Saturday, January 12, 2008

Jesuit's Build First Catholic Church In The American Colonies

Foundation all that's left of short-lived church
Museum attempting to rebuild Colonial structure dismantled shortly after it was built, but no one knows what it looked like
By Jenna Johnson
WASHINGTON POST
ST. MARY'S CITY, Md. --

A foundation in the shape of a Latin cross lay buried for three centuries in a Southern Maryland field, an archaeological puzzle piece thought to have been the base of a Catholic church dismantled soon after it was built. Scattered clues supported the idea of a lost church: fragments of plaster and glass unearthed nearby, a wooden tabernacle traced to a prominent family of Catholic settlers and mention of a "good brick Chappell" in the writings of one of the state's Colonial governors. "So, we know it's good, we know it's brick, we know it's a chapel," said Henry Miller, director of research at Historic St. Mary's City. "That's it." Historic St. Mary's City, an outdoor museum on the site of what was Maryland's first Colonial capital, is using those few clues, along with plenty of research and what Miller calls "scholarly best guesses," to rebuild the chapel as it was constructed circa 1667, an estimate that continues to change. The once-buried foundation again supports walls of brick from local clay, bound by lime-based mortar made from more than 2,000 bushels of oyster shells. Flat clay tiles from England line the wooden, barrel-vault roof. The windows, entrance and interior are expected to be completed in the coming years with the help of a federal grant of $400,000, awarded last month. Although the chapel will not be consecrated or used as a place of worship, it is meant to be a close approximation of the original. project already has cost more than $2 million, funded by grants and private donations to the nonprofit Historic St. Mary's City Foundation. The museum is governed by the Historic St. Mary's City Commission, a panel of local historians and professionals appointed by the governor. Benjamin Bradlee, vice president at large of the Washington Post, is the commission's chairman emeritus. The reconstructed church is intended as a monument to when Maryland led the Colonies in religious tolerance. When the chapel was built, Protestants and Catholics worshipped freely in Maryland -- a rarity in European societies torn by religious rivalries. "It was an age of religious friction, of Protestant against Catholic, or all against Quaker," the late archaeologist Chandlee Forman wrote in his 1938 book about the first excavations of the historic city. "The founders of St. Mary's were the true religious 'Pilgrims' in an age of almost universal intolerance."
The group of about 140 settlers, including several Jesuit priests, arrived in southern Maryland in 1634 aboard the Ark and Dove vessels. The Jesuits acquired a parcel, which they named the Chapel Land, and built a wooden chapel that historians think is the founding place of the Roman Catholic Church in British America. That church was destroyed during an attack in 1645 by anti-Catholic and anti-royalist forces. When the Catholic Calvert family again took charge of the colony in 1660, it is assumed the chapel was rebuilt in brick, according to Historic St. Mary's City historians. "It was really an incredible undertaking for the Jesuits, given that there's no precedent" for such a massive brick structure in Maryland, said John Mesick of Mesick-Cohen-Wilson-Baker Architects of Albany, N.Y., which specializes in restoring historical buildings.
In 1694, Colonial governor Francis Nicholson called for moving the state capital to the Protestant stronghold of Annapolis. Soon, Catholic worship was banned, and the brick chapel was ordered shuttered in 1704. The Jesuits later dismantled the building, pieces of which were used to build St. Inigoes Manor House chapel, five miles away. "It would have been better if it blew up or burned down, instead of being recycled," Miller said. "At least then we would have more clues." The largest of the clues was the foundation, uncovered by Forman in 1938. Archaeologists had expected to find a structure similar to that of period churches in Virginia: a shallow rectangular base for a small building. "It was with genuine surprise that in the excavations of the foundation this year, we found a great Latin cross made of brick walls three feet thick and four feet high," Forman wrote in 1938. Washington Post staff researcher Rena Kirsch contributed to this story.


Link (here)

1 comment:

Brantigny said...

I have added several articles as redirects from my blog to yours. If you wish me to remove them I shall. http://lefleurdelystoo.blogspot.com/

I would also like to add you to my "Sites That I Visit Often" list.

Richard Sieur de Brantigny (dit) Boisvert