History of Colorado; Volume I, Part 75

Author: Stone, Wilbur Fiske, 1833-1920, ed
Publication date: 1918
Publisher: Chicago, S. J. Clarke
Number of Pages: 954


USA > Colorado > History of Colorado; Volume I > Part 75


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105


670


HISTORY OF COLORADO


pines. Afterward he visited Tarryall, Fairplay, and other points and then re- turned to Lima. In the spring of 1860, in broken health, he came again to Central City by way of Pueblo and Canon City. He soon organized a union church into which he gathered sixty-five members. To help support himself, he, with a partner, engaged in the grocery business. About this time his son, a prom- ising young man of nineteen, died. This great affliction almost unbalanced his mind, and as a relief he traveled among the mining camps. For two years he was chaplain of the Second Regiment, Colorado Volunteers, and after his army life he was commissioned by the board as an itinerant missionary. Rev. H. B. Gage says, "We venture to say that Father Hamilton preached the first sermon in more new localities than any other man in the west." He was the first moder- ator of the Presbytery of Colorado and also of the Synod of Colorado. In 1881, when over seventy years of age, he journeyed mostly on foot, eighty miles over the range, crossing the summit by night on the crust of the snow, to take up the work at Irwin, a rough mining camp. Here he built a church, supposed to be the highest in the United States at that time, 10,450 feet above the sea. He went east and obtained money and a bell for the church, and on his return, while changing cars at South Pueblo, was killed on December 7, 1881. He was buried at Cedar Rapids, Iowa.


. The second Presbyterian minister to visit this region was the Rev. Alexander Taylor Rankin, who arrived in Denver on July 31, 1860. On August 5th he preached in the Union School to a large audience, of which service he said, "Made a good start." After holding services in several different places, on Sep- tember 2, 1860, in a large room on Larimer Street, he organized the first Pres- byterian church in the Rocky Mountain region, with eight members, Dr. W. P. Hills and Daniel Mayn were chosen elders, and on September 6th six trustees were elected.


On October 14th the first communion service was held; on November 12th a Bible class was begun and on November 29th Mr. Rankin preached what was probably the first Thanksgiving sermon in all this region. He visited Colorado Springs, Central City and Idaho Springs, and on December 8, 1860, after a stay of a little over four months, left Denver and returned to Buffalo, New York.


From December 8, 1860, there was no Presbyterian minister in Denver until April 26, 1861, when Rev. A. S. Billingsley arrived. He preached in various buildings, at one time over a liquor store, concerning which he writes: "And thus with the spirit of alcohol below and praying for the Spirit of God above, hope to be mighty through God to pulling down the strongholds."


On December 15, 1861, he organized the First Presbyterian Church, with eighteen members. No reference is made to the former organization. Two elders were elected, one of whom, Simon Cort, having been previously ordained, was on the same day inducted into office. He was the first installed elder in the Rocky Mountain region, and with his family had much to do with founding Presbyterianism here. The organization was effected in International Hall on Ferry Street.


Mr. Billingsley remained until April, 1862. After preaching for three months at Buckskin Joe and adjacent points, he returned east and died in North Carolina in 1897.


The work in Denver had not been largely successful and when Rev. Alanson


1


671


HISTORY OF COLORADO


R. Day arrived on November 2, 1862, only six persons could be induced to identify themselves with the church.


In 1863 Major Fillmore donated lots on F Street (now Fifteenth) between Lawrence and Arapahoe, and on them a building 36 by 64 feet, costing $5,200, was erected. It was dedicated on January 17, 1864, being the second Presbyterian church building in this region. To it the Board of Church Extension, Old School, contributed $500 aid, and thus began the important work of helping the churches to obtain buildings. Mr. Day returned east in March, 1865, but again ministered to the church during the winter of 1868 and 1869. After this he labored at Boul- der Valley Church until March, 1873.


