*** Welcome to piglix ***

St. Augustine's Episcopal Church, Gary

St. Augustine's Episcopal Church
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church.jpg
Viewed from the west
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church (Gary, Indiana) is located in Indiana
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church (Gary, Indiana)
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church (Gary, Indiana) is located in the US
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church (Gary, Indiana)
Location 2425 West 19th Ave., Gary, Indiana
Coordinates 41°35′03″N 87°22′06″W / 41.584246°N 87.368386°W / 41.584246; -87.368386Coordinates: 41°35′03″N 87°22′06″W / 41.584246°N 87.368386°W / 41.584246; -87.368386
Built 1958
Architect Edward D. Dart
Architectural style Modern
NRHP Reference # 13000758
Added to NRHP September 18, 2013

St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in Gary, Indiana, is a historically black congregation and building in the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana. The congregation was chartered in 1927, and the building, constructed in 1958, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013 after being nominated for listing by a parishioner.

The historically black parish was chartered in 1927 by thirty African American professionals as a Colored Episcopal Mission. St. Augustine's original home was at 19th and Adams in Gary's Midtown section in an old Roman Catholic Mission building. The first service in the congregation's new home was held on May 8, 1927.

Initially the church struggled to hold regular services and maintain attendance. Only seventeen people attended the first service, and for the first decade of the congregation's existence, it was only able to attract part-time priests. In 1938 Episcopal Bishop Campbell Gray assigned Benedictine monks of St. Gregory's Abbey, Three Rivers to serve the struggling mission, and they remained with the church until 1946, two years after Gray's death. A retired rector named Rev. Langendorff headed the church for the next few years until in 1951 Rev. Wallace L. Wells, spouse of Henrietta Bell Wells and newly ordained, assumed leadership.

During the 1950s many African-Americans that moved to Gary did so as part of The Great Migration, seeking employment opportunities that were kept from them in the South, and many of these newly relocated African-Americans joined St. Augustine's. With this influx, the congregation grew enough so that by 1955, the church was growing too large to remain in its rented Catholic Mission home. While inquiring about a pipe organ to use in services, the organ sales representative suggested the congregation ask Edward D. Dart, now known as a prolific architect, to design a new building for the congregation. Dart had designed many residential homes in suburban Chicago and had designed one other church in 1953 (St. Michael's Episcopal Church in Barrington, Illinois) before St. Augustine's. Though having Dart design the building is significant in and of itself, the fact that the congregation was able to commission his services is even more significant since they were an African American congregation and Dart was white, a rare combination during segregation.


...
Wikipedia

...