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St. James House of Prayer Episcopal Church

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St. James House of Prayer
Episcopal Church
Religion
AffiliationEpiscopal Church
ProvinceProvince IV (Sewanee)
LeadershipThe Rev. Ernestein C. Flemister, Rector
StatusActive parish
Location
Location2708 North Central Avenue and Columbus Drive (Tampa, Florida)
Tampa, Florida
USA
TerritoryDiocese of Southwest Florida
Website
http://www.sjhoptpa.org/
Episcopal House of Prayer
Coordinates27°58′0″N 82°27′20″W / 27.96667°N 82.45556°W / 27.96667; -82.45556
Built1922
ArchitectLouis A. Fort
Architectural styleLate Gothic Revival
Part ofTampa Heights Historic District (ID95000979)
NRHP reference No.91000105[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPFebruary 21, 1991
Designated CPAugust 4, 1995

St. James House of Prayer Episcopal Church, also known as the Episcopal House of Prayer, is an active Episcopal parish and historic church building in Tampa, Florida, United States. It is located at 2708 Central Avenue in the city's Tampa Heights neighborhood. On February 21, 1991, the building was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[2] The structure is also included as an official contributing property within the Tampa Heights Historic District, which was declared a Historic District nationally by the United States Department of the Interior on August 4, 1995, and locally by the city of Tampa on September 7, 2000.[3] Additionally, the building is one of only two churches to have been designated a Local Landmark Structure by the city of Tampa.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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Transcription

(narrator) In Colleton County, in the community of Ritter, there's an area known as Catholic Hill, so-called because of the predominance of Catholics in the area and its legacy as a stronghold of black Catholicism. (female speaker) It's called Catholic Hill today, but it was not originally called Catholic Hill. It used to be known as the Crossroads. (narrator) Hundreds of parishioners, both black and white, were baptized in the 1830s. Although the church burned to the ground in 1856, the slaves and later the freed blacks continued to gather to worship. They read the litany and observed the holy days, and for 40 years, they continued to cling to their faith, without priest and without church. In 1897, when Father Daniel Berberich happened upon this remote parish, he immediately set about celebrating mass and building both a church and school, all the while marveling at this amazing testament of faith. § (Brunson) They were doing so much for the children, and that's when you had more children convert to the Catholic faith-- you know, along with the ones who already were Catholics--than adults. And my mother was not Catholic. She was a Methodist, but I have five brothers and one sister, and we all became Catholics. I couldn't think about being anything but Catholic. [chuckles] I mean! And it is strange because where I work, when I say I'm Catholic, people are amazed. They say, "We didn't know they had black Catholics." And I say, "There are plenty of black Catholics." But in a community like ours, I guess we're kind of isolated and in rural area, and I guess it is strange to see so many people practicing the Catholic faith. But it's just something-- as I said, many of the children, so many of 'em here-- I mean, all of 'em here became Catholics. Saint Anthony, the Catholic church in Walterboro, is only two minutes away from me, but I travel, on Sunday, here because I just feel so much at peace and joy here in my church. I consider this my church. [chuckling] This is the heart of Catholic Hill. §

Parish history

St. James House of Prayer is an active parish under the Tampa Deanery of the Episcopal Diocese of Southwest Florida, which is within Province 4 of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, part of the worldwide Anglican Communion.[5]

The congregation officially formed in 1997 through the merger of two long established congregations, St. James Episcopal Church and The House of Prayer Episcopal Church. The merger of the two was made after the former St. James Church property was chosen as the site for the new Blake High School. Meanwhile, The House of Prayer had lost their rector and parish status after a decline in membership. Joining the two congregations was mutually beneficial, matching the parishioners in need of a priest with the priest in need of a pulpit. The union resulted in full parish status being conferred upon the new St. James House of Prayer in 2001.[6]

The original St. James Episcopal was organized in 1892 as an Anglican Episcopal Church for the city's black population. At that time, segregation was the norm, and many black Bahamian and Cuban immigrants were arriving in Tampa to work in the cigar industry. St. James Episcopal Church would go on to serve Tampa's African-American community for more than a century.[6]

Nearly as old was Tampa's third white Episcopal church, the House of Prayer, founded in 1907. The church served the population of Tampa Heights, and by 1926 was named a parish by the local diocese. The House of Prayer went on to become one of Tampa's first racially integrated churches in the 1960s, but within the next decade much of its membership moved away as the Tampa Heights neighborhood had entered a period of serious decline.[6] Efforts to reverse the downward trend in the neighborhood began in the 1990s, resulting in the establishment of the Tampa Heights Historic District at both the local and national levels.

Church building

Building cornerstone

The historic church building was erected in 1922 and dedicated in February, 1923. The Reverend William C. Richardson, MD, a retired physician-turned-priest, personally spearheaded the construction of the church, even purchasing and donating the land. He selected architect Louis A. Fort to design the Gothic Revival church, including a tower, battlements, and stained glass windows.[7] The church building is unique in its construction, with 16-inch-thick (410 mm) concrete walls on the interior, and exterior walls composed entirely of flint rock, stacked with mortar. The rocks were collected from the bottom of the Hillsborough River where it empties into the bay, however, the rocks did not occur there naturally. The rocks came from all around the world aboard the sailing ships of centuries past, and wound up in Tampa as the ships discarded ballast from their hulls.[6] Because of the striking stonework exterior, the building is occasionally referred to as "The Rock Church."

The building's official listing with the National Register of Historic Places is under the name "Episcopal House of Prayer", since the historic status was determined prior to the merger of churches which created today's St. James House of Prayer Episcopal Church.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Florida - Hillsborough County". National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  3. ^ "Tampa Heights Historic District", February 20, 2007. TampaGov. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  4. ^ "Landmark Structures". TampaGov. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  5. ^ Tampa Deanery of Episcopal Diocese of Southwest Florida
  6. ^ a b c d "Parish Profile 2009". St. James House of Prayer. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  7. ^ Word-Burnside, Margaret. September 2006, "Ask Margaret". Tampa Bay Magazine, page 90-91. Retrieved March 3, 2010.

External links

This page was last edited on 17 March 2023, at 21:04
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