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{{Short description|Church at Stanford University in California, US}}
{{Infobox religious building
{{Featured article}}
| building_name = Stanford Memorial Church
{{Use American English|date = January 2020}}
| infobox_width =
{{Use mdy dates|date = January 2020}}
| image = memorialchurch.jpg
]
| alt = Facade of church, lit at night. The upper story is decorated with mosaics.
]|alt=12 An interior view looking from high in the gallery, past two large arches which support the dome, and into the lofty semi-circular chancel. The building is of very large scale, and every part of the interior is covered with mosaic or carved decoration. In the chancel, a priest officiates for a bride and groom with eleven attendants.]]
| image_size =
| caption = Stanford Memorial Church at night
| map_type =
| map_size =
| map_caption =
| location = ], Stanford, California
| geo =
| latitude = 37.42700
| longitude = -122.17034
| religious_affiliation =
| rite =
| consecration_year = 1903
| status =
| functional_status =
| heritage_designation =
| leadership =
| website =
| architecture = yes
| architect = ], Clinton E. Day, Charles E. Hodges
| architecture_type = Church
| architecture_style = ], ], ]
| general_contractor = John McGilvray
| facade_direction =
| groundbreaking = 1899
| year_completed = 1903
| construction_cost =
| specifications =
| capacity =
| length =
| width =
| width_nave =
| height_max =
| materials =
| nrhp =
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}}


'''Stanford Memorial Church''' (also known as '''MemChu''') is located at the center of the ] campus in ]. It was built during the ]<ref>Gregg, p. 34</ref> by ] as a memorial to her husband ]. Designed by architect ], a protegé of ], the church has been called "the University's architectural crown jewel".<ref name="overview"/> '''Stanford Memorial Church''' (also referred to informally as '''MemChu''')<ref>{{cite news|last1=Nguyen|first1=Ivy|last2=Najarro|first2=Ileana|title=Jobs honored at MemChu service|url=http://www.stanforddaily.com/2011/10/17/steve-jobs-brief/|access-date=27 August 2017|work=The Stanford Daily|date=17 October 2011}}</ref> is located on the ] at the center of the ] campus in ], ]. It was built during the ]<ref name="gregg-34">Gregg, p. 34</ref> by ] as a memorial to her husband ]. Designed by architect ], a student of ], the church has been called "the University's architectural crown jewel".<ref>Joncas, p. 16</ref>


Designs for the church were submitted to Jane Stanford and the university trustees in 1898, and it was dedicated in 1903. The building is ] in form and ] in its details, inspired by churches in the region of ] and, especially, ]y. Its ] and extensive ] are based on religious paintings the Stanfords admired in Europe. The church has four ], which allow musicians to produce many styles of organ music. Stanford Memorial Church has withstood two major earthquakes, in 1906 and 1989, and was extensively renovated after each. Designs for the church were submitted to Jane Stanford and the university trustees in 1898, and it was dedicated in 1903. The building is ] in form and ] in its details, inspired by churches in the region of ], especially, ]. Its ] and extensive ] are based on religious paintings the Stanfords admired in Europe. The church has five ], which allow musicians to produce many styles of organ music. Stanford Memorial Church has withstood two major earthquakes, in 1906 and 1989, and was extensively renovated after each.


Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest and has been "among the most prominent" ] churches on the ].<ref name="memchu"/> Since its dedication in 1903, the church's goal has been to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way.<ref name="overview"/> The church's first chaplain, David Charles Gardner, began a tradition of leadership which has guided the development of Stanford University's spiritual, ethical, and academic relation to religion. The church's chaplains were instrumental in the founding of Stanford's ] department, moving Stanford from a "completely secular university"<ref name="Harvey, p. 3"/> at the middle of the century to "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford"<ref name="Harvey, p. 7">Harvey, p. 7</ref> in the 1960s, when the study of religion at the university focused on social and ethical issues like race and the ]. Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest and has been "among the most prominent" ] churches on the West Coast of the United States. Since its dedication in 1903, the church's goal has been to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way.<ref name=aboutmemchu>{{cite web|title=About Memorial Church|url=https://web.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/cgi-bin/wordpress/memorial-church/history/|website=Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University|access-date=27 August 2017}}</ref> The church's first chaplain, ], began a tradition of leadership which has guided the development of Stanford University's spiritual, ethical, and academic relation to religion. The church's chaplains were instrumental in the founding of Stanford's ] department, moving Stanford from a "secular university"<ref name="harvey-3">Harvey, p. 3</ref> at the middle of the century to "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford"<ref name="harvey-7">Harvey, p. 7</ref> in the late 1960s, when the study of religion at the university focused on social and ethical issues like race and the ].


== History == == History ==
===Early history===
]


=== Early history ===
Stanford Memorial Church is located at the end of the mile-long axis of Stanford University, visible from a distance; the main vista begins at the main entrance, continues to Palm Drive, traverses "the Oval" (a large oval lawn), enters the Main Quad (the core of the university), and finally crosses Memorial Court and the Inner Quad courtyard.<ref name="page27"/> The church was commissioned by ] (1828–1905) as a memorial to her husband, ] (1824–93).<ref name="history">{{cite web | last = Taylor | first = Joseph A. | title = History | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/memchuHistory.html | accessdate = 2008-10-02}}</ref><ref group=note>The Stanfords built the university to honor their only child, ], who died in 1884 of ] shortly before his sixteenth birthday.</ref> The Stanfords had intended that a church should become "the centerpiece of the university complex".<ref name="glass">{{cite news | first = Sheldon | last = Barr | title = Venetian glass at Stanford University | work = Magazine Antiques | url = http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1026/is_3_162/ai_91088119/pg_1?tag=artBody;col1 | date = September 2002 | accessdate = 2008-10-02}}</ref> They were deeply religious, and for their day and social standing, "open-minded ecumenicalists",<ref name="books.google.com">Davis, p. </ref> so they included in the university's original charter that a church built on campus should be a "nondenominational—if essentially Protestant—house of worship".<ref name="books.google.com"/> They had traveled Europe for many years, visiting churches, museums, and notable buildings and finding inspiration for the architecture of both the university and church.<ref name="history"/> They received their greatest inspiration from ] in Venice.<ref name="page27">Joncas, p. </ref>
]
]

Stanford Memorial Church is located at the center of Stanford University,<ref name="aboutmemchu"/> and is "the principle building that is seen as the visitor approaches the University along Palm Drive from ]".<ref>Gregg, p. 14</ref> It sits the middle of the long southern range of the school's ].<ref name="joncas-27">Joncas, p. 27</ref> The church was commissioned by ] (1828–1905) as a memorial to her husband, ] (1824–93).<ref name="gregg-17">Gregg, p. 17</ref>{{refn|group=note|The Stanfords built the university, which opened in 1891, to honor their only child, ], who died in 1884 of ] shortly before his sixteenth birthday. A church had been envisioned but not started when the senior Leland Stanford died in 1893.}} The Stanfords had intended that a church should become "the centerpiece of the university complex".<ref name="glass">{{cite news | first = Sheldon | last = Barr | title = Venetian Glass at Stanford University | work = Magazine Antiques | date = September 2002}}</ref> They were deeply religious, and for their day and social standing, "open-minded ecumenicalists",<ref name="davis-36"/> so Jane Stanford was determined that a church built on campus be a "nondenominational—if essentially Protestant—house of worship".<ref name="davis-36">{{cite book|last1=Davis|first1=Erik|last2=Rauner|first2=Michael|title=The Visionary State: A Journey through California's Spiritual Landscape|date=2006|publisher=Chronicle Books|location=San Francisco, CA|isbn=0-8118-4835-3|page=36}}</ref> ], who was chaplain of Memorial Church during the 1980s and 1990s, stated that the Stanfords had two objectives in building the church: to ensure that Stanford students had an opportunity to develop their ethics as well as their studies, and to provide comfort and strength to the community.<ref>Gregg, p. 11</ref>

