USA > Indiana > Marion County > Indianapolis > History of Indianapolis and Marion County, Indiana > Part 73
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 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117
The Home for the Aged Poor, conducted by the Little Sisters of the Poor, was founded in 1873, and is situate on Vermont Street, between East and Liberty. These sisters take charge of the aged and destitute, and support them by soliciting alms from the public who are charitably disposed. They rely entirely on the means obtained in this way. They receive no one into their house except such as are old and destitute. This community was founded io France in 1840, and it has now in charge two hundred and twenty-three houses in different parts of Europe and America.
The House of the Good Shepherd, situate south of the city on the Bluff road, was founded in 1873. The city authorities donated a building partly finished, and which was intended for a female reformatory. The object of this institution is to afford an asylum to females whose virtue is exposed to danger, or to reclaim such as have fallen and desire to amend their lives. The rules are founded on the strictest princi- ples of Christian charity, and no one is received ex- cept she is willing to enter ; hence the asylum is in no sense a compulsory prison. The inmates are di- vided into two classes,-the penitents, or those who
409
CHURCHES OF INDIANAPOLIS.
have fallen from virtue, and in whose case, as a sani- tary precaution, certain conditions are required ; and the class of perseverance, or those who seck refuge from danger to which they are exposed. These two classes are entirely separated from each other, and are under the care of different members of the commu- nity. The period for which persons are usually received is two years, after which they are either returned to their friends or the sisters try to find situations for them. This community does its work in silence, away from the noise of the world, and but few are aware of the good that it accomplishes.
St. Vincent's Infirmary, situate on Vermont Street near Liberty, was established by Bishop Chat- ard in 1881. It is in charge of the Sisters of Charity from Baltimore. The building used is the Old St. Joseph's Church and Seminary. The sisters intend to locate the infirmary in another part of the city soon, when they will crcct a new and suitable build- ing. The Sisters of Charity are a religious commu- nity founded by St. Vincent de Paul in 1633. Its object is the care of the poor, especially the sick, and its members are everywhere the servants of the poor and afflicted. The destitute who enter the infirmary are supported by the alms which the sisters solicit. Contributions are received from those who may be able to pay for the service rendered them, and the means obtained in this way go to the support of the institution. There is no religious distinction made in regard to those received into this infirmary.
REV. JOHN FRANCIS AUGUST BESSONIES .- The grandfather of Father Bessonies was Dubousquet de Bessonies, who during the horrors of the French revolution of 1793 thought prudent to drop the "de," a title of nobility, which was, however, again assumed by the family in 1845, but never by the subject of this sketch. His great-uncle, a Catholic priest, was arrested as such, and about to be transported or drowned when bappily released by the death of Robespierre. The parents of Father Bessonies were John Baptist Bessonies and Henrietta Moisinac. Their son was born at the village of Alzac, parish of Sousceyrac, department du Lot, diocese of Cahors, on the 17th of June, 1815, and is one of four surviving children. A sister died an Ursuline nun after twenty- 27
five years of religious life. August (as Father Bessonies now writes his name) was placed under the instruction of a priest of a neighboring parish, but made little improvement. On attaining his tenth year he was placed with the Picpucians, and spent a year in preparation for a collegiate course. Here he made his first communion, and was confirmed by Monseigneur Guilaume Baltazar de Grandville, said to be closely allied to Napoleon First. After two years at the latter school he repaired to the Petit Seminaire of Montfaucon, and spent seven years in pursuing the classics and rhetoric. In 1834 he entered the famous seminary of St. Sulpice in Paris, and spent two years at Issy in the study of mathe- matics, philosophy, and natural philosophy. In 1836 he entered the great seminary as a divinity student, and at the expiration of the first year received the sacred order of subdeaconship and the second year that of deaconship. In 1836 he offered his services to Right Rev. Simon Gabriel Brute, Bishop of Vin- cennes, in Indiana. After completing his studies the young man left for America and arrived, after a tedious journey, in 1839. Having been ordained priest in 1840, his earliest mission was in Perry County, where thirteen years were spent. During this period he founded the town of Leopold and erected two stone and three wooden churches. Sever- ing his very happy relations with the parishes of Perry County, he removed to Fort Wayne in 1853, and remained one year, meanwhile erecting a church and parsonage. His next mission was Jeffersonville and the Knobs, where during a period of four years he held service regularly, never missing an appoint- ment. He completed the church at the Knobs, built a parsonage and enlarged the church at Jeffersonville, and secured a fine lot for the present church. In 1857 he became pastor of St. John's Church, Indi- anapolis. He raised the first cross in the city on the old St. John's Church, which is still in use on the vault of St. John's Cemetery. He the following spring erected the St. John's Academy, where a school was opened by the Sisters of Providence in 1859, and soon after built a parsonage. The Catholic cem- etery now in use was purchased with . his private means. Soon after a school building for boys was
.