From October, 1865, to October, 1867, Rev. J. B. McClure of the Presbytery of Chicago, Old School, ministered to the church under commission of the Board of Domestic Missions, and then accepted an agency for the North Western Presbyterian and returned to Chicago.


In February, 1868, the Rev. A. Y. Moore, of the Presbytery of Southern In- diana, Old School, began to supply the church. He received a call to become its pastor, but declined it and returned to Indiana in about three months.


Without dismission or permission, on November 18, 1868, because they could not obtain sufficient aid from the Old School Board, the congregation, by a majority of one, "Resolved to place itself under the care of the most convenient Presbytery connected with the Presbyterian Church, which is to hold its next general assembly in the Church of the Covenant of New York City." This part of the congregation took possession of the building, obtained a title to the property after much litigation, by paying to those who remained in the Old School branch, $2,500. They were received into the Presbytery of Chicago on August 10, 1869, as the First Presbyterian Church of Denver, New School. By a committee of that Presbytery, the Rev. E. P. Wells, who had arrived in Den- ver on December 10, 1868, was installed. The church was received from the Presbytery of Chicago by the Presbytery of Colorado, on August 16, 1870.


The church became self-supporting in 1871, the name was changed to Central in 1874, and the location was changed to Eighteenth and Champa in 1876.


At a congregational meeting held February 14, 1888, Messrs. Fletcher, Bene- dict and Woodward were appointed a committee to secure a suitable site for a new church and parsonage. Eight lots on the corner of Seventeenth and Sher- man avenue were purchased at a cost of $40,000. A building committee consist- ing of Dr. J. W. Graham, J. G. Kilpatrick, J. B. Vroom, Donald Fletcher and B. F. Woodward was appointed. A parsonage was erected on the seventh and eighth lots from the corner at an expense of about twenty-two thousand dollars. The four lots on the corner of Eighteenth and Champa were sold for $130,000, exclusive of improvements. The church building and furniture were sold to the Twenty-third Avenue Church for a nominal consideration. Plans for a new church at Seventeenth and Sherman were prepared by Architects F. E. Edbrooke and W. A. Marean. Contracts were awarded to Messrs. William Simpson and R. C. Greenlee & Sons for the new building, to be completed on or before June I, 1892, at a cost when completed and furnished of $165,000. The New Broad- way Theater was rented for Sabbath services for one year. The First Congre- gational Church lecture room was rented for mid-week and Sabbath school services. The farewell services in the old structure, which was endeared to


672


HISTORY OF COLORADO


many by sacred and tender associations, were held on the Sabbath of December 28, 1890, and soon thereafter the building was carefully taken down and removed to the new location of the Twenty-third Avenue Church, there being rebuilt in the same form, and re-dedicated to the same uses and purposes.


Beginning with eight members in 1861, the church has organized two other churches from its membership, viz., the Twenty-third Avenue and North Pres- byterian churches, and has aided several missions in different parts of the city. The Railroad Union Mission was established and endowed by one of its mem- bers, the late F. J. B. Crane.


The Old School branch of the congregation was ministered to by Rev. A. R. Day from April, 1869, to April, 1870. The Rev. W. Y. Brown succeeded him and began work in July, 1870. He met with great success and built a church where the Equitable building now stands, the entire property being worth $12,- 250. Afterwards what is now the First United Presbyterian Church, was built, and the congregation removed to that location. The different names of this church are interesting: First Presbyterian Church of Denver, Westminster, Stuart Re-Union, First Presbyterian Church of Denver, distinguished as First Presbyterian, on Seventeenth Street, Seventeenth Street Church and Capitol Avenue Church, after which it was united with the First Avenue Church and lost its identity in 1899.


The second church to be organized was that of Central City, on January 26. 1862, by Father Hamilton, with nine members. It was the first Protestant church in the mountains. In the fall of that year the Rev. G. W. Warner of Weedsport, New York, took charge of the work and remained about one year. On February 15, 1863, he organized the Blackhawk Church with ten members, and there built the first Presbyterian Church building in the Rocky Mountain region. It was dedicated on August 29, 1863, free of debt and without aid from the board.