Leland Stanford died in 1893; legal disputes tied up the Stanford estate and prevented the completion of the university for several years. When the disputes were settled in Jane Stanford's favor, she was finally able to put into motion her wish for a church.<ref name="gregg-17"/> In 1898, she and the university trustees requested design submissions for the church.<ref name="hall-21">Hall, p. 21</ref> In 1890, Jane Stanford visited her friend Maurizio Camerino in Venice, an artist with a reputation for producing high-quality mosaics; she and her husband had met him years earlier during one of their many trips to Europe.{{refn|group=note|When the Stanfords' son died in Florence in 1884, Camerino, who spoke fluent English, rushed to their side to help them as an interpreter.<ref name="watercolors">{{cite press release | url = http://news.stanford.edu/pr/92/920303Arc2379.html | title = Venetian Family Donates Historic Watercolors of Church Mosaics | publisher = Stanford University | date = 3 March 1992 | access-date = 2 January 2018}}</ref>}} Stanford commissioned Camerino and his company, the ] studios, to produce mosaics for the church.<ref name="history">{{cite web | last = Taylor | first = Joseph A. | title = Memorial Church History | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church/memorial-church-history | access-date = 3 January 2018}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Salviati & Company also designed and built eight large mosaics in ] and decorated the vestibule of ].<ref>Hall, p. 25</ref>}} Stanford was involved in every part of the church's design and construction. She was determined that the quality of the stonework of Memorial Church should equal the medieval churches she admired in Europe.<ref>Gregg, pp. 22–23</ref>{{refn|group=note|Both Gregg and ceramic expert Joseph Taylor recount what Taylor called the "legend" about Stanford's practice of using her notched parasol to gauge if Memorial Church's stone carvings were as deep as the churches she admired in Europe. Both Gregg and Taylor reported that Stanford would personally examine construction with the church's architect and builder, carrying her parasol and wearing long skirts, even up to the highest scaffolding.<ref name="history"/><ref name="gregg-22"/>}} According to Memorial Church chaplain Robert C. Gregg, "The grandeur of the church, articulated in its details, greatly occupied Jane Stanford—the structure was to be without flaw".<ref>Gregg, pp. 10–11</ref>

Groundbreaking for the church took place in May 1899; construction began in January 1900.<ref name="gregg-22"/> After a delay of almost a year, Stanford Memorial Church was dedicated on January 25, 1903,<ref name="hall-21"/> with "impressive ceremonies".<ref name="dedication">{{cite news | title = Stanford Memorial Church Dedicated Yesterday with Impressive Ceremonies | work = San Francisco Chronicle | date = 26 January 1903}}</ref> Demonstrating Jane Stanford's goal of ecumenicism, Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger of San Francisco's ] read the first Bible lesson. The church's pastor, Heber Newton, gave the sermon. A second service was held later that day, and D. Charles Gardner, the chaplain, gave the sermon. Stanford Memorial Church's first christening was held between the two services.<ref name="dedication"/>


Jane Stanford once remarked: "While my whole heart is in the university, my soul is in that church".<ref name="history"/> She died in 1905, and so did not live to see the damage caused by the ].<ref name="history"/> Her funeral took place in the church, which was called one of her most important accomplishments and "the truest reflection of her visionary leadership",<ref>Oberhausen, p. 4</ref> in March 1905. Clergy from several religious traditions, including a Rabbi, a Presbyterian minister, a Methodist minister, an Episcopal bishop, and a Baptist minister, officiated at the service.<ref name="obit">{{cite news | title = Obituary Jane Stanford | work = The New York Times | page = 9 | date = 25 March 1905}}</ref>
During one of the Stanfords' European trips they met and befriended ], an artist with a reputation for producing high-quality ], who was managing the ] studios in Venice. After Leland Stanford's death in 1893, legal disputes tied up the Stanford estate and prevented the completion of the university for several years. When the disputes were determined in Jane Stanford's favor, she was finally able to put into motion her wish for a church.<ref>Gregg, p. 17</ref> In 1898, she and the university trustees requested design submissions for the church.<ref name="page21"/> Once Stanford Memorial Church was ready for decoration, Jane Stanford visited Camerino, who had taken over the ownership of Salvati and Company in 1890, and commissioned him to produce mosaics for the church.<ref name="history"/> The art contained in the church "greatly occupied" Stanford; as former chaplain Robert C. Gregg put it, "The structure was to be without flaw".<ref>Gregg, p. 11</ref> Stanford was determined that the quality of the church's workmanship would equal the medieval churches she had admired in Europe.<ref>Gregg, p. 23</ref>


=== Earthquakes ===
Groundbreaking for the church was held in 1899.<ref name="glass"/><ref name="dedication">{{cite news | title = Stanford Memorial Church dedicated yesterday with impressive ceremonies | work = San Francisco Chronicle | date = 1903-01-26 | accessdate = 2009-01-30}}</ref> After a delay of almost a year,<ref name="dedication"/> Stanford Memorial Church was dedicated on January 25, 1903,<ref name="page21"/> with "impressive ceremonies".<ref name="dedication"/> Demonstrating Jane Stanford's goal of ecumenicism, Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger of San Francisco's ] read the first Bible lesson. The church's pastor, Heber Newton, gave the sermon. A second service was held later that day, and ], the chaplain, gave the sermon. Stanford Memorial Church's first christening was held between the two services.<ref name="dedication"/>
]


Stanford Memorial Church has suffered two major earthquakes, in ] and in ]. Although extensively damaged, the church was restored after each. The 1906 quake wrecked much of the church, felled the spire, cracked the walls, and "injured beyond repair" the mosaics and ] statuary in the ].<ref name="hall-22">Hall, p. 22</ref> The main cause of the severity of the damage was that the church's original construction failed to attach the crossing structure to the surrounding masonry and roof structures.<ref>Gregg, p. 24</ref><ref name="quake">{{cite web | title = Repair of Monuments 4: Memorial Church | publisher = Quake '06 Walking Tour | url = http://quake06.stanford.edu/centennial/tour/stop4.html | access-date = 27 August 2017}}</ref> When the earthquake hit the church, the crossing structure moved independently from the rest of the building, gouging gaping holes in the roofs over the east and west transepts, the nave, and chancel.<ref name="quake"/> Its original 12-sided, 80-foot spire and its adjoining clock tower fell on top of the chancel roof, destroying the tower dome's "frescoed Victorian interpretation of God's eye—complete with tear—surrounded by cherubs and shooting star".<ref>Gregg, pp. 25, 28</ref> The debris hit and destroyed the marble sculptures of the ] that decorated the ].<ref name="gregg-25"/><ref name="quake"/>
Jane Stanford once remarked: "While my whole heart is in the university, my soul is in that church".<ref name="history"/> She died in 1905, and so did not live to see the damage caused by the ].<ref name="history"/> Her funeral took place in the church, refered to as one of her most important accomplishments and "the truest reflection of her visionary leadership"<ref>Oberhausen, p. 4</ref> in March 1905. Demonstrating her belief in ecumenicism, clergy from several religious traditions, including a Rabbi, a Presbyterian minister, a Methodist minister, an Episcopal bishop, and a Baptist minister, officiated at the service.<ref>{{cite news | title = Obituary Jane Stanford | work = New York Times | page = 9 | date = 1905-03-25 | accessdate = 2009-04-11}}</ref>


The spire was never repaired and the tower was removed and replaced by a simpler structure; however, the clock was saved and preserved in a temporary structure behind the church before eventually being placed in another building on campus, the ].<ref name="history"/><ref name="clock">{{cite news | last = Palmer | first = Barbara | title = His Ph.D. Beckoning, Clock Tower Caretaker Winding Down His Volunteer Duties | work = Stanford Report | date = 13 July 2001 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/june13/robclock-613.html | access-date = 27 August 2017 | archive-date = July 18, 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070718144527/http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/june13/robclock-613.html | url-status = dead }}</ref> University trustees considered re-building the tower, and even looked at possible designs, but eventually chose not to rebuild it because they could not agree on its design, and chose instead to replace the tower with a domed skylight.<ref name="gregg-29"/><ref name="quake"/>{{refn|group=note|According to the Stanford Quake ‘06 Centennial Alliance, an organization dedicated to studying the effect of the 1906 earthquake on Stanford University, the choice improved the church's design. The alliance also reported that contemporary engineers praised the quality of the reconstruction, which was said to be the best of its kind at the time.<ref name="quake"/>}} The crossing structure also pushed the roof of the nave forward. The roof's weak connection to the church's front facade caused the facade to fall into the Inner Quad courtyard;<ref name="quake"/> as mosaic expert Joseph A. Taylor put it, "its wondrous mosaic was blown out and totally destroyed".<ref name="history"/> The only mosaics not destroyed in the quake were the four angels that decorated the crossing.<ref name="gregg-25">Gregg, p. 25</ref> The back of the church, with several hundred feet of arcades, was also completely leveled because it too was not joined to the rest of the building.<ref name="quake"/>
===Earthquakes===
]


