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Visit our “Tour Destination: Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia” page to see the entire tour of the area’s Save America’s Treasures sites.
Monumental Church. Photo courtesy Historic Richmond Foundation. |
Monumental Church
The Treasure: You might consider Monumental
Church an American treasure because it
commemorates the site of the greatest urban tragedy to take place in the United States
up to 1811. Or you might consider Monumental
Church to be an American treasure
because it’s an architectural masterpiece by Robert Mills, famed architect
perhaps best known for the Washington
Monument . Either reason
would be sufficient. Both reasons combine to make it unforgettable.
Interior view of pulpit at Monumental Church. Photo courtesy Historic Richmond Foundation. |
Accessibility: Monumental Church is in the final stages of
being restored by the Historic Richmond Foundation. Currently, it is open for
tours by request only. You can contact the Historic Richmond Foundation to
schedule a personal or group tour.
Or… plan your wedding at Monumental Church .
Scroll down on the website page linked above for information on wedding
planning. It would be a lovely—and very historic—location choice for your
wedding. And afterward you get to say you were married in an official American
Treasure!
Notes: First the tragedy: This site wasn’t always a
church. From 1806 to 1811, the Richmond Theatre was located here. On the day
after Christmas in 1811, a capacity crowd gathered in the theatre for a benefit
concert. A chandelier accidentally touched off flames that quickly spread, fueled
by combustible paints and oils. Panic ensued and people found themselves
trapped in the crush for the doors. In all, 72 people died that night. More
would have died if not for the heroic efforts of Dr. James D. McCaw and Gilbert
Hunt, a slave blacksmith. From inside the building on the second floor, McCaw
lowered people from a window while Hunt waited to catch them as they fell. Working
together, McCaw and Hunt were classic first responders, answering a crisis with
heroic action.
A brick vault was built on the site to serve as a final
resting place for the fire’s victims. Then United States Supreme Court Chief Justice
John Marshall led the campaign to build a memorial and church over the vault. A
young architect named Robert Mills won the competition to design the church and
memorial.
Mills has the distinction of being Thomas Jefferson’s only
architectural student, having worked with Jefferson on the design of Monticello . Mills’ design for Monumental
Church is a domed
octagonal building in the Greek Revival style. Inside, the church’s interior is
stately and graced with unusually fine acoustics. The marble memorial to the victims
is on the front portico.
For a century and a half, Monumental Church
served the community as an Episcopal church. Over the years, the congregation
dwindled and finally the building was deconsecrated in 1965. A 2002 Save America’s Treasures grant launched
the current restoration campaign which is now in its final stages.
The marble funeral urn at Monumental Church. Photo courtesy Historic Richmond Foundation. |
Notes from the
Editor: A large marble funeral urn commemorating the Richmond Theatre
victims stood outside on the Monumental
Church portico for 185
years. Then in 1999, the urn broke off its base. Determining that the original
was too fragile to repair, a team of architectural conservators recommended
placing it in storage to protect it from further damage from the elements.
But visitors to Monumental
Church still see an urn
today, looking exactly like the original. To create this precise replica,
Historic Richmond Foundation contracted with Direct Dimensions, Inc., a laser
scanning, digital modeling, and reverse engineering company. Close study of
historic photographs combined with analysis of detailed laser scans enabled the
team to create a replacement urn that captures minute details that had been
largely obliterated by urban erosion.
Special thanks to Amy Swartz, Director of Preservation
Services at Historic Richmond Foundation, for sharing her article “The
Restoration of Monumental Church in Richmond, Virginia” (CRM: The Journal of
Heritage Stewardship, Summer 2008) which has been invaluable in preparing this blog entry. Also, thanks to our Monumental Church tour guide who led a group of us on a delightful
and informative tour of the church a couple of months ago!
Other Recommended
Sites: John Marshall (1755-1835) was one of the most influential of
Supreme Court Chief Justices, putting his firm stamp on American constitutional
law in its early years. As noted above, Marshall
was also the head of the committee that raised the funds to build Monumental Church . Dedicated to his adopted home
city of Richmond , Marshall
lived several blocks away at 9th and Marshall . Today, the John Marshall House is
open for tours on weekends from March through December (with tours only by
appointment in January and February). Check the John Marshall House website for details.
The memorial on the portico of Monumental Church. Photo courtesy Historic Richmond Foundation. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Monday’s destination: Virginia Historical Society (The Dinwiddie Collection)
Tuesday’s destination: Virginia Historical Society (Custis Family Papers)
Tuesday’s destination: Virginia Historical Society (Custis Family Papers)
© 2012 Lee Price
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