In the spring of 1864, the Revs. T. D. Marsh and A. M. Heizer were ap- pointed by the board, the former to Central City and the latter to Blackhawk.


Doctor Marsh labored at Central City until February, 1865, when he accepted a call to Blackhawk. He recognized the need of a Presbytery, and at a conven- tion of Presbyterians in Denver, on January 16, 1866, the Presbytery of Colorado was informally organized, consisting of three ministers and four churches. Doctor Marsh was moderator. Strong resolutions in favor of union were adopted. By it Mr. Marsh was installed at Blackhawk. But this so-called prehistoric Pres- bytery never met again and was not recognized by the General Assembly, and the pastoral relation was never dissolved.


The next organization was that of Boulder Valley, effected in September, 1863, by the Rev. A. R. Day, having seven members. He continued to preach for them every alternate Monday evening, until the summer of 1864, when the Rev. C. M. Campbell, of the Presbytery of Allegheny City, took charge of the field. He labored for this church for some two years, preaching also at Boulder City and Upper St. Vrain. The church was vacant from October, 1866, until October, 1867, when the Rev. A. R. Day again took charge and continued to labor there until January 1, 1871. After this the Rev. C. M. Campbell again supplied the church. A building was erected in 1864.


At the end of ten years, June, 1869, there were six organized churches: the two in Denver, and one each in Central City, Blackhawk, Boulder Valley and


673


HISTORY OF COLORADO


Santa Fé, with a combined membership of probably not more than one hundred and fifty. There were three church buildings, Denver, Blackhawk and Boulder Valley. There was but one organized Presbytery, that of Santa Fé, including but a small part of the territory.


As early as 1867 the Cumberland Presbyterian Church at Canon City, then in charge of Rev. B. F. Brown, erected the largest and finest religious edifice in southern Colorado.


In 1890 there were four Presbyteries in Colorado, those of Boulder, Den- ver, Gunnison and Pueblo. Churches had been established at Boulder, Boulder Valley, Cheyenne, Fossil Creek, Fort Collins, Timnath, Greeley, Fort Morgan, Longmont, Laramie, Crook, Rankin, Rawlins, Berthoud, Julesburg, Denver, seven churches, Akron, Otis, Blackhawk, Idaho Springs, Westminster, Littleton, Georgetown, Hyde Park, Central City, Brighton, Wray, Laird, Yuma, Abbott, Golden, Tabernacle, Pitkin, Grand Junction, Aspen, Leadville, Salida, Glenwood Springs, Ouray, Lake City, Delta, Poncho Springs, Irwin, Fairplay, Palmer Lake, Monument, Mesa, Pueblo, Trinidad, Saguache, Monte Vista, Valley View, Colorado Springs, Walsenburg, Eaton, Table Rock, Cañon City, Huerfano, Du -. rango, Antonito, La Luz, Cinicero, Las Animas, Silver Cliff, West Cliff, Ala- mosa, Del Norte, Rocky Ford, La Junta, El Moro, Eagle, La Veta. In its eighty churches there were the following number of communicants: Boulder, 1,080; Denver, 2,449; Gunnison, 901 ; Pueblo, 2,142. The Presbyterian College of the Southwest, which had been established in 1884 at Del Norte, and the Salida Academy, established at Salida in 1884, both received aid at this period from the General Assembly. In 1900 there were forty-seven students at the Del Norte College, and 161 at Salida. The General Assembly was continuing its work of aiding these institutions.


The growth of the membership of the church in Colorado was gratifying. In 1891 it was 6,674 ; in 1892, 7,312. In 1897 it was 9,327; in 1899 it was 10.310. In 1910 it had grown to 20,167. In 1900 there were 128 churches in the four Presbyteries which formed the Synod of Colorado.


In 1910 there were 155 churches, with a Sunday school membership of 20,112.


