Shiloh Temple Explained

Shiloh Temple
Location:38 Beulah Lane, Durham, Maine
Coordinates:43.9803°N -70.0472°W
Area:4acres (listed area)
Architecture:Late 19th And Early 20th Century American Movements
Added:May 12, 1975
Refnum:75000203

The Shiloh Temple, now Shiloh Chapel, is a historic religious facility at 38 Beulah Lane in Durham, Maine. Built in 1897, the surviving building is a small portion of a once-extensive religious enclave established by the evangelical Christian leader Frank Sandford, exhibiting a unique expression of religious and summer retreat architecture. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.

Description and history

The Shiloh Temple stands on a property overlooking the southern bank of the Androscoggin River, a few miles south of Lisbon Falls, off the north side of Shiloh Road. The surviving portion of the temple is a four-story structure, its ground floor a raised basement of brick, and the rest a frame structure with a mansarded roof. A seven-stage tower projects from the street-facing front, square in shape except for the crowning open circular belfry and cupola.[1]

Frank Sandford was an ordained Baptist minister, who in 1893 left his ministry in Topsham, Maine on a quest to evangelize the world. He attracted a large number of followers, and construction of the Temple began in 1897. The temple's property grew to include a large quadrangular complex, of which the present building is the only surviving element. At its height, the complex had 500 rooms and space for more than 1,000 residents.[2] Life at the complex was strictly regulated by Sandford, who claimed to be a new Elijah, and many of his followers sold off their possessions to join his "Holy Ghost and Us" society.[2]

In the early 1900s Sandford took a number of his followers on a round-the-world proselytizing mission aboard the yacht Coronet.[1] Following a misguided and undersupplied voyage to Greenland, in which six crew died of scurvy and related illnesses, he was arrested on manslaughter charges in 1911.[2] Sandford's "Kingdom" project was ended by legal action in 1920 following the death of a Shiloh resident, and most of Shiloh's buildings were demolished in the 1950s. Low level occupation continued, and the present Shiloh Chapel is a successor to Sandford's legacy.[2]

A minister of the Holy Ghost and Us Society, George W. Higgins, was a victim of New England's last tarring and feathering incident in 1899.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=75000203}} NRHP nomination for Shiloh Temple]. National Park Service. 2016-02-23.
  2. Shirley Nelson, Fair Clear and Terrible: The Story of Shiloh, Maine. Latham, New York: British American Publishing, 1989.