir. A newspaper noted that seats were being placed in the chancel for its members. It is likely that it was a sextet of men and women and was not vested, since vesting women was considered unseemly at the time. In the 1880s, the Rev. William Webbe attempted to reorganize the choir, hiring soloists, a man and a woman, at $150 and $100 respectively. The organist, Rudolph Wellenstine, was hired to play the organ on all Sundays and major feast days. Later, Webbe introduced the first vested choir of men and boys (eight men and twelve boys), who followed in the English choral tradition of King's College, Cambridge. This vested choir remained a mainstay of the church, and in the 1890s during the rectorate of the Rev. Alexander Seabrease, it greatly increased in size. A professional choir master, Hugh McLetchie, a Scottish immigrant, was hired to train the boys and improve their performance. By the early 1900s under the leadership of organist Fred Church, the boys choir was one of the city's largest and attracted boys from across the city who were not church members. Each was paid a dime a week, and a major incentive was the offering of free time at a lake camp every summer. Church summarily by the Rev. Louis Rocca in 1923, and subsequent organists failed to inspire the boys the way Church did. By the 1930s, the boy choir was abandoned and a vested mixed choir of adult men and women replaced it. That choir still exists. A children's choir of boys and girls also existed at various times and sung with it or separate from it.