Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights

Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights is a church located in Shaker Heights, Ohio, USA. It is a member of the United Church of Christ. The Senior Minister is Rev. Dr. Shawnthea Monroe. The church building, dedicated in 1923, has been designated a landmark by the Shaker Heights Landmarks Commission.

Plymouth Church
United Church of Christ
Location2860 Coventry Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120
Country United States
DenominationUnited Church of Christ
Websitewww.plymouthchurchucc.org
History
FoundedMarch 25, 1850
DedicatedMarch 25, 1923
Architecture
Architect(s)Charles S. Schneider
StyleGeorgian Colonial
Administration
DivisionOhio Conference
SubdivisionWestern Reserve Association
Clergy
Senior pastor(s)Rev. Dr. Shawnthea Monroe

History

Plymouth Congregational Church

The church traces its origins to the Free Presbyterian Church, formed in 1850 by members of the First Presbyterian Church (Old Stone Church) who objected to that church's moderate stand on slavery. It associated with the Congregational Church two years later, and on August 17, 1852[1] took the name Plymouth Congregational Church at the suggestion of the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher.[2] [3]

During the 19th Century, the church had various locations in Cleveland, including Euclid Avenue and East 9th Street (1853), Prospect Avenue near East 9th Street (1857), and Prospect Avenue and East 22nd Street (1882). In 1864, Mt. Zion Congregational Church was formed at Plymouth Church. Under the leadership of the Rev. Charles Terry Collins, Plymouth also formed Olivet Mission to work as an outreach in the Czech community.[4] The Plymouth Church congregation disbanded in 1913 due to a loss of members and a lack of money.[5]

Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights

The planning of Shaker Heights by the Van Sweringen Brothers provided for land for five churches. To provide one of the churches, Plymouth Church was reconstituted in 1916 with the aid of the Congregational Union as a Congregational Community Church. Worship began in Shaker Heights on September 3, 1916 using a temporary chapel,[3] and soon thereafter planning began for a permanent building. The cornerstone for the present church was laid on June 27, 1920, and worship began in the sanctuary on February 11, 1923. The structure, designed by architect Charles S. Schneider, is considered one of the best examples of the Georgian Colonial style in the region.[5]

In 1951 work began on the addition of two wings, one on each side of the original structure, to provide additional offices, education classrooms and a chapel. The addition was dedicated on February 15, 1953.[3][6] In 1964, a new Holtkamp organ was installed in the sanctuary, and the choir loft was removed to make room for 2,851 organ pipes, while the chancel was remodeled in order to accommodate the choir.[6]

From its inception, the church was a member of the Congregational Churches, and later the Congregational Christian Churches. It decided by congregational vote to affiliate with the United Church of Christ in 1963. Plymouth officially became a house of prayer for all people Open and Affirming congregation by congregational vote in February 2005.

Senior Ministers

Plymouth Congregational Church

  • Rev. Edwin H. Nevin (1850–1855)
  • Rev. James C. White (1855–1861)
  • Rev. Dr. Samuel L. Wolcott (1862–1874)
  • Rev. Charles Terry Collins (1875–1883)
  • Rev. Dr. George L. Leavitt (1885–1894)
  • Rev. Livingston L. Taylor (1894–1900)
  • Rev. Morgan Wood (1900–1904)
  • Rev. W.H.G. Temple (1905–1906)
  • Rev. Nathan M. Pratt (1906–1913)

Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights

  • Rev. John Stuchell (1916–1919)
  • Rev. Dr. Charles Haven Myers (1919–1929)
  • Rev. Dr. Miles H. Krumbine (1929–1953)
  • Rev. Dr. Robert Blakesley (1953–1973)
  • Rev. Dr. David W. Rees (1974–1978)
  • Rev. Gary A. Scheuer, Jr. (1979–1982)
  • Rev. Dr. William G. “Skip” Holliday (1984–1994)
  • Rev. Dr. James A. Antal (1995–2006)
  • Rev. Dr. Shawnthea Monroe (2008–2019)
gollark: There is no actual blocking.
gollark: The code is internally rewritten in a confusing way to use promises.
gollark: It doesn't actually block.
gollark: Await/async is syntactic sugar for promises.
gollark: Technically that isn't right.

References

  1. Cristy, Albert Barnes (1896). Cleveland Congregationalists 1895: Historical Sketches of Our Twenty-five Churches and Missions. Cleveland: Williams Publishing and Electric Co. pp. 71–75. OCLC 2289611.
  2. Rose, William Ganson (1990). Cleveland: The Making of a City. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 232. ISBN 0-87338-428-8.
  3. A Brief History of Plymouth, from Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights web site, October 2000.
  4. Cristy (1896). p. 83.
  5. Van Tassel, David D.; John J. Grabowski, eds. (1996). "Plymouth Church of Shaker Heights". The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History (2nd ed.). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33056-4. Retrieved 2008-02-22.
  6. History of Plymouth Church, from church web site. Retrieved on 2007-02-22.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.