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St.
Mark's, an extremely beautiful building in the Moderne style of the
Empire State Building, was one of a handful of uncompromisingly modern
churches built anywhere in the world before World War II. Some
of the internal decoration, such as the front of the choir loft, uses
neo-Egyptian detailing like that of the Chrysler Building in New York.
The building seats only two hundred, but is lofty and resonant.
As a space it combines intimacy with elegance and grandeur in a way
that is reminiscent of an Oxford or Cambridge college chapel.
Externally, the tall white brick church dominates a paved plaza, flanked
by the low white brick Parish House and Rectory, both dating from the
1950's. The ensemble also forms an interesting contrast with the
red brick that predominates in the rest of the neighborhood, something
that, together with its advanced design, made it highly controversial
when it was built.
The
church is especially noteworthy for its fine stained glass in pastel
shades of blue, green and purple, designed by Robert Harmon and made
at the Emil Frei studios. A hammer depicted in one of the windows
is a lighthearted tribute to the architects: a worker in overalls holds
a hammer, with "Dunn" written on it, another holds a nail,
a play on the name of Charles Nagel in German. The windows on
the north side depict the life of Christ as told in the gospel of Mark.
The windows on the south side explore where Christ is present in modern
times. Workers in overalls, strikers' umbrellas, soldiers and moneybags,
rather than saints in flowing garments, look down from the windows.
Some of the windows on the south side, whose social justice themes were
very controversial when they were new, deal with race relations, industrial
relations and opposition to totalitarianism. The same themes are
found in Robert Harmon's Holy Innocents rose window above the organ
at the west end, commemorating the association with the former Church
of the Holy Innocents. The race relations theme is also taken
up in Beatrice Boot's tapestry on the wall to the right of the freestanding
white marble altar, and a gift from former members of Holy Innocents
parish, a vision of the kingdom of God on earth in which people of all
races and classes unite in the praise of God, with the text "Earth
shall be fair and all her folk be one." The statue of St. Mark
to the left of the west door and the "Christus Rex" crucifix
above and behind the altar were both the work of Sheila Burlingame,
a pupil of Carl Milles.
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A
preliminary sketch by the architects of the altar area of St.
Mark's Church
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Also
of interest is the little Aeolian-Skinner organ (op. 979) in the choir
loft at the west end of the church, one of the first instruments built
in a church on open display rather than buried in a chamber, and an
early example of a small neo-baroque church organ. It is one of G. Donald
Harrison's finest instruments. Because it is so effective in the
lively acoustics of St. Mark's, Senator Emerson Richards described the
instrument as "the biggest little organ in the world".
The
ironwork pulpit and lectern date from the 1950s and were early works
of sculptor Clarke Battle Fitzgerald, best known for his sculpture "The
Pendulum and the City" in Coventry Cathedral. The Victorian
font came from the Church of the Holy Innocents. It was given in
memory of the Rev. Louis Sanford Schuyler (1852-1878), their first rector,
and one of the Martyrs of Memphis
.A
recent addition of 1991 is the All Saint's Memorial Garden on the north
side of the church with its attractive marble fountain-wall. On the
east side of this garden hangs an old bell, dated 1636, originally in
the tower of the village church in Blendworth, England, shipped over
courtesy of the Royal Navy, and a memento of a clergy exchange between
Blendworth and St. Mark's in 1959-1960. The Rev. Murray Kenney, rector
of St. Mark's, went to Blendworth and the Rev. William Rees of Blendworth,
Hants, came to St. Mark's.
The
rectory was built in 1950-1951 after a design by Frederick Dunn and
the William Scarlett Parish House by Norton-Higgenbotham was dedicated
in 1955. In the parish house are wood blocks of the Gospels by John
Tatschl on a mural background.
Clergy of St. Mark's Church
| 1939-41 |
The Rev.
Charles Wilson |
| 1941-1946 |
The Rev.
Raymond Maxwell |
| 1947-1966 |
The Rev.
William Murray Kenney |
| 1967-1977 |
The Rev.
James Paget |
| 1978-1984 |
The Rev.
David Musgrave |
| 1985-1992
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The Rev.
Paul Lautenschlager |
| 1993- |
The Rev.
Lydia Agnew Speller |
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Saint Mark's
Episcopal Church
4714 Clifton Avenue
St. Louis, MO 63109 |
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