St. Mary Cathedral (Lansing, Michigan) Explained

St. Mary Cathedral
Fullname:Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
Coordinates:42.7356°N -84.5561°W
Location:229 Seymour Street Lansing, Michigan
Country:United States
Language(S):English (1913-current)
Polish (parish hall, August 1916-September 1921)
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Religious Order:-->
Status:Active
Founder:Fr. Lafayette Isadore Brancheau
Dedication:Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Dedicated Date:December 8, 1913
Relics:Saint Lawrence the Deacon, Saint Dominic, Saint Barbara
Events:Cornerstone laid: July 4, 1911 (Bishop Edward D. Kelly)
Archdiocese:Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit (1913-1937)
Diocese:Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing (1913-current)
Parish:Lansing Parish (to 1937)
Past Bishop:Fr. Lafayette Isadore Brancheau (December 1913-November 1915)
Rev. Msgr. John W. O'Rafferty (1915-1940)
Diocese of Lansing:
M. Rev. Joseph H. Albers (1937-1964)
Architect:Edwyn A. Bowd
Architectural Type:Cathedral
Style:Norman Architecture-Gothic Architecture
Years Built:1910-1913
Completed Date:December 8, 1913
Construction Cost:$135,000
Capacity:1,400 (1913)
Length Nave:1080NaN0
Width Nave:630NaN0
Height Nave:500NaN0
Floor Count:1 nave
2 transept wings
4 bell tower
Tower Quantity:2
Bell Weight:
St. Mary Cathedral
Embed:yes
Built:1913
Architecture:Late Gothic Revival
Added:November 2, 1990
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:90001716

St. Mary Cathedral is a cathedral of the Roman Catholic Church in Lansing, Michigan one block north of the Michigan State Capitol. It is the seat of the bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing.

History

Before the cathedral was built, St. Mary Church, located north of the present church, was dedicated in Lansing in 1866. However, in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Lansing's population grew. The church purchased the land that the present St. Mary's sits on in 1900, and a temporary new church was constructed in 1903. Construction of the permanent new church began in 1911 from a design by Edwyn A. Bowd, and was completed in 1913. The stained glass windows were made in Munich, Germany and installed in 1923. In 1937, the church became the cathedral for the newly formed Diocese of Lansing.

In January 1938, a serious fire broke out in the rectory and Bishop Joseph H. Albers, the survivor of a World War I gas attack, collapsed inside the building before he was rescued by firefighters.

The church has seen four renovations. The first was in the 1920s which added the stained glass windows, Gothic details, and decorative painting behind the altar. The second was in 1954 and removed some of the Gothic details in the sanctuary. Another renovation from 1967 to 1968 removed the communion rail, side altars, and stations of the cross and reconfigured many other elements. The most recent was in 1986 that restored some of the elements removed from the previous renovation.

Description

St. Mary Cathedral is a Gothic Revival style church constructed in a cruciform shape of rock-face limestone with the water table and other details of smooth-faced limestone. The church sits on a granite foundation, and had a red ceramic tile gable roof. On the main facade is a central, Gothic-arched portal flanked by two smaller portals of similar design. A rose window is recessed above the center entrance. On the corners are large square towers, one taller than the other by the height of the belfry. The towers are set flush with the front wall.

On the interior is a vestibule in front, opening through glass doors into the nave, which measures 108 feet by 63 feet. The nave has terrazzo floors, and a high, vaulted plaster ceiling.

See also

External links