Choir of Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne in the Garth, 1930s.
1 2019-05-07T20:16:31-07:00 Erika Mann 5455e1a7748f5964f1814c21caf1072e3f05f299 31022 1 Choir of Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne in the Garth, 1930s. Rev. James McNeal Wheatley, rector, and Rev. Edward W. Averill, retired rector, can be seen at left, with Bishop Campbell Gray at the rear, right. plain 2019-05-07T20:16:31-07:00 Trinity Episcopal Archives 1930s Choir Erika Mann 5455e1a7748f5964f1814c21caf1072e3f05f299This page is referenced by:
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Rt. Rev. Campbell Gray
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The Rt. Rev. Campbell Gray and video footage of his consecration as Bishop of Northern Indiana on 1925 at Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne
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On 1 May 1925, the Rev. Campbell Gray became the second bishop of the Diocese of Northern Indiana in a solemn celebration at Trinity Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne.
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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.
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Rev. James McNeal Wheatley, Thirteenth Rector of Trinity, 1932-1947
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James McNeal Wheatley was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on 30 June 1896, the son of Samuel Thomas Wheatley and Mary Louise (Taylor). His father was an accountant, and both Wheatley and his brother Samuel were trained as bookkeepers. He married Winifred Marie Taylor on 15 July 1916, and the couple had two children, a son, James McNeal Jr., called "Mac," and a daughter Anne.
Wheatley was raised as a member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Baltimore and served as a lay reader before getting the call to be a priest. Finding it difficult to go to seminary with a small family, he read for orders under the tuteladge of Bishop John Gardiner Murray, later Presiding Bishop, and Bishop Edward Helfenstein. He was ordained tot he diaconate in June 1928 and the priesthood the following December. Bishop Murray was a High Churchman and instilled in Wheatley a reverence for this liturgical style.
Wheatley's first assignment after ordination was to be priest-in-charge of St. George's Church in Dundalk, Maryland. He remained there for three years until becoming curate of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Evanston, Illinois, where he took charge of the student chapel at Northwestern University. In November 1932, he received a call to the rectorate of Trinity at a salary of $2,800 per year.
Upon his arrival Wheatley found the parish mired in debt of $58,000 and in danger of losing the church to Penn Mutual Life Insurance Comapny, which held the mortgage. He immediately went to work to reduce the interest rate on the loan and by early 1933, succeeded in forestalling the foreclosure crisis. The diocese felt the effects of the Depression, and Bishop Gray had been forced to go without a salary in order to meet expenses.
Unlike his predecessor, Wheatley seemed determined to pay off the mortgage, agreeing to pay Penn Mutual an additional $100 per month in interest and reduce the principal on the loan. Many suffered difficult financial circumstances at the time and were unable to pledge to the church.
In March 1933, the parish received a bequest from Clara Edgerton, who left Trinity $18,000 in a trust stipulating that it go to a hiring a deaconess for missionary work. After several years of legal petitions, Wheatley succeeded in getting the language of the trust changed, replacing "priest" for deaconess, but he was able to apply most of the income of the trust tot he payment of the mortgage.
Wheatley was a strong pastor and well liked in the parish. His liturgical High Churchmanship aligned him closely with that of Bishop Campbell Gray. Early in his rectorate he worked parishioner John Wilding at drilling the corps of acolytes with military precision, forming what became known as St. Hugh's Guild and making them as accomplished as the corps at St. Luke's Evanston, his former parish. The musci program also underwent changes with the hiring of Eliza (Hanna) Elliott as organist and William R. Sur, a faculty member of North Side High School, as choirmaster. The boys' choir had diminished in size by this date, and by 1940 there were both senior and junior choirs with members of both sexes.
Wheatley faced a major pastoral crises. One involved the suicide pact of the Kenneth Larwill family in Fort Wayne. After losing a daughter, Louise, to illness, the surviving family members resolved to die together by turning on the gas registers in the home. Kenneth, his wife Mary, and a daughter, also named Mary, all died, but another daughter, Louise, survived, having fallen in a bathroom where she received enough oxygen from a nearby window. The parish was shaken by their deaths, but Louise became very attached to both the rector and his wife.
