ST. MARK'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, PHILADELPHIA

'St Mark's Episcopal Church, Philadelphia', at 1625 Locust St, Center City, Philadelphia, 19103 is an Episcopal church in the Anglo-Catholic tradition. It is part of the Diocese of Pennsylvania.
The building was built by John Notman in the Gothic Revival style between 1847 and 1849. The Lady Chapel is in the Late Decorated Gothic style, as it was built in 1900, donated with all its furnishings by Rodman Wanamaker in memory of his late wife; the ceiling is the first known example of a stone vault in America. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places.
The church contains several ornaments by Charles Eamer Kempe; the Lady Chapel was originally decorated entirely according to Kempe's designs, and when it was later redecorated the altar was moved to the head of the north aisle to become the St. John's Altar, and the polychromed figures moved throughout the church, while the original stained glass remains in place. The church also has several Kempe frontals, representing a significant proportion of the surviving embroideries from that firm, some of which are still in occasional use. The Lady Chapel now contains a world-renowned silver altar with nearly 150 individually sculpted saints and scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary; it is traditionally said of this altar that it is "the only place where one can worship both God and Mammon". The tower is one of the few in North America hung for change-ringing, with a ring of eight bells.
The church maintains a daily mass schedule, as well as running a food cupboard and soup kitchen. Fr. Sean Mullen, formerly the Curate, was recently installed as the 14th Rector of the parish.

Contents
External links

External links



The church

The bells

Aerial photo

Map

Mystery Worshipper report

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves