The cornerstone of St. John’s Episcopal Church was laid at the corner of Third and Red Cross Streets in Wilmington, North Carolina on November 21, 1853. Was that the beginning of SJC ILM? Not by a long shot.
Wilmington experienced tremendous growth during the first half of the 19th century. It became the largest city in North Carolina and the state’s largest port. You could say that SJC ILM's beginnings are marked by the 1851 decision of the vestry and congregation of St. James Parish to establish a new Episcopal church in Wilmington. In 1851, only twelve years after the cornerstone had been laid for a new church building at the corner of Third and Market Streets, the congregation of St. James Parish had outgrown its seating capacity. The rector of St. James Parish, Dr. Robert D. Drane, insisted the new church should be called St. John’s, since James and John, the sons of Zebedee, were brothers. |
Barber and McMurry Architects in Knoxville, Tennessee designed the new church to echo the gothic lines of the former edifice. It was constructed of native North Carolina stone with North Carolina oak interior woodwork. The first services were held in the new, air-conditioned, church July 10, 1955. Construction of the parish hall, kitchen, common room, nursery, and choir room remained to be accomplished. The building was completed within a year. The St. John’s Episcopal Church Women began making the needlepoint cushions for the chancel seats and kneelers that grace the communion rails to this day. |
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