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Shrine of the Immaculate Conception

Coordinates:33°45′1″N84°23′22″W / 33.75028°N 84.38944°W /33.75028; -84.38944
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This article is about the church in Atlanta. For the church in Washington, D.C., seeBasilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. For a list of similarly named churches, seeChurch of the Immaculate Conception.

Church in Georgia, United States
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
The church in 2006, with theAtlanta City Hall in the background
Map
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
33°45′1″N84°23′22″W / 33.75028°N 84.38944°W /33.75028; -84.38944
Location48 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive
Atlanta,Georgia
CountryUnited States
DenominationCatholic
TraditionRoman Rite
WebsiteShrine of the Immaculate Conception
History
Former nameChurch of the Immaculate Conception (1848–1954)
StatusShrine
DedicationImmaculate Conception
DedicatedDecember 10, 1873
May 25, 1984 (rededication)
Architecture
Architect(s)William H. Parkins
Henry Howard Smith (renovation)
StyleGothic Revival
Years built1869–1873
GroundbreakingJune 1869
Administration
ProvinceEcclesiastical Province of Atlanta
ArchdioceseRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
Arealess than one acre
NRHP reference No.76000630[1]
Added to NRHPDecember 12, 1976

TheShrine of the Immaculate Conception is aRoman Catholicchurch indowntownAtlanta,Georgia, United States. The current church building was completed in 1873 and is the oldest church in Atlanta, as well as one of the oldest standing buildings in the city. It was added to theNational Register of Historic Places in 1976.

The church traces its history back to the 1840s, whenmissionary priests fromAugusta andMacon would hold services in the houses ofIrish Catholic immigrants who lived in the city. By 1848, the Catholic population in the area had grown enough to warrant its own dedicated building, and a wooden structure was constructed in 1848 anddedicated as theChurch of the Immaculate Conception the following year. During theAmerican Civil War, the church's pastor,Thomas O'Reilly, convinced officials in theUnion Army to spare the building and several nearby structures from destruction during theiroccupation of Atlanta. However, the church was severely damaged during the war and as the congregation grew during theReconstruction era, it became evident that a larger building was needed.

In 1869, work commenced on a new brick structure, designed by Atlanta architectWilliam H. Parkins in theGothic Revival style, which was completed and dedicated in 1873. The church continued to grow through the late 1800s and early 1900s, and several parishes were carved out of the church's parish as the city's population increased. However, due to a change in demographics starting in the early 1900s, the church began to decline in membership, and by the late 1940s, there were discussions on selling the church. However, instead, the bishop of the church's diocese oversaw a restoration that was completed by 1954, when the church was dedicated as ashrine. In 1958, the church was placed under the care of theFranciscans. In 1982, the church suffered from a massiveelectrical fire that nearly destroyed the entire building, but it was restored by 1984. In 1987, the Franciscans returned management of the church to theArchdiocese of Atlanta, and their appointed priest, John Adamski, made sweeping changes to the church, such as by expanding outreach to the city'sLGBT population and topeople with AIDS, working with other nearby churches to provide more services to the area'shomeless population, and opening the church to the public for guided tours to attract contributions from tourists. By the mid-2000s, the church had an estimated 325 families in its congregation, and roughly a third of its congregants were LGBT.

History

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Background

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The city now known asAtlanta was founded in 1837 under the name Terminus,[2] in reference to its location as the "terminus" for theWestern and Atlantic Railroad that had been built innorth Georgia.[3] Over the next several years, the city grew in size and importance, becoming a majorrailroad junction for thesoutheastern United States.[4] Many of the people who had worked on the railroad's construction and operation wereimmigrants,[5] and by 1850, of the roughly 2,500 people who lived in the city, about 10 percent had been born outside of the United States.[4] These immigrants were primarilyIrish Catholics who maintained their religion after settling in the area,[5][2] which at the time was under the jurisdiction of theRoman Catholic Diocese of Charleston.[6] Beginning in 1845,[7][8]priests from otherGeorgia cities such asAugusta andMacon would travel to the city to preach and performMass in the houses of the railroad workers.[4] The oldest records from thismissionparish date to 1846, when abaptism was conducted on August 9.[5][9][8] From this time until 1849,John Barry served as the parish priest.[8]

First church building

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A copy ofThe Immaculate Conception of El Escorial hung behind the altar in the parish's first church building.