Repairs of the earthquake damage began in 1908, despite misgivings from some university administration regarding its cost; it was closed between 1906 and 1913 while it was repaired.<ref name="quake"/><ref name="hall-21"/> The university president had to postpone academic projects to pay for the church's restoration, as well as the restoration of the entire campus. Ultimately, they chose to repair Memorial Church because they recognized that it was "integral to the identity of the young university".<ref name="quake"/> The church and the Old Chemistry building were the only two buildings in the university's Inner Quad that were repaired.<ref name="sandstone">{{cite journal|last=Junkerman |first=Charles |title=A Biography of Stanford Sandstone: From Greystone Quarry to ''Stone River'' |journal=Sandstone & Tile |volume=34 |issue=3 |date=Fall 2010 |page=10 |url=http://histsoc.stanford.edu/pdfST/ST34no3.pdf |access-date=27 August 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130922042736/http://histsoc.stanford.edu/pdfST/ST34no3.pdf |archive-date=22 September 2013 }}</ref> The extent of the damage was such that the church had to be completely rebuilt. The entire church, except for its surviving crossing structure and offices, was dismantled stone by stone, which, along with the windows, were labelled and stored, and were later relaid in their original positions.<ref name="gregg-25"/><ref name="hall-22"/> According to architecture historian Willis L. Hall in his 1917 book about the church, "In reconstruction great care has been taken to assure permanence".<ref name="hall-22"/> The stones were securely bolted to each other, "making the whole structure practically one massive hollow rock on a great steel foundation skeleton".<ref name="hall-22"/> The tile floor was replaced with cork.<ref name="gregg-26">Gregg, p. 26</ref> The building's crossing received a tiled hipped roof and an ], which lit the interior of the church, and was added above the renovated dome, which had a frescoed ceiling decorated with bronze designs as opposed to the gold leaf present before the earthquake.<ref name="gregg-29">Gregg, p. 29</ref> The original rose window above the front facade was replaced with one with a simpler arch shape because it was more similar to the style of the rest of the buildings in the Inner Quad.<ref name="gregg-26"/>
Stanford Memorial Church has suffered two major earthquakes, in ] and in ]. Although extensively damaged, the church was restored after each. The 1906 quake wrecked much of the church, felled the spire, cracked the walls, and "injured beyond repair" the mosaics and Carrara marble statuary in the chancel.<ref name="page22">Hall, p. </ref> The main cause of the severity of the damage was that the church's original construction failed to attach the crossing structure to the surrounding masonry and roof structures.<ref>Gregg, p. 24</ref> The result was that when the tower swayed in the earthquake, it pushed against the walls and roofs of the nave, transepts and chancel, causing the walls to move and the roof of the nave to be forced towards the gable of the facade.<ref name="quake"/> The upper north face of the building was affected by the movement of the nave roof against the gable and fell forward into the Inner Quad courtyard,<ref name="quake"/> "its wondrous mosaic was blown out and totally destroyed".<ref name="page22"/>


]
The spire fell into the chancel, bringing down the roof and doing massive damage to the internal fittings.<ref name="quake"/> The twelve marble statues of the apostles, which stood in front of the niches surrounding the altar, were damaged and never replaced.<ref name="page25">Gregg, p. 25</ref> The spire was never repaired<ref name="history"/> and the tower was removed and replaced by a simpler structure; however, the clock was saved and eventually placed in another building on campus, the ].<ref>{{cite news | last = Palmer | first = Barbara | title = His Ph.D. beckoning, Clock Tower caretaker winding down his volunteer duties | work = Stanford Report | date = 2001-07-13 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/june13/robclock-613.html | accessdate = 2009-01-29}}</ref> The crossing of the church was the only part of the building to remain relatively stable after the quake.<ref name="quake"/> and the only mosaics not destroyed in the quake were the four angels that decorated the crossing dome's ].<ref name="page25"/>
The dedication, which was engraved in large letters below the facade mosaic, was replaced by a smaller dedication plaque placed at the lower left of the facade, a choice the university alumni magazine called "a tremendous improvement".<ref name="gregg-26"/> Camerino's design of the mosaics that were to fill in the empty space created by the removal of the original dedication, which he offered free of charge, were rejected in favor of a simple version created by John K. Branner (son of university president ]) in 1914. Camerino, who did not appraise the damage until 1913, restored the interior mosaics. He had saved the original drawings in Venice, so he removed and re-fabricated the chancel mosaic, and redesigned the entire exterior mosaic.<ref name="history"/> The Stanford alumni magazine, in early 1917, after the completion of the interior mosaics, declared the renovation complete, stating that "the church, for almost the first time since it was begun, is finished".<ref name="gregg-26"/> Its appearance after the renovation was "significantly transformed".<ref name="quake"/>


In 1989 the church was damaged again, in the ]. Although the damage was not as serious as the '06 earthquake, it "spurred intricate strengthening and restoration work" to protect further damage from future earthquakes.<ref name="quake"/> The Stanford Quake ‘06 Centennial Alliance stated that the damage was not devastating, even though the building did not fulfill the more stringent earthquake codes in place in 1989, because of the previous renovation after the '06 earthquake. The Alliance also stated that if the earthquake had been stronger or lasted longer, the damage would have been more extensive.<ref name="quake"/> The integrity of the structure remained,<ref name="history"/> but the crossing structure, the only major part of the building that was not dismantled and replaced after the 1906 earthquake, buckled and caused several stones in the north and west arches to slip as much as {{convert|2|in|cm}}.<ref name="gregg-30">Gregg, p. 30</ref>
Repairs of the earthquake damage began immediately. The church building was extensively ], "to assure permanence" in case of further earthquakes.<ref name="page22"/> The extent of the damage was such that the church had to be completely rebuilt. It was dismantled stone by stone, which, along with the windows, were labeled and stored.<ref name="page25"/> In the rebuilding, stones were anchored to concrete-reinforced walls. The building's crossing received a tiled hipped roof and an ], which lit the interior of the church, was added above the renovated dome. The original dome had been decorated with a "a frescoed Victorian interpretation of God's eye&mdash;complete with tear&mdash;surrounded by cherubs and shooting star".<ref>Gregg, pp. 25, 28</ref> The new dome had a frescoed ceiling decorated with bronze designs as opposed to the gold leaf present before the earthquake.<ref name="page29">Gregg, p. 29</ref> A further structural alteration was that the irregular ] of the facade was replaced by a more regular round-arched window like the smaller ones flanking it.<ref name="quake"/>


The four mosaic angels in the pendentives, which decorated its high rounded walls directly below the church's dome and served as the setting beds for hundreds of thousands of ]e, were severely damaged.<ref name="kreysler"/> Parts of the fallen mosaics were stolen, but later returned anonymously.<ref name="quake"/> The angels' damage caused large chunks of mortar and glass to fall to the floor {{convert|80|ft|m}} below, while other sections "were left hanging by the sheer geometry of their arched shape".<ref name="kreysler">{{cite journal | last = Kreysler | first = William | title = In Defiance of Gravity: The Restoration of Stanford's Angels | journal = Flash Point | volume = 6 | issue = 2 }}</ref> An eight-foot mosaic section of an angel's left wing in the church's northeast corner fell {{convert|70|ft|m}} to the floor. Several stones from the east arch wall fell onto pews in the balcony, and the organ-loft railing collapsed inward. Although the damage was minor, the church remained closed until 1992 while restoration, as well as a bracing project to protect the building from future earthquakes, without changing the building's decorations, was carried out. The university hired a team of contractors, structural engineers, architects, and conservation specialists to develop a renovation plan, which was paid for by a $10 million fundraising drive. Many donations came from undergraduates, and the university's board of trustees approved the plan before its funding was in place because they recognized the church's importance to Stanford.<ref>Gregg, pp. 30–31</ref><ref name="quake"/>
]
The dedication inscription, which had been placed in large letters below the facade mosaic, was replaced by a smaller dedication plaque placed at the lower left of the facade.<ref name="page26">Gregg, p. 26</ref> The mosaics were restored by Camerino, who did not appraise the damage until 1913. He had saved the original drawings in Venice, so he removed and re-fabricated the ] mosaic, and redesigned the entire exterior mosaic.<ref name="history"/> Camerino also donated mosaics to fill the spaces left by the removal of the dedication inscription. The tile floor was replaced with cork. The Stanford alumni magazine, in early 1917, declared the renovation complete, stating that "the church, for almost the first time since it was begun, is finished".<ref name="page26"/>