In 1917 there were 149 churches in the Synod of Colorado, and communicants were as follows: Boulder Presbytery, 4,811; Denver, 7,724; Gunnison, 1,993; Pueblo, 8,216; total, 22,744. Sunday school membership, 20,839.


In 1899 and in 1904 the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States met in Denver. In 1884 Dr. George P. Hays, of Denver, and in 1903 Dr. Robert F. Coyle, of Denver, were chosen moderators of the General Assembly. Dr. R. F. Tinnon, of the Rocky Mountain Synod was chosen mod- erator of the Cumberland Branch, General Assembly, in 1903.


· CLOSING WESTMINSTER UNIVERSITY


On June 8, 1891, the Westminster University of Colorado was incorporated. Among the leading figures in the movement were: Rev. T. M. Hopkins, D. D .; Ben F. Woodward; E. B. Light, and J. J. Garver.


The corporation acquired title to 640 acres of land from Ben D. Spencer and H. J. Mayham, of which forty acres were set apart as the campus of the uni- Vol. 1-43


674


HISTORY OF COLORADO


versity, eighty acres as the college farm, and the remainder plotted into lots and blocks. This section of land is located seven miles north of Denver near the station then known as Harris on the Colorado & Southern Railway.


A handsome building was erected, costing more than two hundred thousand dollars, the funds being secured from loans and advances made by the estate of H. A. W. Tabor, The Sayre-Newton Lumber Company, The Colorado Mort- gage & Investment Company, Ltd., and from the proceeds of sales of real estate.


Before the enterprise was completely launched the so-called panic of 1893 came on and it became necessary to defer the plans of the founders. No faculty was organized and no instruction offered.


On March 14, 1903, a certificate of incorporatioin of The Westminster Uni- versity Corporation was filed in the office of the secretary of state. The man- agement of the corporation was confided to twenty-four trustees, at least two- thirds of whom "shall be ministers or members in good standing of some church or churches in connection with and under the control of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America."


On September 18, 1907, the college was formally opened, work being car- ried on for the first year in the Central Presbyterian Church of Denver.


The deficit was, however, continuous, and at the session of the synod in Pueblo, October 16, 1917, the college was officially closed, arrangements having been made to clear the institution of debt.


THE UNITARIAN CHURCH


On May 31, 1871, there appeared in the Denver morning papers a notice, which said that at three o'clock on the following Sunday afternoon there would be preaching in the District Court room, on Larimer Street, by the Rev. L. E. Beckwith, Unitarian minister from Boston, and that all persons interested in Liberal Christianity were cordially invited to be present.


After the close of the services. the congregation, forty or fifty, who were mostly strangers to each other, remained to introduce themselves to Mr. and Mrs. Beckwith and to each other, and it was then and there learned that Mr. Beckwith was recently graduated from Harvard, had as yet charge of no church, but was visiting his parents, who resided in Denver, and desired, if practicable, to establish a Unitarian Society in Denver.


A meeting was called early in June, 1871, at the residence of D. D. Belden, to organize such society.


This organization was effected under the name of "The First Unitarian So- ciety of Denver."


The officers of the First Unitarian Society then elected were: Pastor, Rev. L. E. Beckwith ; trustees, D. D. Belden (chairman), George C. Beckwith, Alfred Sayre, D. C. Dodge, John L. Dailey; secretary, Mrs. William H. Greenwood; treasurer, Col. E. H. Powers.


From the District Court room the society went to the old Denver Theater, corner of Lawrence and G (now Sixteenth) streets, where they continued until the summer vacation. Upon their re-assembling, October 1, 1871, the school- room of the Methodist Seminary (now Denver University) had been rented,


675


HISTORY OF COLORADO


but after holding service there two Sundays, notice was received from the trus- tees of the seminary that the society could no longer occupy the room.


Being unable to secure any suitable hall or public room, the pastor opened the parlor of his house on California Street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth, and there religious services were first held October 15, 1871.