410
HISTORY OF INDIANAPOLIS AND MARION COUNTY.
Aug. Bessones V.4.
erected, and at the same time the St. Peter's Church } edifice, now used as a school building. In 1867 was begun the present St. John's Cathedral, which was . opened for worship in 1877, and cost about one hun- dred thousand dollars. He was also instrumental in ยท obtaining from the city, ground for the buildings occupied by the Sisters of the Good Shepherd and the Little Sisters of the Poor. Father Bessonies was appointed vicar-general by the bishop of the diocese, and later administrator of the Diocese of Vincennes by the Archbishop of Cincinnati. His zeal in the cause of temperance has won for him the affectionate regard of citizens irrespective of creed, and prompted, on the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of his pastorate and his departure for Europe, the presentation of a purse of four hundred dollars, with a graceful address by the mayor of the city. Father Bessonies continues to fill the offices of rector of the cathedral, vicar-general of the diocese, and agent for the orphans' asylum. He manifests
the same earnest spirit in his life-work and enjoys as ever the esteem and love of his parishioners.
EPISCOPALIANS.
Christ Church was organized in 1837. There had been an occasional clergyman in the settlement, and he had held occasional services at private houses, through a period reaching nearly as far back towards the first settlement as the carly services of any denom- ination, but the Episcopal was the weakest numer- ically of all the leading sects, and took longer to grow np to organizing and building strength. Among the clergymen who were here temporarily were, first, Rev. Melanchthon Hoyt, then Rev. J. C. Clay (after- wards Dr. Clay, of Philadelphia), Rev. Mr. Pfeiffer, and Rev. Henry Shaw. The end of the transition period came with Rev. James B. Britton, in 1837; as a missionary he held regular services in July of that year. Three months before a movement towards organization had been made, and with the arrival of
411
CHURCHES OF INDIANAPOLIS.
Mr. Britton it was advanced a step and completed. On the 13th of July, less than a week after Mr. Brit- ton's first ministration, a meeting was held and the following agreement made:
"We, whose names are hereunto affixed, impressed with the importance of the Christian religion, and wishing to promote its holy influence in the hearts and lives of ourselves, our fam- ilics, and our neighbors, do hereby associate ourselvos together as the parish of Christ Church, in the town of Indianapolis, township of Centre, county of Marion, State of Indiana, and by so doing do recognize the jurisdiction of the missionary bishop of Indiana, and do adopt the constitution and eanons of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of Amorica.
"Joseph M. Moore.
G. W. Starr.
D. D. Moore.
Mrs. G. W. Starr.
Charles W. Cady.
James Morrison.
T. B. Johnson.
A. G. Willard.
George W. Mears.
M. D. Willard.
Thomas McOuat.
James Dawson, Jr.
Janet McOuat. Edward J. Dawson.
William Hannaman. Joseph Farbos.
A. St. Clair.
Nancy Farhos.
Mrs. Browning.
Joseph Norman.
Miss Howell.
Joanna Norman.
Miss Gordon.
Stewart Crawford.
Mrs. Riley.
John W. Jones.
Miss Drake.
Edward Boyd.
Mrs. Julia A. MoKenny.
Mrs. Stevens.
" INDIANAPOLIS, July 13, 1837."
Under this organization an election for vestrymen, on the 21st of August, resulted in the choice of 'Arthur St. Clair, senior warden, Thomas McOuat, junior warden, James Morrison, Joseph M. Moore, and William Hannaman. On the 7th of May, 1838, the corner-stone of the first church was laid with suitable ceremonies, and that was the first corner- stone laid in Indianapolis. One of the members made a deposit in it of the first silver coins of the dime and half-dime class ever brought to the town. On the 18th of November following the edifice was opened for worship, and consecrated on the 16th day of December by Bishop Kemper. In .1857 it was removed to Georgia Strcet for the colored (Bethel) church, and burned soon after. The present thor- oughly ecclesiastical edifice, orthodoxically covered with ivy, was finished in 1860, the chime of bells, the only one in the city, put up in the spring of 1861,
and the spire completed in 1869. The membership is three hundred and fifty ; Sunday-school pupils, two hundred. Value of the property, seventy-five thou- sand dollars. Rector, Rev. E. A. Bradley.