In this restoration, the entire crossing was strengthened by bracing it behind the dome and securing it to the superstructure of the building.<ref name="gregg-30"/> The restoration team evaluated every decoration in the church and made improvements and changes as necessary, in order to preserve the building's interior elements. They also discovered that the crossing's four large arches were hollow; they also found remnants of the steel frame that supported the original clock tower within a 20" void space in the church's arched walls. They had to fill the void with more than 470 tonnes of concrete and several layers of reinforcing steel in order to improve the walls' stability, an accomplishment the Alliance called "one of the most challenging retrofit feats implemented at Stanford".<ref name="quake"/>
In 1989 the church was damaged again, in the ]. The integrity of the structure remained,<ref name="history"/> but the crossing structure, the only major part of the building that was not damaged in the 1905 earthquake, buckled and caused several stones in the north and west arches to slip as much as to {{convert|2|in|m}}.<ref name="page30">Gregg, p. 30</ref> The four mosaic angels in the pendentives supporting the dome were damaged.<ref name="kreysler"/> An eight-foot mosaic section of an angel's left wing broke off and fell {{convert|70|ft|m}} to the floor. Several stones from the east arch wall fell onto pews in the balcony, and the organ-loft railing collapsed inward. Although the damage was minor, the church remained closed until 1992 while restoration was carried out.<ref name="page30"/>


In this restoration the entire crossing was strengthened by bracing it behind the dome and securing it to the superstructure of the building. The roofs, which had not been replaced since 1913, were rebuilt with plywood ] and 30,000 new red clay tiles were installed. The wing of the damaged angel was restored;<ref name="page30"/> Stanford University hired William Kreysler and Associates to create a new backing system to secure this angel and three other mosaic angels to the base of the dome.<ref name="kreysler">{{cite journal | last = Kreysler | first = William | title = In defiance of gravity: The restoration of Stanford's angels | journal = Flash Point | volume = 6 | issue = 2 | url = http://www.kreysler.com/about/press/fp1-art.htm | accessdate = 2008-10-08}}</ref> The stones from the arches were replaced.<ref name="page30"/> During the renovation after the earthquake, a piece of the original mosaic from the vestibule, with its '']'', was found in the foundation and inserted into the Communion Table in the chancel, linking the current building with the pre-1906 church.<ref>Gregg, pp. 38–39</ref> Other improvements to the church were also made at this time. The Victorian ] were repaired and rewired, and the transept balconies, which had been closed for twenty years because they were declared unsafe, were reopened, after the false doors on the south side of each balcony were replaced by ]s and connected to existing staircases on the other side of the wall. Stanford Memorial Church was rededicated by chaplain ] on November 1, 1992.<ref>Gregg, p. 31</ref> The roofs, which had not been replaced since 1913, were rebuilt with plywood ], 30,000 new red clay tiles were installed, and the stones from the decorative arches were reinserted. The wing of the damaged angel was restored;<ref name="gregg-30"/> Stanford University hired William Kreysler and Associates to create a new backing system to secure this angel and three other mosaic angels to the base of the dome, which included replacing the original bonding materials (a weak lime mortar), with steel angles that anchored the mosaics to the walls and with a stronger polymer resin.<ref name="kreysler"/><ref name="quake"/> {{refn|group=note|William Kreysler described the repair in detail in ''Flash Point Magazine'' in 2013.<ref name="kreysler"/>}} The renovators found a piece of the original mosaic from the vestibule wall, which had a '']'' design, in the foundation, and inserted it into the Communion Table in the chancel, linking the current building with the pre-1906 church.<ref>Gregg, pp. 38–39</ref> The Victorian chandeliers were repaired and rewired, and the transept balconies, which had been closed for twenty years because they were declared unsafe, were reopened, after the false doors on the south side of each balcony were replaced by emergency exits and connected to existing staircases on the other side of the wall.<ref name="gregg-31"/> A new sprinkler system and a new audio system was also installed.<ref name="quake"/> Stanford Memorial Church was rededicated by chaplain Robert C. Gregg on November 1, 1992.<ref name="gregg-31">Gregg, p. 31</ref>


===Influence=== === Influence ===
{{Quote box {{Quote box
| quote = Gifted as a preacher as well as a jazz pianist, Napier turned the chapel into what some regarded as Christian theater—the introduction of jazz and other types of experimental worship as well as provocative preaching. Suddenly a jam-packed Memorial Church became the fashionable place for undergraduates to congregate on weekends. | quote = Gifted as a preacher as well as a jazz pianist, Napier turned the chapel into what some regarded as Christian theater—the introduction of jazz and other types of experimental worship as well as provocative preaching. Suddenly a jam-packed Memorial Church became the fashionable place for undergraduates to congregate on weekends.
| source = Stanford professor Dr. Van Harvey<ref name="Harvey, p. 7"/> | source = Stanford professor Dr. Van Harvey<ref name="harvey-7"/>
| width = 30% | width = 30%
| align = right | align = right
}} }}
Before the 1950s, Stanford "had the reputation of being a completely secular university".<ref name="Harvey, p. 3">Harvey, p. 3</ref> Stanford professor Van Harvey refers to this as a "background of aggressive secularism and the almost complete neglect of the academic study of religion".<ref name="Harvey, p. 3"/> In 1946, ], a visiting chaplain at Stanford Memorial Church, criticized the "dearth" of religious and spiritual resources available at Stanford for its students and criticized the university's lack of academic courses offered in the study of religions. Cuninggim insisted that the university's administration and trustees were responsible because they had interpreted the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter in "a negative and restrictive fashion rather than as enabling the tolerance and the flourishing of many religious faiths on campus".<ref name="Harvey, p. 3"/> According to Stanford professor ], Stanford "had the reputation of being a completely secular university" before the 1950s, calling the period a "background of aggressive secularism and the almost complete neglect of the academic study of religion".<ref name="harvey-3"/> In 1946, ], a visiting chaplain at Stanford Memorial Church, criticized the serious lack of religious and spiritual resources available at Stanford for its students and criticized the university's lack of academic courses offered in the study of religions. Cuninggim insisted that the university's administration and trustees were responsible because they had interpreted the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter in "a negative and restrictive fashion rather than as enabling the tolerance and the flourishing of many religious faiths on campus".<ref name="harvey-3"/>


Cuninggim also charged that Stanford's religious policies were inadequate compared to other prominent US universities. Harvey speculated that if Stanford had established a ] like other prestigious universities, its ] department and the "ethos" of the entire institution would be different.<ref name="Harvey, p. 3"/> In 1966, however, the Board of Trustees got a court order that allowed them to change the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter so that they could expand the university's religious program, which included permitting sectarian worship services at Stanford Memorial Church.<ref>{{cite book | last = Bartholomew | first = Karen | coauthors = Claude Brinegar, Roxanne Nilan | title = A chronology of Stanford University and its founders | publisher = Stanford Historical Society | date = 2001 | location = Stanford, Calif. | page = 90 | isbn = 0-9664-2491-3}}</ref> Cuninggim also charged that Stanford's religious policies were inadequate compared to other prominent U.S. universities. Two attempts were made to found a ] to train pastors and religious leaders at Stanford, in 1921 and in 1940, but both failed.<ref name="Harvey, pp. 3–4">Harvey, pp. 3–4</ref> Harvey speculated that if Stanford had established a seminary like other prestigious universities, its ] department and the "ethos" of the entire institution would be different.<ref name="harvey-3"/> In 1966, however, the university's board of trustees got a court order that allowed them to change the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter so that they could expand the university's religious program, which included permitting sectarian worship services at Stanford Memorial Church.<ref>{{cite book | last = Bartholomew | first = Karen | author2=Claude Brinegar |author3=Roxanne Nilan | title = A Chronology of Stanford University and Its Founders | publisher = Stanford Historical Society | year = 2001 | location = Stanford, Calif. | page = 90 | isbn = 0-9664249-1-3}}</ref>
]
Stanford did not employ a full-time professor in religion until 1951 and did not establish a religious studies department until 1973, later than most other universities in the US. Earlier courses in religion were largely offered by the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church. ] offered a course in Biblical history and literature beginning in 1907, and by 1910, he was teaching ] and Bible classes. Gardner's successor, ], taught classes about the ]. In 1941 Trueblood's efforts to expand the study of religion resulted in the creation of a minor in religion, as well as twenty-one courses offered by him and four faculty members. By 1960, the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church no longer had to run the program, which had expanded to allow students the option of majoring in the study of religion.<ref>Harvey, pp. 4–6</ref> By the mid-1960s, the religious studies program at Stanford was enjoying "enormous success".<ref>Harvey, p. 6</ref>