Through the 1840s, the Irish Catholic population of Atlanta continued to increase, driven primarily by immigration fromIreland due to theGreat Famine.[5] By 1848, the parish's population had grown large enough to necessitate a permanentchurch building.[3] On February 23 of that year,[8] aland lot located oneblock fromAtlanta City Hall was purchased by the parish for $300 and construction commenced on a new building.[7] Work on this new church was completed later that year,[8] making it one of the first in the city to be built in the city.[7][note 1] The building was made of wood with a white painted exterior, and its front had a small porch with stairs on either side.[10] Inside, the church'ssanctuary consisted of analcove that had the phrase "Gloria in excelsis Deo" painted around the arch.[10] Hanging behind thealtar was a painting,[10] a copy ofThe Immaculate Conception of El Escorial byBartolomé Esteban Murillo.[12]

In early 1849,BishopIgnatius A. Reynolds of Charleston officiallydedicated this new church building and also gave it an official name of the Church of theImmaculate Conception.[8] Prior to this, the church had no official name and was typically just referred to as the city's Catholic church.[8][12] In 1850, theRoman Catholic Diocese of Savannah was formed out of the Diocese of Charleston and included all of Georgia.[6] At this time,DeKalb County, (which Atlanta was located in), was home to 34 churches, of which only one was Catholic.[13] On February 13, 1851,[8] after several years of relying on missionary priests, the parish received its first permanentpastor with the installation of Jeremiah F. O'Neill of Savannah,[14] who used the church as a base for further missionary work into north Georgia andEast Tennessee.[4] On May 2, 1852, BishopFrancis Xavier Gartland of Savannah made his first visit to the church, where he administered thesacrament ofconfirmation on several individuals.[14]

American Civil War

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In 1861,Thomas O'Reilly, a 30-year-old member of theclergy fromCounty Cavan, Ireland, was named the pastor of Immaculate Conception.[15] O'Reilly would serve as the church's pastor for 11 years,[15] including the duration of theAmerican Civil War, which began the same year he was appointed to that position.[5] During the war, the church building was used as a military hospital for wounded soldiers.[16] O'Reilly during this time ministered to wounded soldiers from both theConfederate and theUnion armies, and on March 16, 1864, he was given acommission as an officialmilitary chaplain for the Confederacy.[17] On September 2, 1864, during theAtlanta campaign, UnionGeneralWilliam Tecumseh Sherman's army captured Atlanta.[18] Much of his army was made up of Irish Catholic immigrants, and Sherman was largely viewed as being a Catholic himself.[18][note 2] Following the city's capture, Sherman ordered the civilian population to evacuate the city, though O'Reilly disobeyed his orders.[19] At the time, O'Reilly was the only Catholic chaplain available in the area.[12][20] and he continued to minister to soldiers in the city, including to many of Sherman's troops.[19] In November, Sherman ordered that all useful infrastructure in the city be burned before he commenced withhis March to the Sea.[19] However, O'Reilly, convinced one of Sherman's officers,Henry Warner Slocum, to spare the church from destruction.[19][21] O'Reilly alluded to a rebellion amongst the army's Catholic soldiers if the church were allowed to be destroyed,[19][22] and Sherman acquiesced to his requests, stationing several guards around the church.[23] As a result of O'Reilly's actions, Immaculate Conception, as well as several other nearby churches, the city hall, and several residential buildings indowntown, were among the only buildings to not be destroyed.[19][24][5] Years later, in 1945, theAtlanta Historical Society would honor O'Reilly's contributions to the city with a memorial on the grounds of the city hall.[25]