St. George's Chapel, a little stone mission church on the corner of Morris and Church Streets, was built some half-dozen years ago by the Christ Church congregation. It is served by Rev. Mr. Bradley, has about two hundred children attending the Sunday- school, and the value of the property is about two thousand dollars.
St. Paul's Cathedral, the largest Protestant Epis- copal Church in the city, is situate on the southeast corner of Illinois and New York Streets. The parish was organized, in 1866, by the Rev. Horace Stringfel- low. The first services were held in Military Hall, which was in the building located on East Washing- ton Street, over Craft & Co.'s, and Cathcart, Clel- land & Co.'s stores. The present edifice has a seat- ing capacity of ten hundred and fifty, besides the chapel, which will seat about two hundred and fifty. The present edifice was erected in 1869, at a cost of about ninety thousand dollars. The number of com- municants, three hundred and twenty-one. Bishop, Right Rev. D. B. Knickerbacker, D.D .; dean and rector, Rev. Joseph S. Jenckes. Sunday-school, one hundred.
St. James' Mission, located on West Street above Walnut, is also under control of St. Paul's Cathedral, and possesses a neat little edifice, erected in 1875 at a cost of seven thousand dollars ; has a flourishing Sun- day-school of one hundred scholars. Full service is held every Sunday evening by Rev. Mr. Jenckes. Will seat about two hundred.
Grace Church, at the corner of Pennsylvania and St. Joseph Streets, has a good bnilding with seating capacity of abont two hundred and fifty, with large school-room. Is at present closed as a church, but Bishop Knickerbacker will have it reopened as soon as possession can be obtained, as it has been rented for school purposes.
Holy Innocents, on Fletcher Avenue, has a neat frame building ; seating capacity about two hundred. Has seventy-three communicants. Until recently under charge of Rev. Willis D. Engle.
412
HISTORY OF INDIANAPOLIS AND MARION COUNTY.
REFORMED EPISCOPAL.
Trinity, on the northwest corner of Alabama and North Streets.
LUTHERANS.
First English Lutheran Church, organized Jan. 22, 1837. P. W. Scibert, one of the early hardware merchants of the city, was president, and Elijah Martin, secretary. The first elders were Adam Haugh and Henry Ohr, who, like Rev. Abraham Reck, the first pastor, were Maryland men. The first deacons were King English (father of Joseph K., for- merly county commissioner) and Philip W. Seibert. The first house was a brick of one story on the south side of Ohio Street, near Meridian, but not on the corner. It was built in 1838. Mr. Reck resigned the pastorate in 1840, and was succeeded by Rev. A. A. Timper. Mr. Reck died in Lancaster, O., in 1869. His son, Luther, entered the Indianapolis company of the First Indiana Regiment in the Mexi- can war, and was drowned while swimming in the Rio Grande, at Matamoras, where the regiment was stationed. During the pastorate term of Rev. J. A. Kunkleman, about 1860, the church was torn down and another built on the southwest corner of New York and Alabama Streets, which was dedicated in 1861. A few years ago this church was sold and a third built on the corner of Pennsylvania and Walnut Streets. The present pastor is Rev. John Baltzley. The membership is one hundred and two ; Sunday- school pupils, seventy-five; value of property about eighteen thousand dollars.
St. Paul's (German), on the corner of East and Georgia Streets, was organized June 5, 1844. The first church was built on Alabama Street below Wash- ington, and dedicated May 11, 1845 ; first pastor, Rev. Theodore J. G. Kuntz. In 1860, another church was built on the corner of East and Georgia Streets, and dedicated Nov. 3, 1860, by Rev. Dr. Wynckan, president of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod. In the rear of the church two school-houses have been built, where a parochial school has been maintained for twenty years. A parsonage on East and Ohio Streets was built in 1869, and in 1870 the cemetery south of Pleasant Run, on the east side of the Three- Notch road, already referred to, was purchased aud
laid out. The present pastor is Rev. Charles C. Schmidt. The membership is over two hundred, and the Sunday-school attendance is abont four hun- dred. The value of the church property is about sixty thousand dollars.
