Zion Lutheran Church | |
Zion Lutheran Church in 2009 | |
![]() Interactive map of Zion Lutheran Church | |
| Location | 400 East Lexington Street,(original bldg. facing North Gay Street),City Hall/War Memorial Plaza,Baltimore, Maryland, 21202 |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 39°17′29″N76°36′37″W / 39.29139°N 76.61028°W /39.29139; -76.61028 |
| Built | 1807-08 (original church, 1912-13 (western addition -"Aldersaal" [Parish House], Bell Tower, Parsonage, Gardens) |
| Architect | Strobel, Johann and Saumening, Henry |
| Architectural style | Georgian/Federal era - original churchNorth German Hanseatic - western addition |
| NRHP reference No. | 11000960[1] |
| Significant dates | |
| Added to NRHP | December 30, 2011 |
| Designated BCL | 1977 |
Zion Lutheran Church, also known as theZion Church of the City of Baltimore (formerly known as theGerman Lutheran Reformed Church), is a historicEvangelical Lutheran church located in downtownBaltimore,Maryland,United States, founded 1755.
The congregation was founded in 1755 in order to serve the needs of Lutheranimmigrants from Germany, as well asGermans from Pennsylvania who moved to Baltimore. It has a bilingual congregation that provides sermons in bothGerman andEnglish. In 1762 the congregation built its first church on Fish Street (later East Fayette Street). By 1773, a new church constitution had replaced the church's earlier core document,[2] and eventually, the 1762 structure was also replaced by a bigger building, the current Zion Church on North Gay Street, erected from 1807 to 1808 in a Gothic style.[3] An additional expansion of the church to the west along East Lexington Street to North Holliday Street composed of an "Adlersaal" (Parish House), bell tower, parsonage and an enclosed garden designed of Hanseatic North German architecture was constructed under Rev. Julius K. Hofmann in 1912-1913. In the late 1920s, the entire block south of the church was razed to form a monumental square (known asWar Memorial Plaza or, less frequently, as "City Hall Plaza") opposite theBaltimore City Hall of 1875 on the western side and construction at the eastern end of the War Memorial Building with an auditorium, historical exhibit area and veterans organizations offices. On the south side of the church buildings facing the plaza, a new headquarters for theBaltimore City Fire Department was constructed in a Georgian-Federal style complementing the original Zion Church around the corner.
German-language sermons have been provided for over 250 years at Zion Church, the only church left in Maryland still holding weekly German-language services. The church participates in the annual Maryland German Festival and is a member of the German-American Citizens Association of Maryland.
Zion Church was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2011.[4]
The composerGeorge Frederick Boyle was married at the church.