Campustown: A Brief History of the First West Ames by Capps Anthony
Author:Capps, Anthony [Capps, Anthony]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
Published: 2016-11-07T05:00:00+00:00
ST . JOHN ’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH BY THE CAMPUS
St. John’s Episcopal Church by the Campus traces its roots back to 1876. Organized as Trinity Mission, the church changed its name to St. John’s in 1893. The church’s first home, finished in 1899, was at Fifth and Clark Streets, though the building did move once when the city needed to make room for a new school. In 1919, the church bought land, which included a house, in Campustown at the southeast corner of Lincoln Way and Stanton Avenue. The house served as a rectory (the Episcopal version of a parsonage) and student center for the next decade. In September 1929, the old house, built in the early 1900s, closed to make way for the new church. The completed building was dedicated on May 4, 1930. The Great Depression soon put pains on the church to pay off the mortgage, but the story goes that even the children of the parish were contributing their pennies to prevent a foreclosure. It worked. A house to the south at 116 Stanton Avenue, built in 1911, was purchased in the early 1960s and called the Canterbury House. It became the new student center and was torn down in the mid-1990s; the church parking lot is now on the site.
For the first several years, worship service was conducted by neighboring ministers. The church didn’t have a rector of its own until 1919, when Father LeRoy Burroughs arrived. He remained at the church for forty-two years. There have only been two others since him: Paul Goodland, who served from 1961 to 1991, and Al Aiton, who has served since 1991.
For more than thirty years (1964–96), the Episcopal Parish of Ames comprised two churches: St. David’s and St. John’s. The congregation of St. David’s, which began in 1964, first met at Stevens Funeral Home and then at Northminster Presbyterian Church. In 1974, St. David’s completed its church building, which is at the current site of Windsor Oaks on Adams Street. The two congregations rejoined in 1996. Located under the skylight and at the fireplace hearth, the Gathering Area is dedicated to the St. David’s congregation. In 1995, St. John’s undertook an extensive (and much-needed) renovation of the building and helped create some necessary space.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Shoot Sexy by Ryan Armbrust(17559)
Portrait Mastery in Black & White: Learn the Signature Style of a Legendary Photographer by Tim Kelly(16873)
Adobe Camera Raw For Digital Photographers Only by Rob Sheppard(16797)
Photographically Speaking: A Deeper Look at Creating Stronger Images (Eva Spring's Library) by David duChemin(16501)
Bombshells: Glamour Girls of a Lifetime by Sullivan Steve(13689)
Art Nude Photography Explained: How to Photograph and Understand Great Art Nude Images by Simon Walden(12854)
Perfect Rhythm by Jae(5074)
Pillow Thoughts by Courtney Peppernell(4018)
The Book of Joy by Dalai Lama(3700)
Good by S. Walden(3349)
The Pixar Touch by David A. Price(3214)
A Dictionary of Sociology by Unknown(2858)
Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald by J. K. Rowling(2846)
Humans of New York by Brandon Stanton(2690)
Stacked Decks by The Rotenberg Collection(2690)
Read This If You Want to Take Great Photographs by Carroll Henry(2603)
On Photography by Susan Sontag(2489)
Photographic Guide to the Birds of Indonesia by Strange Morten;(2408)
Insomniac City by Bill Hayes(2399)