The number attending the Unitarian services, during all these months, ranged from thirty to fifty persons.


On December 5, 1871, a hall was rented in Crow's Block, on what was then called Holladay Street (later Market Street). This hall was occupied during the week, through the winter, by the House of Representatives of the Territorial Legislative Assembly. The floor was covered with sawdust, and all the sur- roundings and appointments were as unchurchlike as possible.


One hundred common wooden chairs were purchased, and the small cabinet organ previously secured was removed thither, and in this bare, unattractive hall, reached by two long flights of stairs, the little society continued to struggle for an existence.


On May 8, 1872, Mr. Beckwith resigned his pastorate of the church because of failing health.


In August, the Rev. S. S. Hunting, western secretary of the American Uni- tarian Association, visited Denver to ascertain the condition and wishes of the little society, and to assist in securing a pastor.


Correspondence was at once opened with Rev. W. G. M. Stone, of Berlin, Wisconsin, which resulted in his accepting the call made to him, and on the 8th day of October, 1872, he arrived in Denver and reported himself in readi- ness for the work.


The committee secured for Sunday, August 30th, at three o'clock in the after- noon, the place then familiarly known as the "Baptist Dug-Out," corner of Cur- tis and G (now Sixteenth) streets. This consisted of a cellar or basement, mostly underground and wholly without superstructure, and roofed over with common rough boards. There were held, with forty persons present, the first religious services under the Reverend Mr. Stone.


It was, however, decided by the committee not best to engage this basement further, because of its want of light and other unfavorable conditions, but to accept the offer of Messrs. Belden and Powers for the free use of their offices, in Ruter's Block, in G Street, which offices were upon the ground floor.


There was organized by Reverend Mr. Stone, on Sunday, February 2, 1873, the first Sunday school of the Unitarian Society, with nineteen named as mem- bers.


In June, 1873, the society purchased four lots, corner of Seventeenth and California streets, and the work of building was at once commenced. The build- ing was of wood, of Gothic architecture, with stained glass windows and a seat- ing capacity of 225. It was neatly finished and furnished, and was dedicated Sunday, December 28, 1873.


Rev. S. S. Hunting was present, and assisted, preaching morning and eve- ning to a crowded house, and on that day, by unanimous vote, the name "Unity" was given to the church.


On Sunday, January 23, 1875, Reverend Mr. Stone resigned the pastorate


676


HISTORY OF COLORADO


of the church, although remaining some three months thereafter. From that date until October 27, 1878, no regular pastor occupied the pulpit.


In the autumn of 1878 a call was sent to the Rev. Wm. R. Alger, who ac- .cepted, and preached his first sermon in Denver October 27, 1878.


The Rev. R. L. Herbert, having accepted a call to Denver, preached his first sermon September 19, 1880.


In August, 1881, Mr. Herbert died suddenly. The payment of the church debt is Mr. Herbert's memorial.


From Mr. Herbert's death, in August, 1881, there were no regular services until March 19, 1883, when Rev. A. M. Weeks, of Chelsea, Massachusetts, preached his first sermon in Unity pulpit. His sudden death occurred January 29, 1884, at the age of thirty-three.


In July a call was extended to Rev. Thomas Van Ness, and on Sunday, October 13, 1884, his installation took place at Unity Church. Present and assisting : Rev. John Snyder, of St. Louis; Rev. E. Powell, of Topeka; Rev. J. T. Gibbs, of Greeley; Rev. C. G. Howland, of Lawrence.


During the first two years of Mr. Van Ness' pastorate, the steadily increas- ing congregation made the need of a new and larger church building more and more imperative.