New church building

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Despite being spared from complete destruction, the church building had been severely damaged byshelling that had occurred during the conflict, and the building's use as a hospital had left the floors stained with blood.[22] However, the church's congregation continued to grow in theReconstruction era as the city recovered from the war.[3] In 1866, four members of theSisters of Mercy opened aday school and aboarding school for the parish.[26] The church'sSunday school had roughly 400 members in 1867,[27] while the church itself claimed 900 members in 1871.[28] Around this time,J. J. Haverty, a future businessman who would go on to found the furniture companyHavertys, served as analtar boy for O'Reilly.[29] In 1868,Redemptorists visited Georgia and, during a week-long stay in Atlanta, heard 5,500confessions and saw 23converts join the church.[26] That same year, the capital of Georgia was relocated to Atlanta, and construction on the newcapitol building commenced one block away from Immaculate Conception.[26] With the growth of both the city and the church in the postwar era, the wooden building proved insufficient for their needs,[3] and the parishioners decided to move forward with the construction of a new church.[26]

Thecornerstone of the church was dedicated on September 1, 1869.

In 1869, the wooden church buildingwas relocated to a corner of the church's property to allow the construction of a new brick building in its place.[26] Local architectWilliam H. Parkins was selected to design this new building,[30][31][32] and it was one of the first major projects he would work on during his career in Atlanta.[16] Parkins, who was the first architect to practice in Atlanta,[33] would go on to have a lengthy career and would design several other churches in the city,[31] of which today only Immaculate Conception still stands.[34]Groundbreaking for the new structure happened in June 1869,[35] and the stone for the building'sfoundation was provided by Patrick Lynch, a local Irish businessman in thestone industry who was responsible for some of the earliest paved streets in Atlanta.[36] On September 1,[37][16] thecornerstone of the building was laid.[26] At the accompanying dedication, BishopAugustin Verot of Savannah presided,[35] while noted Catholic pastor andpoetAbram Joseph Ryan delivered a sermon.[37][16] Construction on the new building continued for several years, at a cost of between $75,000 and $80,000.[note 3] In 1872, during the building's construction, O'Reilly died,[5][2] with his funeral held in the old wooden church.[26] His body would later be interred in acrypt underneath the main altar in the new church.[26][2] Primary construction on the building lasted until 1873,[5][30][38][16] and on December 10 of that year,[35] the building was dedicated in a ceremony presided over by BishopWilliam Hickley Gross of Savannah.[39] The wooden building was demolished the same year,[22] and in fact, all of the buildings that had been spared destruction during the occupation of Atlanta would be demolished within the next 20 years.[40] Despite the dedication, additional minor construction work continued until 1880,[26][41] and the church's high altar would not be dedicated until January 10 of that year.[41] Also in 1880, Immaculate Conception's pastor James O'Brien donated land forSt. Joseph's Infirmary.[3] This institution, operated by the Sisters of Mercy,[42] was the first permanent hospital in the city.[3]

In 1880, arectory was constructed adjacent to the church.[30] That same year, with the growth of the Catholic population in Atlanta, a second parish for the city was established out of territory spun off from Immaculate Conception.[43][44] This new parish was originally known as Saints Peter and Paul, but after the construction ofa new church building alongPeachtree Street in 1898, it became known as the Sacred Heart parish.[44] In 1903, another parish was established from former Immaculate Conception territory,[45] and by 1908 there were four Catholic churches in the city.[26] The late 1800s and early 1900s also saw several notable pastors serving at Immaculate Conception, includingBenjamin Joseph Keiley andEmmet M. Walsh, who would both later become bishops.[46][43] Also during this time, manyIrish Travellers in the region would meet at Immaculate Conception once a year on April 28 to hold a mass funeral for their dead,[47][48] with many Travellers buried in the city'sOakland andWestview cemeteries.[25] By 1914, Immaculate Conception had a membership of between 1,300 and 1,500 and supported sixteen missions.[49]

Decline and restorations

[edit]

Through the first half of the 20th century, changes in Atlanta's demographics and church organization hurt Immaculate Conception.[3] The population of downtown, where the church was located, began to decline during this time as the population spread to other parts of the city andsurrounding metropolitan area, and many new parishes were established to cater to these areas, causing Immaculate Conception's membership to decline.[3] During this time, despite a significant growth in the area's population, downtown became less residential and more centered on government and business activities, and byWorld War II, the parish only had about 100 families in their membership.[50] During the mid-20th century,Auxiliary BishopFrancis Edward Hyland of Savannah-Atlanta[note 4] favored selling the property, but BishopGerald O'Hara instead opted to renovate the historic church, delegating that authority toMonsignor James Grady and Donald Kiernan.[52] Their efforts included a large fundraising program and a renovation of the church that cost $100,000.[52] The renovations were completed by 1954, in time for the one hundredth anniversary of thepromulgation ofIneffabilis Deus, which codified the Catholic doctrine of the Immaculate Conception.[52] The church was rededicated on June 2 of that year,[41] being given the status of ashrine.[26] Two years later, the church became a part of theRoman Catholic Diocese of Atlanta.[51]

AGeorgia historical marker erected near the church in 1981

In 1958, the Bishop of Atlanta appointed theFranciscans to take over operations at Immaculate Conception.[52] The Franciscans have a long history of acting as caretakers forMarian shrines,[52] and at the time they had begun to focus on churches located in downtown areas.[53] During this time, the Franciscans took a custodial approach to managing the church and several services offered by the church began to be shut down due to the small membership.[54] For instance, by 1970, the church was no longer operating itsparochial school due to a lack of students.[55] On December 12, 1976, the church was added to theNational Register of Historic Places,[1] and several years later in 1981, theGeorgia Historical Commission erected aGeorgia historical marker outside the church.[11] During this time, the church saw a demographic shift as moreAfrican Americans became church members, constituting about 40 percent of the congregation by the 1980s.[55] Under Franciscan control, the church also expanded its charitable operations, focusing on more outreach to the localhomeless population.[55] The church worked with the nearbyCentral Presbyterian Church (which operated anight shelter for homeless in the area) to begin a weeklymeal program.[55]

On August 6, 1982,[53] the church experienced a massive fire caused by faulty wiring that resulted in almost the entire structure being destroyed.[3][2] Only the exterior brick structure of the church was left standing.[53] The main altar had been destroyed, though the two side altars remained intact.[56] Following this, the church underwent a massive restoration project that took roughly two years to complete,[53] during which time services were held at the nearby Central Presbyterian Church.[57] The project, which cost about $4 million,[57] was overseen by architect Henry Howard Smith, the son of noted Atlanta architectFrancis Palmer Smith.[58] On May 25, 1984,[41] the church was rededicated.[3] Following the fire, the church continued to experience financial difficulties, and in 1987, due in part to this,[57] the Franciscans left the church and control was transferred back to the Archdiocese of Atlanta.[53][note 5]

Recent history

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Following the return of the church to archdiocese control, thechancellor of Atlanta recommended changes to the church to attract tourists while still maintaining their community outreach efforts.[57] John Adamski was appointed priest by the archdiocese in 1988 and set about making largescale changes to the church.[60] He restructured the church's administration and made changes to attract tourists,[60] such as opening the crypt area to the public for guided tours.[2] Adamski had also spent time inNew York City, where he ministered topeople with AIDS, and at Immaculate Conception he began a weekly dinner for people with AIDS as a form ofevangelism to them.[60] By the early 1990s, these dinners attracted about 100 to 120 people,[53] and by 1992, the church had started a ministry for LGBT people,[61] with a full-time priest to minister to people with AIDS.[53] While Adamski's decision to minister to LGBT people divided the opinion of the church,[61] it did lead to an increase inLGBT congregants.[60] In 1992, the church counted about 275 households among its membership and was feeding about 500 people per week at its soup kitchen.[53] Adamski also worked more closely with Central Presbyterian and opened a nightly emergency homeless shelter,[60] and in 1992 they had 35 people living there.[53] Given its central location in the city near several prominent government buildings, the church also began to be used during this time as a coordinating location for protests, such asanti-abortion protests at the capitol building.[53] In 1998, the church celebrated its 150th anniversary with a theme of "People Living Church".[60] Adamski departed from Immaculate Conception the following year.[60]