The Depression years were ones of great austerity for the parish. The women of the church prepared lunches for the public as a way of raising money. The building needed significant repair, including new boilers and major repairs to the spire, which had cracked because a carillon installed in 1920 was too heavy for the structure. In 1936, the shingles installed in the 1890s were replaced with copper sheathing. The entire spire was rebuilt at a cost of more than $2,000. Wheatley came up with the idea of selling mortgage bonds to members of the parish, which could raise additional funds and be redeemed at a later date.
The financial adversity of the Depression years brought Wheatley and Bishop Gray increasingly together out of necessity, and Gray gave Wheatley more diocesan responsibility. He was given charge of arranging the Howe Conference at Howe Military School, who was initially a summer retreat for both adults and youth to take classes and build fellowship across the diocese. In 1939, Gray appointed Wheatley as archdeacon, which gave him oversight of all diocesan missions. It appeared to some that Wheatley was being groomed as Gray's possible successor. In this role he appealed to the diocese through the Every Member Canvass to think more broadly about stewardship and the needs of the whole diocese.
Membership at Trinity grew throughout the Depression years, even if funds were in short supply. Attendance at the Easter services of 1939 exceeded 1,200 with over 600 communicants. The need for redecorating the church led a group of men of the parish to form what became known as the Holy Rollers, and together they painted the nave themselves.
The outbreak of World War II led many men of the parish to enlist. An altar dedicated to their safety was placed under the Great Window at the rear of the nave. Wheatley held daily noon-day prayers and would often visit Baer Field to minister to soldiers on their way overseas. The parish house of the church was outfitted as a hospital, and parish women received training from the Red Cross to act as nurses in case the war should come to Fort Wayne. Then in 1944, the mortgage was finally burned and the parish was at last freed from debt.
Bishop Gray died unexpectedly in 1944, and a special convocation to elect his successor resulted in a split decision. Wheatley received the support of the laity on thirteen consecutive ballots, but he failed to get sufficient votes from his fellow clergy. He was bitterly disappointed at the outcome and felt that the jealousy of his fellow priests had prevented in election. A second convocation resulted in the election of Reginald Mallett of Baltimore as the new bishop, and almost immediately, tension developed between the two men.
During the war Wheatley had taken a job as accountant for several downtown theaters owned by parishioner Helen Quimby, widow of entrepreneur, Clyde Quimby. The job took him away from the parish during the week, and some members of the parish suspected him of having an affair with Quimby, which he vehemently denied. When new members were proposed for the vestry that year, Wheatley's son Mac decided to run, but this action precipitated additional anger in the parish, believing that Wheatley was promoting his son's candidacy.
The matter came to a head at the Annual Meeting in January 1947, when a group of vestry members headed by Franklin Peddie demanded Wheatley's resignation. This action was countered by the rector's supporters, who denounced Peddie's actions. Bishop Mallett refused to intervene, and Wheatley reluctantly resigned, leaving the parish deeply divided. Mallett forced the appointment of the Rev. Peter Langendorff as priest-in-charge, but the senior warden, Harold Owen, a Wheatley supporter, refused to recognize the appointment. Langendorff, with Mallett's support, had Owen excommunicated.
Wheatley became canonically resident of the Diocese of Quincy, Illinois, but he continued to live in Fort Wayne. He hoped to remain in the diocese in a different capacity, but Bishop Mallett refused to give him an assignment or altar. In 1951 he became rector of the Church of the Advocate in Philadelphia, where he remained until 1958, when he became rector of St. Matthew's Episcopal Church in St. Petersburg, Florida. He retired from the priesthood in 1951, and in 1963 wrote to Mallett's successor, Bishop Walter Conrad Klein, for an assignment, but was again refused. He spent his remaining years in Maryland, attending services at St. Peter's in Ellicott City and St. John's in Glyndon. He visited Fort Wayne to visit friends but was not allowed by Trinity's rector, George Wood, to attend services. He died in Fort Wayne on 27 January 1969 of a heart attack. At the time he owned property at 1225 Illsley Drive. His body was returned to Maryland for burial in St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery in Reisterstown.
Wheatley is considered a significant rector in Trinity's history and is best remembered for his leadership in saving the parish financially during the Depression. His grandson, National Security Advisor James Clapper, was baptized in the parish in 1941.