]
In the 1960s, the study of religion at Stanford focused not on academics, but on social and ethical issues like race and the ]. Leading this focus was Stanford Memorial Church chaplain David Napier, who was "a powerful critic of US policy in Vietnam".<ref name="Harvey, p. 7"/> Napier, along with Stanford professors ] and ], were the subject of a '']'' article in 1966, describing "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford".<ref name="Harvey, p. 7"/> Students crowded into the church to hear anti-war speeches by them, as well as by "notables" such as ] and ].<ref name="page29"/>
Stanford did not employ a full-time professor in religion until 1951 and did not establish a religious studies department until 1973, later than most other universities in the U.S. Earlier courses in religion were largely offered by the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church. David Charles Gardner offered a course in Biblical history and literature beginning in 1907, and by 1910, he was teaching ] and Bible classes. Gardner's successor, ], whose goal was the establishment of a non-denominational graduate school in religious studies at Stanford, taught classes about the ]. In 1941 Trueblood's efforts to expand the study of religion resulted in the creation of a minor in religion, as well as twenty-one courses offered by him and four faculty members. By 1960, the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church no longer had to run the program, which had expanded to allow students the option of majoring in the study of religion.<ref>Harvey, pp. 4–6</ref> By the mid-1960s, the religious studies program at Stanford was enjoying "enormous success".<ref>Harvey, p. 6</ref>


In the 1960s, the study of religion at Stanford began to focus more on social and ethical issues like race and the ]. Leading this focus was Stanford Memorial Church Dean of the Chapel and Professor of Religion B. Davie Napier, who was "a powerful critic of U.S. policy in Vietnam".<ref name="harvey-7"/> Napier, along with Stanford professors ] and ], who had previously been faculty members of seminaries, were the subject of a '']'' article in 1966, describing "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford".<ref name="harvey-7"/> Students crowded into the church to hear anti-war speeches by them, as well as by "notables" such as ] and ].<ref name="gregg-29"/> Harvey credited Napier for making the church a popular meeting place on campus for undergraduates and for turning it into "Christian theater—the introduction of jazz and other types of experimental worship as well as provocative preaching".<ref name="harvey-7"/>
In 1993, Stanford became the first major educational institution in the United States to give formal permission allowing same-sex ] at its chapel.<ref>{{cite news | last = Honan | first = William H. | title = Harvard allows gay couples to hold ceremonies at its chapel | work = New York Times | date = 1997-07-22 | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F07E1DA123BF931A15754C0A961958260&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Organizations/S/Stanford%20University | accessdate = 2009-01-29}}</ref> The first ceremony, called "vows of commitment",<ref name="ceremony"/> took place on Labor Day, September 6, 1993, and was performed by Associate Dean of the Chapel, ]. Stanford's Memorial Church's dean at the time, ], obtained permission from the university administration and discussed it with his staff before the ceremony was performed.<ref name="ceremony">{{cite news | last = Simon | first = Mark | title = Unusual ceremony at Stanford - Church's first blessing of homosexual couple | work = The San Francisco Chronicle | page = A15| date = 1993-10-16 | accessdate = 2009-01-29}}</ref>

Stanford University was the first major educational institution in the United States that conducted same-sex ] at its chapel.<ref>{{cite news | last = Honan | first = William H. | author-link = William H. Honan | title = Harvard Allows Gay Couples to Hold Ceremonies at Its Chapel | work = The New York Times | date = 22 July 1997 | url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F07E1DA123BF931A15754C0A961958260&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Organizations/S/Stanford%20University | access-date = 28 August 2017}}</ref> Its first ceremony was held in 1993, and was officiated by Associate Dean ].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Chaung|first1=Angie|title=A First for Mem Chu|url=http://stanforddailyarchive.com/cgi-bin/stanford?a=d&d=stanford19931018-01.2.2&srpos=1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN-Terry+Rouman------#|access-date=28 August 2017|issue=16|publisher=Stanford Daily|date=18 October 1993|volume=204|page=1}}</ref> In 2017, a campus organization attempted to have Stanford Memorial Church declared a sanctuary church for the undocumented immigrant student population, but was unsuccessful due to university policies regarding the status of the church as part of the university.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Samrai|first1=Yasmin|title=Campaign to make Memorial Church a 'sanctuary church' meets obstacles|url=https://www.stanforddaily.com/2017/10/26/campaign-to-make-memorial-church-a-sanctuary-church-meets-obstacles/|access-date=23 May 2018|work=The Stanford Daily|date=26 October 2017}}</ref>


=== Chaplains === === Chaplains ===
Stanford Memorial Church, throughout its history, has been served by chaplains who have been influential amongst the Stanford University student body and community at large. ], the first and last pastor of Stanford Memorial Church, resigned after four months in 1903 "because he disagreed with Mrs. Stanford on some aspects of church management".<ref name="records">{{cite web | title = Guide to the Stanford University. Memorial Church. Records | publisher = Online Archive of California | url = http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=kt4d5nf0q6&doc.view=entire_text&brand=oac | accessdate = 2009-01-09}}</ref> According to Stanford biographer Robert W. P. Cutler, "Newton's tenure had been a disappointment to Mrs. Stanford".<ref>{{cite book | last = Cutler | first = Robert W.P | title = The mysterious death of Jane Stanford | publisher = Stanford University Press | date = 2003 | location = Stanford, CA | page = 24 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=2tRNXXjG9kEC&printsec=frontcover&client=firefox-a&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0#PPA24,M1 | isbn = 0-8047-4793-8}}</ref> Newton had been rector of All Souls' Church, New York City (1869–1902). He was a leader in the ] movement, a supporter of ] of the Bible, and sought to unify Christian churches in the United States.<ref>{{cite web | first= Donald S. | last= Armentrout| title= Newton, Richard Heber | url= http://www.anb.org/articles/08/08-01090.html | publisher=American National Biography Online | date= February 2000 | accessdate = 2009-01-18}}</ref> ], who replaced Newton and was the first chaplain of Stanford Memorial Church, served the church from 1903 to 1936.<ref name="gardner">{{cite web | last = Hansen | first = Hazel Dorothy | coauthors = Robert M. Minto | title = Memorial resolution: David Charles Gardner (1871–1948) | publisher = Stanford Historical Society | date = 2008-11-13 | url = http://histsoc.stanford.edu/pdfmem/GardnerD.pdf | format = pdf | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> An ] minister, Gardner was known as "the Padre" to his students at Stanford. He was born in England, immigrated to the US when he was twenty-one years old, and attended seminary near San Francisco. Gardner taught courses in Biblical history and literature at Stanford.<ref name="gardner"/> Edith Mirrielees, a student, professor, and Stanford historian, considered him "a preacher of only indifferent ability" but "a strength to the whole university". According to her he was the prime mover behind the creation of the Stanford Home for Convalescent Children,<ref name="mirrielees">{{cite book | last = Mirrielees | first = Edith | title = Stanford: The story of a university | publisher = Putnam | date = 1959 | location = New York | pages = 111, 210–212 }}</ref> established in 1919, which eventually became the ]. Stanford Memorial Church, throughout its history, has been served by chaplains who have been influential amongst the Stanford University student body and community at large. ], "distinguished writer"<ref name="elliott">{{cite book|last1=Elliott|first1=Orrin Leslie|title=Stanford University: The First Twenty-five Years|url=https://archive.org/details/stanfroduniversi009361mbp|date=1937|publisher=Stanford University Press|location=Stanford, California|page=}}</ref> and former rector at ] in New York, was handpicked by Jane Stanford to serve as the church's first pastor; he resigned after four months in 1903 "because he disagreed with Mrs. Stanford on some aspects of church management".<ref name="records">{{cite web | title = Guide to the Stanford University, Memorial Church, Records | publisher = Online Archive of California | url = http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4d5nf0q6/entire_text/ | access-date = 28 August 2017}}</ref> According to Stanford biographer Robert W. P. Cutler, "Newton's tenure had been a disappointment to Mrs. Stanford".<ref>{{cite book | last = Cutler | first = Robert W.P | title = The Mysterious Death of Jane Stanford | publisher = Stanford University Press | year = 2003 | location = Stanford, California | page = 24 | isbn = 0-8047-4793-8}}</ref> ], who replaced Newton, served the church from 1902 to his retirement in 1936.<ref name="gardner">{{cite web|last1=Hartwig|first1=Daniel|title=Guide to the Rev. David Charles Gardner Collection|url=http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4h4nf4hp/entire_text/|website=Stanford University Libraries, Department of Special Collections and University Archives|publisher=Online Archives of California|access-date=28 August 2017}}</ref> Stanford also handpicked Gardner as Newton's assistant because she was impressed with his "parish work" in Palo Alto.<ref name="elliott"/> Gardner went on to teach courses in Biblical history and literature at Stanford.<ref name="gardner"/> Influential English professor and Stanford historian ]<ref>{{cite news|last1=Grossman|first1=Taylor|title=Steinbeck at Stanford|url=http://www.stanforddaily.com/2012/06/07/steinbeck-at-stanford/|access-date=24 April 2016|work=The Stanford Daily|date=7 June 2012}}</ref> called Gardner "a preacher of only indifferent ability", but considered him "a strength to the whole university". Mirrieless considered Gardner the prime mover behind the creation of the Stanford Home for Convalescent Children,<ref>{{cite book | last = Mirrielees | first = Edith | title = Stanford: The Story of a University | publisher = Putnam | year = 1959 | location = New York | pages = 111, 210–212 }}</ref> established in 1919, which eventually became the ].