In 2000, the church began a $1.4 million restoration project that was completed the following year.[62] By the mid-2000s, the church counted about 325 families in its membership,[62] and while it had historically catered to an Irish Catholic congregation, its congregation was split roughly evenly betweenwhite andblack people, with the latter mostly made up of African Americans andHaitian Americans.[63] Additionally, due in large part to Adamski's ministry, about a third of the congregation was LGBT.[63] The structure itself stands as one of the oldest buildings in downtown and one of only two buildings that began construction in 1869, alongside theGeorgia Railroad Freight Depot.[33]

Architecture and design

[edit]
The side of the church along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive SW

The church is located at 48 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive (formerly Hunter Street SW),[1][30][25] at the intersection of that street and Central Avenue,[16] and it shares its city block with Central Presbyterian.[64] The main structure is a one-story brick building with acruciform,[16] modified rectangular layout[30] that covers an area of 145 feet (44 m) by 86 feet (26 m).[65] Much of the exterior brickwork is original and was reused following the 1982 fire and subsequent restoration, though the building now usescementmortar instead of the originallime mortar.[53] The roof is made ofVirginia Slate[65] and consists of intersectinggabled sections.[30] The front of the building has three doorways beneath threepointed arch entryways,[30] with the main front gable topped with an iron cross.[16] These doorways face Central Avenue and lead to a largegranite stairway.[16] On one side of the front there is a three-story tower with a cross-gabled roof, while on the other side is a four-storybell tower complete with abelfry on top.[30] Both towers featurefinials.[66] The exterior of the building also includedbuttresses,galvanizedironpinnacles,[35] andpointed arch windows.[30] The exterior also featurescast iron ridge castings.[65][16] Attached to this structure is a 2.5-story rectory with ajerkinhead roof.[30] The overall design of the church is in theGothic Revival style,[30] while Parkins incorporated some elements fromFrench Gothic architecture (such as the three-part frontportal and arose window) andHigh Victorian Gothic architecture.[67]

