St. George Melkite Catholic Church | |
St. George Melkite Catholic Church | |
| Location | 1617 W. State St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 43°02′35″N87°56′00″W / 43.04301°N 87.93346°W /43.04301; -87.93346 |
| Architect | Erhard Brielmaier & Sons |
| Architectural style | Byzantine Revival |
| NRHP reference No. | 86000128 |
| Added to NRHP | January 16, 1986 |
St. George Melkite Catholic Church is aMelkiteGreek Catholic[1] Church, located inMilwaukee, Wisconsin.[2] It was added to theNational Register of Historic Places in 1986.[3] The church was built in 1917[4] to serve the needs of theSyrian-Lebanese community[5] who migrated to Milwaukee after theChicago World's Fair of 1892.[6] It is the second oldest Melkite church in the United States.[6]
Syrian immigrants began to arrive in Milwaukee in 1895, settling in the neighborhood that surrounds the current church. Though many had grown up in theMelkite Greek Catholic Church, they didn't speak English orLatin, so weren't a fit for nearbyRoman Catholic parishes. In 1911 Reverend Timothy Jock was assigned to the Syrians, holding services in a former dance hall.[7]
In 1915 the congregation began to worship in a house at 1615 West State. Shortly after, they began planning a new church.[7] It was designed by architectErhard Brielmaier with St. George Church ofAin-Berdel (also referred to as Ain-Borday and Ain-Bordal),[6]Lebanon in mind.[4] The resulting building is one story, with a gable roof and tall windows behind the facade that are conventional for a Wisconsin church. But the facade has a Byzantine flavor, with the shapedparapet wall and the three bulbous domes.[7]