St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Denver, Colorado) Explained

St. Andrew's Episcopal Church
Designated Other1:Colorado
Designated Other1 Number:5DV.116
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom
Location:2015 Glenarm Place
Denver, Colorado
Coordinates:39.7481°N -104.9847°W
Built:c.1907-1909
Architect:Ralph Adams Cram
Architecture:Gothic
Added:March 18, 1975
Refnum:75000512

St. Andrew's Episcopal Church is a liberal Anglo-catholic church in Denver, Colorado, United States. It is a Gothic style church built c.1907-1909 that was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram. It was dedicated January 17, 1909 as Trinity Memorial Church and was renamed to St. Andrews in 1917.

The distinguished architect Cram, of Cram and Ferguson in Boston, Massachusetts, was commissioned to design the building for Alexis Dupont Parker as a memorial to his wife. Parker was a magnate of the Colorado and Southern Railway who was educated in the Episcopal ministry, and was president of the board of the Colorado diocese of the Episcopal Church.[1]

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.

Expanded in 2008 to a design in keeping with Cram's original plans for a larger church, St. Andrew's now seats 175 in a sanctuary that includes works by Denver artists Marion Buchan and Albert Byron Olson. The parish house is by Denver architect Jacques Benedict.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=75000512}} National Register of Historic Places Registration: Saint Andrews Episcopal Church / originally built as Trinity Memorial Church ]. National Park Service. July 1, 2016 . with