Second Lutheran Church (German), on the northeast corner of East and Ohio Streets. The pastor is Rev. Peter Seucl ; membership, one hun- dred and fifteen; Sunday-school pupils, two hun- dred; value of property, probably twenty thousand dollars.
Zion's Church (German) was organized in 1840 by the German members of the First English Lu- theran Church. They wanted services in their own language, and formed the new organization for that purpose. The first pastor was the Rev. J. G. Kuntz, who was later the first pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, who served until 1842. The congregation was then without a pastor till 1844, when Rev. J. F. Isensec was called. The first church building was erected where the present one is in 1844, and was dedicated in 1845, May 18th. In 1866 the present house was begun, the corner-stone laid July 1, 1866, and the dedication celebrated Feb. 5, 1867. The church has about two hundred members, and the Sunday-school one hundred and fifty pupils. The value of the church property is over thirty thousand dollars.
First Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church, . southeast corner of McCarty and Beaty Streets.
Second Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church, east side of New Jersey Street, south of Merrill.
During about a year, in 1882-83, a small Danish mission church was maintained in a neat little frame building on South Missouri Street, below Merrill. The "wash" of the west bank of Pogue's Creek at that point cut away the ground between the church and the creek, and finally cut under the house, and the congregation moved. The building was turned into a little grocery-store.
GERMAN REFORMED.
Emannel Church, on the northwest corner of Coburn and New Jersey Streets ; Rev. H. Helming, pastor.
413
CHURCHES OF INDIANAPOLIS.
First Church, east side of Alabama, south of Market Street ; pastor, Rev. John Rettig. The first steps in the organization of this church were taken by Rev. George Long, who came here as a missionary of the German Reformed denomination-chiefly fol- lowers of Zwingle and Calvin-in 1851, and preached till the following spring, 1852, when he organized the First Church, and they began the erection of the church, which was completed and dedicated in Octo- ber, 1852. In 1856, Mr. Long resigned, and Rev. M. G. I. Stern succeeded. The membership is over two hundred, and the Sunday-school attendance about as large. The value of the property is about fifteen thousand dollars.
Second Church, west side of East Street, opposite Stevens Street. Organization was made in the sum- mer of 1867 by some members of a former church who lived in the southeastern part of the city. Rev. Mr. Steinbach, who had served here as a Lutheran minister, took the church first, resigning at the end of the year 1867. Rev. M. G. I. Stern was selected in place of Mr. Steinbach, and under him the mission was changed to the "Second German Reformed Church." Mr. Stern is still the pastor. A German- English parochial school of one hundred pupils is connected with the church, under two teachers. Membership, about one hundred and fifty-six; the attendance at Sunday-school, nearly double that ; value of property, about twelve thousand dollars.
GERMAN EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION.
First Church, on the southeast corner of New Jersey and Wabash Streets; organized June 19, 1855, with twenty-one members, as the Immanuel Church of the Evangelical Association of Indianap- olis. Rev. Joseph Fisher is the pastor. The mem- bership is about two hundred; the Sunday-school attendance, about two hundred; value of property, probably twelve thousand dollars.
FRIENDS.
Their meeting-house is on the southwest corner of Delaware and St. Clair Streets. The ministers are Jo- seph J. Mills, Anna Mills, Calvin W. Pritchard, Jane Trueblood, and Sarah Smith. The organization was
made in 1854, and the first minister Mrs. Hannah Pierson. Membership, about two hundred and fifty ; value of property, twelve thousand dollars.
CONGREGATIONALISTS.
Plymouth Church, organized Aug. 9, 1857, by thirty-one members, who for some months previously had maintained religious services and a Sunday- school in the Senate Chamber of the old State- Honse. The chamber was used most of the time, till the congregation removed to their first church on Meridian Street, opposite Christ Church (Epis- copal). This edifice was begun in the fall of 1858, and the front part, containing the lecture-room, study, and social rooms, was completed and occupied in September, 1859. The remainder was finished and dedicated, after much improving, on the 30th of April, 1871, when the Rev. Joseph L. Burnett was made pastor. The first pastor was Rev. N. A. Hyde, now of the Mayflower Church. He began in the fall of 1866, and resigned the pastorate in August, 1867, to assume the duties of superin- tendent of the American Home Missionary Society for this State. Within the present year (1884) this church has completed and occupied a new and very fine church edifice on the southeast corner of Merid- ian and New York Streets. The value of it is esti- mated at forty thousand dollars. The membership is not counted by the number of communicants but by the number attending the church services, aver- aging about six hundred in the morning and seven to eight hundred young people in the evening.
Mayflower Church, St. Clair and East Streets, was organized from a Sunday-school formed by the Young Men's Christian Association, at a private house on the corner of Jackson and Cherry Streets, May 23, 1869. There were thirteen original members, -five from Plymouth Church, two from the Third Street Methodist Church, one from Roberts Park Church, and three from the Fourth Presbyterian Church. The church edifice was completed and dedicated in January, 1870. It is a frame building, worth now with the lot probably ten thousand dol- lars. The membership is one hundred and fifty ; Sunday-school attendance, one hundred and eighty.
414
HISTORY OF INDIANAPOLIS AND MARION COUNTY.
Rev. Nathaniel A. Hyde, first pastor of Plymouth Church, is the present pastor of Mayflower Church.
REV. NATHANIEL ALDEN HYDE, D.D., pastor of the Mayflower Congregational Church of Indianap- olis, has been actively identified with the general, as well as the religious, interests of the eity and State for upwards of twenty years. Like many other prom- inent and useful men of the West, he is of New England origin, and of genuine Pilgrim stock. He was born May 10, 1827, in Stafford, Conn. His father, Nathaniel Hyde, was a thrifty and successful
till she was removed by death in his ripe and sue- eessful manhood. This devoted mother was very desirous that her son should enter the gospel min- istry, and, very early in his life, laid her plans for him accordingly. At the age of twelve years he entered Monson Academy, then a very popular and flourishing school in the town of Monson, which was just across the line from his native town, in the State of Massachusetts. Here he pursued his preparatory studies for four years, entering Yale College at the age of sixteen, and graduating from that institution
N. a. Hyde -
iron-founder. His mother, whose maiden name was Caroline Converse, was a direet descendant of John Al- den, one of the Pilgrims coming in the " Mayflower" and landing on Plymouth Rock. This honorable ancestry was recognized by his parents, doubtless with commendable pride, in the name which they gave to their son,-Nathaniel for the father, and Alden for the Pilgrim father. The death of the father early left the sou to the entire eare and train- ing of the mother, between whom and himself there ever existed a peculiarly tender and intimate relation
at twenty years of age in the elass of 1847. His professional studies were pursued at Andover Theo- logical Seminary, from which he graduated in the elass of 1851. After graduation, and before begin- ning his long and useful work in Indianapolis, he spent seven years in somewhat desultory work in his profession. During a portion of 1851-52 he preached in Central Village, Conn., and in 1852-53 in Roekville, Conn. He then became assistant seere- tary of the Children's Aid Society in New York City, a position which he held from 1854 to 1856.
415
CHURCHES OF INDIANAPOLIS.
After preaching for a short time in Deep River, Conn., in 1857 he turned his face and steps west- ward. On the 23d day of December in this latter year he was ordained at Columbus, Ohio, remaining there till the next year, when he went for a very brief period to fill a temporary engagement at Cin- cinnati. The Plymouth Church in Indianapolis had just been organized, and in 1858 it extended to Dr. Hyde a call to become its pastor. He accepted the call, and here entered, with this young church, upon his real life-work. The first services which he con- dueted here were held in the Senate chamber of the old State-House. But it was not long before the enthusiasm and earnestness of the young pastor, with the pressing need of a church home, resulted in the erection of the house of worship which has been occupied till recently by that church. For nearly ten years he held this pastorate to the entire satis- faction and great profit of the church. In the year 1867 the State Association of Congregational Churches and ministers felt that the time had come when the general interests of the cause of religion, and the interests and usefulness of the demomination, demanded the appointment of a superintendent of missions for the State. When application was made to the American Home Missionary Society for such an appointment, and the officers of the society replied that they would comply with the request if the breth- ren in Indiana would name the right man for the place, the thoughts of all turned directly to Dr. Hyde. His long residence in the State, and conse- quent familiarity with its peculiarities and needs, coupled with his earnest Christian spirit and sound judgment, caused his brethren unanimously to feel that of all others he was the man for the place, a decision which subsequent results fully justified. Accordingly, although it was contrary to his own desires, and contrary to the desires of his church, which was very strongly attached to him, he was appointed to this important position, and, in obe- dience to a sense of duty, accepted it, and discharged its duties with rare fidelity, success, and acceptabil- ity for six years. The assertion will not be ques- tioned by those knowing the facts in the case that no other man in the State has done so much for
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.