The sanctuary is illuminated by 12chandeliers.[56] Lining the aisles are roughly 50stained glass windows that have religious symbolism.[53][56] The ceiling contains a cloverleaf-design painting that depicts the 12 apostles and was designed by Georgian artist Henry Barnes during the building's 1980s restoration.[56][53] Concerning further artwork in the building, there is a statue of thePietà that was carved inItaly and survived the 1982 fire.[56] The interiorcolumns and thecapitals are slender and made of iron.[68] The main altar is made of marble,[3] and it incorporates pieces of marble from the original altar that was destroyed in the 1982 fire.[53] Immediately beneath this main altar, located in the church's basement, is the grave of O'Reilly and Thomas Cleary, a successor of O'Reilly's who was buried next to him in 1884.[26][2]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Multiple sources, including an authorized history of theRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta, state that the church building was completed in 1848.[8][7][2] However, in a 1969 book, Atlanta historianFranklin Garrett stated that the building was "erected in 1850 or 1851".[10] A year of 1851 is also given on theGeorgia historical marker located outside of the church, which was placed there in 1981.[11]
  2. ^While Sherman's religious views have been a source of debate amongst historians, he was largely perceived as a Catholic during the American Civil War.[18] SeeWilliam Tecumseh Sherman#Religious views for more information.
  3. ^Sources vary on the exact cost of the construction.[26][31]
  4. ^The Diocese of Savannah had become the Diocese of Savannah-Atlanta in 1937 to reflect the growth in the Catholic population of Atlanta.[51]
  5. ^The Diocese of Atlanta was elevated to the status ofarchdiocese in 1962.[59]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcNational Park Service 1994, p. 152.
  2. ^abcdefghCzarnopys & Santa 1998, p. 84.
  3. ^abcdefghijkSampson 1987, p. 46.
  4. ^abcdMaloney 1992, p. 379.
  5. ^abcdefghBarnes 1995, p. 223.
  6. ^abMaloney 1992, pp. 368–369.
  7. ^abcdScharen 2004, p. 79.
  8. ^abcdefghiHanley 2006, p. 17.
  9. ^Mitchell 1927, p. 28.
  10. ^abcdGarrett 1969a, p. 333.
  11. ^abGeorgia Historical Society 2014.
  12. ^abcBroderick 1958, p. 112.
  13. ^Hart 1970, p. 23.
  14. ^abMitchell 1927, p. 29.
  15. ^abMaloney 1992, p. 380.
  16. ^abcdefghijKing 1969, p. 25.
  17. ^Brinsfield 2005, p. 225.
  18. ^abcMaloney 1992, pp. 380–381.
  19. ^abcdefMaloney 1992, p. 381.
  20. ^Burch & Stimpson 2014, p. 168.
  21. ^Broderick 1958, pp. 112–113.
  22. ^abcBroderick 1958, p. 113.
  23. ^Gibbons 1979, p. 55.
  24. ^Morrison 2019, p. 120.
  25. ^abcBarnes 1995, p. 224.
  26. ^abcdefghijklmMaloney 1992, p. 382.
  27. ^Newman 1983, p. 49.
  28. ^Wilson 1871, p. 36.
  29. ^Smith 2006, p. xv.
  30. ^abcdefghijkGreenberg & Marusin 1976, p. 116.
  31. ^abcReed 1889, p. 454.
  32. ^Morgan 1937, p. 6.
  33. ^abGournay 1993, p. xxvi.
  34. ^King 1969, p. 27.
  35. ^abcdHanley 2006, p. 20.
  36. ^Harrison 1944, p. 198.
  37. ^abHarrison 1944, p. 210.
  38. ^King 1969, p. 12.
  39. ^Martin 1902, p. 571.
  40. ^Morrison 2019, p. 122.
  41. ^abcdHanley 2006, p. 21.
  42. ^Hanley 2006, p. 23.
  43. ^abMitchell 1927, p. 33.
  44. ^abHanley 2006, p. 27.
  45. ^Hanley 2006, p. 36.
  46. ^O'Hara 1914, p. 201.
  47. ^Barnes 1995, pp. 223–224.
  48. ^Ferris 2013, pp. 31–32.
  49. ^O'Hara 1914, p. 209.
  50. ^Scharen 2004, pp. 81–82.
  51. ^abMaloney 1992, p. 376.
  52. ^abcdeScharen 2004, p. 82.
  53. ^abcdefghijklmnMaloney 1992, p. 383.
  54. ^Scharen 2004, pp. 82–83.
  55. ^abcdScharen 2004, p. 83.
  56. ^abcdeCzarnopys & Santa 1998, p. 85.
  57. ^abcdScharen 2004, p. 84.
  58. ^Craig 2012, p. 241.
  59. ^Moore 2007, p. 168.
  60. ^abcdefgScharen 2004, p. 85.
  61. ^abWilliams 2008, p. 127.
  62. ^abHanley 2006, p. 158.
  63. ^abScharen 2004, pp. 52–53.
  64. ^Czarnopys & Santa 1998, p. 86.
  65. ^abcWilson 1871, p. 76.
  66. ^Gournay 1993, p. 7.
  67. ^Gournay 1993, pp. 7–8.
  68. ^Gournay 1993, p. 8.

Sources

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Further reading

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External links

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