], a ], was the church's chaplain from 1936 to 1946. Trueblood was also a professor of philosophy of religion at Stanford and wrote 33 books, including one about ]. Trueblood and his wife hosted monthly Friends meetings in their home. He met weekly with ] students in the vestry of Stanford Memorial Church.<ref>{{cite book | last = Trueblood | first = Elton | title = The best of Elton Trueblood: An anthology | publisher = Impact Books | date = 1979 | location = Kirkwood, Missouri | page = 84 | isbn = 0914850865}}</ref> Trueblood left Stanford to go to ].<ref name="Harvey, p. 3"/><ref>{{cite web | last = Bolling | first = Landrum | title = D. Elton Trueblood: 1900 to 1994 | publisher = Way Net.org | url = http://www.waynet.org/people/biography/trueblood.htm | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> George J. Hall was the interim chaplain between Trueblood and ],<ref name="records"/> who, except for a short break in his employment in 1949, worked at Stanford for almost twenty years, from 1947–1965.<ref name="records"/> Ordained in the ], Minto was known for his handwritten marriage certificates.<ref name="records"/><ref name="minto">{{cite news | last = Newfield | first = Elsbeth | title = 773 Dolores Street: 1917 Shingle Style | url = http://histsoc.stanford.edu/hh1/773Dolores.pdf | accessdate = 2009-01-09}}</ref> Paul C. Johnston filled in during Minto's break.<ref name="records"/> ], a lifelong ], was the church's chaplain from 1936 to 1946.<ref name="records"/><ref name="bolling"/> Trueblood was also a professor of philosophy of religion at Stanford and established the university's first major in religious studies;<ref name="Harvey, pp. 3–4"/> his tenure there provided him with "the public visibility and financial freedom that made a national ministry possible".<ref name="bolling">{{cite web | last = Bolling | first = Landrum | title = D. Elton Trueblood: 1900 to 1994 | publisher = Erlhamite Magazine | date = Winter 1995| website = Way Net.org | url = http://www.waynet.org/people/biography/trueblood.htm | access-date = 28 August 2017}}</ref> He wrote 33 books, including one about ]. Trueblood and his wife hosted monthly Friends meetings in their home, and met weekly with ] students in the vestry of Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="records"/><ref name="bolling"/><ref>{{cite book | last = Trueblood | first = Elton | title = The Best of Elton Trueblood: An Anthology | publisher = Impact Books | year = 1979 | location = Kirkwood, Missouri | page = | isbn = 0-914850-86-5 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/bestofeltontrueb00true/page/84 }}</ref> George J. Hall was the church's chaplain from 1946 to 1947, followed by Paul C. Johnson, who served between 1949 and 1950. Robert M. Minto was chaplain twice, in 1947–1948, and again from 1950 to 1973.<ref name="records"/> Minto, an associate chaplain at Stanford for two years prior, was a pastor in Scotland and a former British naval chaplain during World War II.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://stanford.dlconsulting.com/cgi-bin/imageserver/imageserver.pl?oid=stanford19500926-01&getpdf=true|title=Minto Given Chaplaincy|date=26 September 1950|work=Stanford Daily|access-date=28 August 2017|page=4|format=PDF}}</ref>


Stanford's next two chaplains, ] (1966–72)<ref name="napier">{{cite news | last = Peña | first = Michael | title = B. Davie Napier, dean of Stanford chapel during turbulent 1960s, dead at 91 | work = Stanford News Service | date = 2007-02-28 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/march7/napiersr-030707.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> and ] (1972–73),<ref name="records"/> were among the most politically active chaplains. Napier was an ordained ] minister. He was born in China to ] parents, grew up in the American South, and went to seminary at ]. He gained fame among Stanford students "for his efforts to relate Scripture to the turbulent political times of the late 1960s".<ref name="napier"/> Napier was a "charismatic biblical scholar &nbsp;... a powerful critic of US policy in ]".<ref name="Harvey, p. 7" /> Napier was also a "gifted" preacher and jazz pianist.<ref name="Harvey, p. 7"/> Brown, the author of 29 books, became "an international leader in civil rights, ecumenical and social justice causes".<ref name="brown">{{cite news | last=Palmer | first=Barbara | title = Activist theologian Robert McAfee Brown dead at 81 | work = Stanford Report |url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/september19/brownobit919.html | date = 2001-09-07 | accessdate = 2009-01-12}}</ref> He also protested US involvement in Vietnam and taught religion and ethics in relation to contemporary life and literature.<ref name="brown"/> Stanford's next two chaplains, ] (Dean of the chapel, 1966–72)<ref name="napier"/> and ] (Acting Dean of the chapel, 1972–73),<ref name="records"/> were among the most politically active chaplains. Napier was an ordained ] minister. He was born in China to missionary parents, grew up in the American South, and went to seminary at ]. He became known at Stanford "for his efforts to relate Scripture to the turbulent political times of the late 1960s".<ref name="napier">{{cite news | last = Peña | first = Michael | title = B. Davie Napier, Dean of Stanford Chapel During Turbulent 1960s, Dead at 91 | work = Stanford News Service | date = 28 February 2007 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/march7/napiersr-030707.html | access-date = 31 August 2017}}</ref> Napier was a "charismatic biblical scholar &nbsp;... a powerful critic of U.S. policy in Vietnam".<ref name="harvey-7" /> Napier was also a "gifted" preacher and jazz pianist.<ref name="harvey-7"/> Brown, the author of 29 books, became "an international leader in civil rights, ecumenical and social justice causes".<ref name="brown">{{cite news | last = Palmer | first = Barbara | title = Activist Theologian Robert McAfee Brown Dead at 81 | work = Stanford Report | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/september19/brownobit919.html | date = 7 September 2001 | access-date = 31 August 2017}}</ref> He also protested U.S. involvement in Vietnam and taught religion and ethics in relation to contemporary life and literature.<ref name="brown"/>


