Misplaced Pages

Church of the Redeemer, Jamaica

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Church in Kingston, Jamaica
The Church of the Redeemer
The Church of the Redeemer, corner of North and Duke Streets, Kingston, Jamaica, 1963.
17°58′33″N 76°47′24″W / 17.975753°N 76.790062°W / 17.975753; -76.790062
LocationKingston
CountryJamaica
DenominationMoravian
Websitewww.jamaicamoravian.com www.techadvancejamaica.com/moravian.html
History
StatusChurch
Founded1918 (1918)
Founder(s)Jonathan Reinke
Consecrated1918-05-08
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Completed1918
Construction cost£3,124
Clergy
Minister(s)Rev. Marsha Edwards-Brown

The Church of the Redeemer is the oldest Moravian Church building in Kingston, Jamaica, and houses a congregation of the Jamaican province of the Moravian Church. It was opened in 1918. The name, which is unusual for a Moravian church, was bestowed by its builder Jonathan Reinke "because he did not want people to speak of Reinke's church".

History

First building

Kingston's first Moravian Church (at 23 Hanover Street) was a large house which was adapted for the purpose and consecrated on 1893-04-14. This building and the Mission House next door (at 25 Hanover Street) were destroyed in 1907 by an earthquake. Two shed's were erected to replace them while a new Church building was constructed.

Present building

The building at the corner of North Street and Duke Street was consecrated by Bishop Westphal on 1918-05-08. The total cost of the building, site and out buildings was £3,124.

Manse

A new manse, on the north side of North Street a block to the east, was completed in 1927 at a cost of £921. The manse site was sold to the Gleaner Company for £4,000 in 1949 and a new manse purchased in Antrim Road, Vineyard Town.

Hall

The Mary Morris-Knibb memorial hall, 1963.

A church hall was opened on 1930-12-30 by Lady Stubbs, wife of the Governor. This was destroyed by the hurricane of 1951. A replacement hall was opened in 1962-02-28 at a cost of £16,000.

Organ

A pipe organ was installed in 1932, reconstructed in 1945 and destroyed during the 1951 hurricane. A replacement was installed in 1953 at a cost of over £3,000.

Clergy

1893-1894 Bishop Hannah
1894-1896 G H Lopp
1896-1928 Jonathan Reinke
1929-1932 John Kneale
1932-1939 W M O'Meally
1939-1944 W A Kaltreider
1944-1946 John Kneale
1946-1947 J P Davidson
1947-1951 H T Cuthbert
1951-1957 S U Hastings
1957-1959 Ben Muncaster
1959-1977 Neville S Neil

Notes and references

  1. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 138.
  2. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 139.
  3. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 140.
  4. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 145.
  5. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 141.
  6. Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 187.
  7. ^ Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 142.
  8. Hastings & MacLeavy 1979, p. 144.

Bibliography

Hastings, S U & MacLeavy, B L (1979), Seedtime and Harvest (A Brief History of the Moravian Church in Jamaica 1754-1979), The Moravian Church Corporation

External links

Moravian Church
Provinces
Other work
Congregations
Educational institutions
Other institutions
Settlements
Traditions
History
People
The Moravian Church in Jamaica
Congregations
Colleges
Other work
People
Bishops
Archivists
Categories: