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St. Andrew's Cathedral (Jackson, Mississippi)

St. Andrew's Cathedral
Jackson, Mississippi (3932765480).jpg
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Jackson, Mississippi) is located in Mississippi
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Jackson, Mississippi)
32°17′57.22″N 90°11′1.87″W / 32.2992278°N 90.1838528°W / 32.2992278; -90.1838528Coordinates: 32°17′57.22″N 90°11′1.87″W / 32.2992278°N 90.1838528°W / 32.2992278; -90.1838528
Location 305 E. Capitol St.
Jackson, Mississippi
Country United States
Denomination Episcopal Church in the United States of America
Website standrewscathedral.org
History
Founded 1839
Architecture
Style Gothic Revival
Completed 1903
Administration
Diocese Diocese of Mississippi
Clergy
Bishop(s) Rt. Rev. Brian Seage
Dean Very Rev. David Elliott

St. Andrew's Cathedral is an Episcopal cathedral located in Jackson, Mississippi, United States. It is the seat of the Diocese of Mississippi. St. Andrew's is the third church to serve as the diocesan cathedral.

St. Andrew’s began as a mission station in 1839. The Domestic Missionary Society of the Episcopal Church in New York sent a clergyman, hymnals and prayer books. The congregation numbered eight communicants at its beginning. St. Andrew’s became a parish of the Diocese of Mississippi in 1843. It was the only parish at the time that was not located along the Mississippi River. Its church was burned by the Union Army during the American Civil War in 1863. The cornerstone for the second church was laid by the Rt. Rev. William Mercer Green in 1869. By the turn of the Twentieth Century the congregation had outgrown its church building and the present structure was completed in 1903. The Parish House was constructed between 1923 and 1924. The congregation continued to grow and the building along West Street was built in 1955. The bishop moved his offices into the new building. The service area behind the church was made into a courtyard. The wing on the east side was built in 1987.

Cathedrals in the Episcopal Church in the United States were not popular until the Oxford Movement began. The Diocese of Mississippi was no different in this regard and did not have a cathedral in its first decades. St. Peter's Church in Oxford was named the first cathedral when the Rt. Rev. Hugh M. Thompson was bishop. Bishop Thompson moved to Jackson and believed the cathedral should be in the city where he resided. Therefore, St. Columba's Church was named the diocesan cathedral and served that purpose until just after Thompson's death. St. Andrew's, which grew to become the largest parish in the diocese, was elevated to be the cathedral on January 19, 1966. It became the third church in the diocese to serve this purpose.


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