] (1972–86), born in South Africa, was a United Methodist minister. He taught religion, classics, and Greek at Stanford.<ref>{{cite news | last = Gemmet | first = Andrea | title = Going by the book: Woodside Village Church pastor retires, returns to intellectual pursuits | work = The Almanac | url = http://www.almanacnews.com/morgue/2004/2004_06_16.rvklly.shtml | date = 2004-06-16 | accessdate = 2009-01-12}}</ref> Thomas Ambrogi was the acting dean in 1986.<ref name="records"/> He was a former ] priest who was an elder in the First Presbyterian Church in Palo Alto, and referred to himself as " a transdenominational Christian with roots in the Catholic tradition".<ref>{{cite web | last = Ambrogi | first = Thomas E. | title = Leaving church | publisher = A Voice from the Desert | url = http://reform-network.net/?p=1335 | accessdate = 2009-01-18}}</ref> ] (1987–98), was born in Texas and ordained as an ] minister. He was also Professor of Religious Studies.<ref>{{cite news | last=Ray | first=Elaine | title = Priestly passions: Dean Robert Gregg talks about what's dear to his heart | work =Stanford News Service | url=http://news-service.stanford.edu/pr/97/971105gregg.html | date= December 5, 1997 | accessdate = 2009-01-09}}</ref><ref group=note>Gregg also wrote ''Glory of Angels'', the 1995 book about MemChu.</ref> Kelly Denton-Borhaug (1999–2000), a ] minister, came to Stanford in 1996 as an associate dean.<ref name="denton">{{cite news | last= Ray | first = Elaine | title = University chaplain at Tufts named Stanford's dean for religious life | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/pr/00/scotty628.html | work =Stanford News Service | date = 2000-06-19 | accessdate = 2009-01-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title = Interim dean for religious life sees more values in questions than answers | url=http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2000/february23/denton-223.html | work=Stanford Report | date= 2000-02-23 | accessdate = 2009-01-19}}</ref> ] (1972–86), born in South Africa, was a United Methodist minister. He taught religion, classics, and Greek at Stanford.<ref>{{cite news | last = Gemmet | first = Andrea | title = Going By the Book: Woodside Village Church Pastor Retires, Returns to Intellectual Pursuits | work = The Almanac | url = http://www.almanacnews.com/morgue/2004/2004_06_16.rvklly.shtml | date = 16 June 2004 | access-date = 31 August 2017}}</ref> Thomas Ambrogi was acting dean for "a challenging year" in 1986.<ref name="records"/><ref>{{cite news|title=Thomas Ambrogi|url=https://www.claremont-courier.com/articles/obituaries/t17065-tom-ambrogi-obituary|access-date=31 August 2017|work=]|date=9 October 2015|location=Claremont, Calif.}}</ref> Robert C. Gregg (1987–98) was born in Texas and ordained as an Episcopal priest. He was also Professor of Religious Studies (now emeritus).<ref name="records"/><ref>{{cite news|last1=Ray|first1=Elaine|title=Campus celebrates the life of former President Richard Lyman|url=http://news.stanford.edu/news/2012/october/richard-lyman-memorial-100312.html|access-date=1 September 2017|work=Stanford Report|date=12 October 2012|location=Stanford, Calif.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Gregg, Robert C. {{!}} Stanford Historical Society |url=https://historicalsociety.stanford.edu/publications/gregg-robert-c |website=historicalsociety.stanford.edu |access-date=10 January 2020}}</ref><ref group=note>Gregg also wrote ''Glory of Angels'', the 1995 book about MemChu.</ref> Kelly Denton-Borhaug (1999–2000), a ] minister, came to Stanford in 1996 as an associate dean.<ref name="records"/><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2000/february23/denton-223.html|title=Interim Dean for Religious Life Sees More Values in Questions Than Answers|date=23 February 2000|work=Stanford Report|access-date=21 May 2018}}</ref> The Rev. ] (2001–2014), a ] minister, was "an activist neighborhood lawyer"<ref name="mclennan">{{cite news | last = Day | first = Nancy | title = Cut from a Different Cloth | work = Stanford Magazine | date = July–August 2001 | url = http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2001/julaug/features/mclennan.html | access-date = 1 September 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120402034847/http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2001/julaug/features/mclennan.html# | archive-date = 2012-04-02 | url-status = dead }}</ref> in Boston before becoming a university chaplain, first at ].<ref name="mclennan"/> ], who was McLennan's roommate when they were students at ], based his ] character, the Rev. ], in part on McLennan.<ref name="mclennan"/> He was replaced by the Very Rev. ], an Episcopal priest and "a historian of modern religion", in the fall of 2014.<ref name="shaw">{{cite news|last1=Hayward|first1=Brad|title=Dean of Grace Cathedral to become Stanford dean for religious life|url=https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/people/rev-professor-jane-shaw|access-date=1 September 2017|work=Stanford Report|date=22 July 2014|location=Stanford, Calif.|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170911053203/https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/people/rev-professor-jane-shaw|archive-date=2017-09-11|url-status=dead}}</ref>


====Staff==== ==== Staff ====
Stanford Memorial Church is run by the Stanford Office for Religious Life, headed by the current Dean for Religious Life, Tiffany Steinwert. She replaced the Very Rev. Prof. ] who was the dean for 4 years, 2014–18.<ref>{{Cite web|last=University|first=Stanford|date=2018-10-01|title=Tiffany Steinwert to become Stanford Dean for Religious Life|url=https://news.stanford.edu/2018/10/01/tiffany-steinwert-dean-for-religious-life/|access-date=2020-09-12|website=Stanford News|language=en}}</ref> Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann serves as Senior Associate Dean. Stanford has two associate deans: the Rev. Joanne Sanders and Sughra Ahmed.<ref name="staff">{{cite web|url= https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/stanford/people | title= Staff |publisher= Stanford University| access-date=21 May 2018}}</ref>
]
The Rev. ] has served as ] for Religious Life at Stanford since 2001. He is joined by associate deans Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann and The Rev. Joanne Sanders to form a multi-faith team. The deans oversee educational programs and serve on administrative committees on campus.<ref name="memchu">{{cite web | title = Welcome from the deans | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/aboutWelcome.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref>


Rabbi Karlin-Neumann is Stanford's first associate dean from outside the Christian tradition. Before coming to Stanford, Karlin-Neumann had been a ] director and chaplain at ], ], and Princeton, and was a rabbi in ]. She has taught courses in ], rabbinical ethics, education, and ].<ref name="rabbi">{{cite news | last = Strasser | first = Teresa | title = Alameda Rabbi to be Stanford's First Jewish Chaplain | work = The Jewish News of Northern California | date = 31 May 1996 | url = https://www.jweekly.com/1996/05/31/alameda-rabbi-to-be-stanford-s-first-jewish-chaplain/ | access-date = 2 September 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann|url=https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/people/rabbi-patricia-karlin-neumann|website=Stanford Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University|access-date=2 September 2017}}</ref> The university changed the title of her position to accommodate a Jewish rabbi, from "Associate Dean of Memorial Church" to "Associate Dean of Religious Life at Stanford". She calls her title at Stanford "Mem Chu and a Jew, too".<ref name="rabbi"/>
McLennan, who is a ] minister, was "an activist neighborhood lawyer"<ref name="mclennan">{{cite news | last = Day | first = Nancy | title = Cut from a different cloth | work = Stanford Magazine | date = July/August 2001 | url = http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2001/julaug/features/mclennan.html | accessdate = 2008-11-13}}</ref> in Boston before becoming a university chaplain, first at ].<ref name="mclennan"/> ], who was McLennan's roommate when they were students at ], based his ] character, the Rev. ], in part on McLennan.<ref name="mclennan"/>


Joanne Sanders, an Episcopal priest, has worked at Stanford since 2000. She has degrees in theology, ] and ]. She "provides liturgical leadership for Memorial Church on campus for a variety of religious and other events".<ref>{{cite web | title = The Rev. Joanne Sanders | publisher = Stanford University | website=Stanford Office for Religious Life | url = https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/people/rev-joanne-sanders | access-date = 2 September 2017}}</ref>
Rabbi Karlin-Neumann is Stanford's first ] associate dean of religious life. Before the university hired her in 1996, the chaplaincy position was called "Dean of Memorial Church"; in order to accommodate Karlin-Neumann, the position's name was changed to "Dean of Religious Life at Stanford".<ref name="rabbi">{{cite news | last = Strasser | first = Teresa | title = Alameda rabbi to be Stanford's first Jewish chaplain | work = Jewish News Weekly of Northern California | date = 1996-05-31 | url = http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/3780/edition_id/67/format/html/displaystory.html | accessdate = 2008-11-13}}</ref> Before coming to Stanford, Karlin-Neumann had been a ] director and chaplain at ] and ], a rabbi in ], and was active in ]. She has taught courses in ], rabbinical ethics, education, and ].<ref>{{cite web | title = Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/aboutKarlin-Neumann.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> She refers to her role at Stanford as "Mem Chu and a Jew, too".<ref name="rabbi"/>