In the spring of 1887 the church property, corner of California and Seven- teenth streets, was sold for $24,000, and lots purchased at the corner of Broadway and Nineteenth Avenue for the sum of $14,000. Here, on November 9, 1886, was laid, with appropriate and impressive ceremonies, the corner-stone of the present church building. The building is of brick, with red stone trimmings, of Romanesque architecture, and has a seating capacity of 920. Besides the spa- cious entrance hall, and the beautiful audience room, there are commodious Sunday school rooms, parlors, and all that is necessary to the social as well as the religious work of the society.


Beautiful memorial windows keep fresh the memory of their beloved dead. The new church was dedicated September 4, 1887. The Revs. Minot J. Savage and Brooke Hereford, of Boston, were present, and preached morning and evening.


Failing health compelled Mr. Van Ness' resignation October 1, 1889.


On November 10, 1889, Rev. Samuel A. Eliot, son of President Emeritus Eliot of Harvard, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, was ordained in Unity Church. Under his ministry large numbers were added to the church, and the Sunday school doubled its numbers. Dr. Eliot is now president of the American Unita- rian Association.


Rev. N. A. Haskell succeeded Rev. Samuel A. Eliot in 1893, and remained until 1895, when Rev. David Utter, now pastor emeritus, followed.


Doctor Utter remained in active charge of the church until 1917, when Rev. Fred Alban Weil, originally of Boston, succeeded him. Doctor Weil was for ten years at Bellingham, Washington.


There are now small but active Unitarian congregations at Pueblo, Fort Col- lins, Greeley and Colorado Springs, all of which are thriving. The Greeley church was founded in 1880; the church at Colorado Springs in 1891; that at Fort Collins in 1897 ; that in Pueblo in 1898.


CHAPTER XXXIII


THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN COLORADO


AMONG THE PUEBLOS-CHURCH ESTABLISHED IN DENVER-THE FIRST BUILDING- COMING OF FATHERS MACHEBEUF AND RAVERDY-REVIVAL OF WORK-THE CATHEDRAL-ST. MARY'S ACADEMY-SISTERS OF LORETTO-CATHOLICISM AT CAL- IFORNIA GULCH-BEGINNING OF THE CHURCH IN OTHER COMMUNITIES.


The teachings of Catholicism were perhaps brought to the Pike's Peak country many decades before the first permanent white settlements were located. The Spaniards taught the principles of the faith to the Pueblos, but these tribes, for some reasons, failed to adopt completely the customs and their religious rites, even to this day, contain only a few features suggestive of the Catholics.


The denomination proper did not have birth in this territory until about 1858, when the first white settlers began to come in numbers. Catholicism was the fourth denomination in the settlement at Denver, although the members erected the second church building in the village. The Town Company had extended to the churches the privilege of obtaining ground upon which to erect houses of worship, and the Catholics seem to have been about the only ones who took advan- tage of this offer, receiving land which afterwards proved to be extremely val- uable. The first actual record of the Catholic Church in Denver is contained in the following excerpts from the Town Company's books :


"Mr. Clancy moved that a committee of three be appointed to see Mr. Guiraud in relation to a Catholic Church and that said committee be further empowered to reserve grounds for them, if they should determine to build a church in Den- ver City."


The Guiraud referred to in the above statement was a Denver merchant, of French nativity, and undoubtedly one of the leaders among the members of his church and one who represented the church officially in the community.


Late in the spring of 1860 Rt. Rev. J. B. Miege, bishop of Leavenworth, Kansas, came to Denver with the purpose of establishing his church, the matter of the first lot donation having been settled the previous March. His first services were conducted in Guiraud's home, located on the southeast corner of Fifteenth and Market streets. This was in June. Immediately afterward he journeyed out of Denver and conducted mass in several of the mining camps in the surround- ing country, carrying his religion into many of these places for the first time. He found, upon his return to Denver, that the Town Company had donated to him another lot, known as Block 139, and bounded by Fifteenth, Stout, Sixteenth and California streets. A church association was then organized, with Judge G. W. Purkins as president and arrangements were made for the construction of a church on Stout Street near Fifteenth. About this time Rt. Rev. J. B. Lamy,




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.