] dean Sughra Ahmed was appointed in 2017, for the purpose of, as Provost Persis Drell stated, to assist "the Stanford community develop a broader understanding of the Islamic faith, particularly at this time".<ref name="ahmed">{{cite news|last1=Chesley|first1=Kate|title=New associate dean for religious life named|url=https://news.stanford.edu/2017/06/15/new-associate-dean-religious-life-named/|access-date=21 May 2018|work=Stanford News|publisher=Stanford University|date=17 June 2017}}</ref> She was named Muslim Woman of the Year in the ] in 2014, and is a recognized Muslim leader.<ref name="ahmed"/>
Sanders, an ] priest, has worked at Stanford since 2001. She has degrees in ], ] and ]. Her career has focused on the connection between body, mind, and spirit. She serves as ] officer for Memorial Church, is responsible for coordinating and facilitating the religious services at the church, and is active in the athletic community on campus. She is also a member of Stanford's Women's Community Center.<ref>{{cite web | title = The Rev. Joanne Sanders | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/aboutSanders.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref>


] has been Stanford Memorial Church's organist since 1999.<ref name="morgan"/> He is a lecturer in organ at the Stanford University School of Music.<ref>{{cite web | title = About the university organist | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/aboutOrganist.html | accessdate = 2008-11-15}}</ref> Morgan performs at up to thirty services, mostly weddings, each month at the church.<ref name="morgan"/> Mary Gallagher is the current wedding coordinator at Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="weddings">{{cite web | last = Gallagher | first = Mary | title = Wedding program at Stanford University | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/docs/weddings/wedding_program.pdf | format = PDF | accessdate = 2009-05-01}}</ref> ], a native of Wales, has been Stanford Memorial Church's organist since 1999. He attended ], where he was an ], and earned two doctorates at the ] in Seattle, where he served on staff as a pianist and conductor. At Stanford, he serves as a lecturer in organ, director of the Stanford University Singers, and director of the Memorial Church Choir.<ref name="morgan">{{cite news | last = Trevino | first = Laramie | title = Staff Profile: Morgan on Organ | work = Stanford News Service | date = 10 November 1999 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/1999/november10/organist-1110.html | access-date = 2 September 2017 | archive-date = September 19, 2006 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060919093301/http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/1999/november10/organist-1110.html | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = Dr. Robert Huw Morgan | website = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | publisher = Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/cgi-bin/wordpress/about-orl/orl-staff/dr-robert-huw-morgan/ | access-date = 2 September 2017}}</ref>


==Murder of Arlis Perry==
==Architecture==
], a 19-year-old who lived on-campus, was murdered there on October 12, 1974.<ref name="Stanford Daily">{{cite news|title=Murder at Memorial Church remains unsolved 40 years later|url=http://www.stanforddaily.com/2014/10/10/murder-at-memorial-church-remains-unsolved-40-years-later/|accessdate=May 17, 2017|agency=The Stanford Daily}}</ref>
]
Stanford Memorial Church was built during the ] period, a time of architectural ], so elements of styles from different eras are synthesized in its design.<ref name="page37"/> The architectural style of Stanford Memorial Church has been referred to as "a stunning example of late ] ] and ] with echoes of ]".<ref name="page3">Oberhausen, p. 3</ref> As it stands today, having been altered after earthquake damage, Stanford Memorial Church has the plan and structure of a large ] church while the extensive use of mosaic and the foliate forms of the stone carvings reflect ] styles seen by Jane Stanford on her visits to the churches of ] and ], Venice.<ref name="watercolors">{{cite press release|url=http://news.stanford.edu/pr/92/920303Arc2379.html |title=Venetian family donates historic watercolors of church mosaics |publisher=Stanford University|date=1992-03-03|accessdate=2009-07-26}}</ref>


== Architecture ==
The architect was ], a protegé of ], and who developed the massing of Richardson's ] in Boston, (1876).<ref>Joncas, Neuman and Turner p. 27</ref> Like Trinity Church, Memorial Church originally had a large central tower with turrets and a twelve-sided spire, but this was lost as a result of the 1906 earthquake.<ref name="quake">{{cite web | title = Repair of monuments 4: Memorial Church | publisher = Quake '06 Walking Tour | url = http://quake06.stanford.edu/centennial/tour/stop4.html | accessdate = 2009-07-22}}</ref> The church's blueprints were prepared by ] of San Francisco, and ] was the supervising architect for the project. Jane Stanford hired builder ], who was responsible for constructing the ], the ] complex in San Francisco, and much of Stanford University, for the actual construction of Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="history"/>
]
Stanford Memorial Church is part of a linked, complex system of arcades that make up the Quad, which serves to unify the entire complex, is more reminiscent of European public spaces than American ones, and "is probably one of the most important feature of the original Stanford architecture".<ref>Turner, p. 4</ref> It was built during the ] period.<ref name="gregg-34"/> Gregg called the church "a perfect example of the movement", with elements of the ], ] and ] art, the ] period, and the ].<ref name="gregg-36"/> The architectural style of Stanford Memorial Church has been referred to as "a stunning example of late ] ] and ] with echoes of ]".<ref name="oberhausen-3">Oberhausen, p. 3</ref> Stanford historian Richard Joncas called the church "an opulent example of high ] with sumptuous materials and arts".<ref name="joncas-27"/>


The original designs for Memorial Church and much of the university were made in 1886 by prominent American architect ]; when he died that same year, his student ] completed them.<ref>Turner, p. 2</ref> Coolidge loosely based his design of Memorial Church on Richardson's design of ] in Boston.<ref name="joncas-27"/><ref name="quake"/> The church's heavy red tile roofs, round turrets, low arches, and rough-hewn stonework matches the design of other buildings in the Quad.<ref name="quake"/> After Jane Stanford's legal difficulties after her husband's death were resolved, she hired San Francisco architect ] to review and update the church's blueprints. ] was the supervising architect for the project. Jane Stanford hired builder ], who was responsible for constructing the ], the ] complex in San Francisco, and much of Stanford University, for the actual construction of Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="history"/>
Jane Stanford's taste and knowledge of both contemporary and classical art is evident in several aspects of the plan, appearance, and architecture of the church, which "dazzle the eye yet also produce an atmosphere of quiet contemplation".<ref name="page3"/> On her direction, Coolidge imitated the "glorious color"<ref name="page28">Joncas, p. </ref> of the European cathedrals, especially those in Italy. Although the ] in the church is Christian, Stanford was a "late Victorian progressive",<ref name="page3"/> and chose the art displayed less for their religious themes and more for their "humanitarian ethics".<ref name="page3"/> She requested that the designs include women in the church's images, "to show the uplifting influence of religion for women";<ref name="page23">Hall, p. </ref> there are many women depicted in the 24 mosaics throughout the church.<ref name="page23"/> Art historian Judy Oberhausen reports that Stanford used ]s of biblical illustrations like ''The Story of the Bible'' by Charles Foster, which contained 300 illustrations and summarized the events and stories she wished to depict in the church's windows and mosaics.<ref name="page3"/>


]
===Plan===
Jane Stanford's taste and knowledge of both contemporary and classical art is evident in several aspects of the plan, appearance, and architecture of the church, which "dazzle the eye yet also produce an atmosphere of quiet contemplation".<ref name="oberhausen-3"/> According to Joncas, "the church emulates the 'glorious color' of the great European cathedrals", especially those in Italy.<ref name="joncas-28">Joncas, p. 28</ref> Although the ] in the church is Christian, Stanford was a "late Victorian progressive",<ref name="oberhausen-3"/> and chose the art less for its religious themes and more for its "humanitarian ethics".<ref name="oberhausen-3"/> She requested that the designs include women, "to show the uplifting influence of religion for women";<ref name="hall-23">Hall, p. 23</ref> Architectural historian Willis L. Hall claims that there are more depictions of women than in most church imagery at the time.<ref name="hall-23"/> Art historian Judy Oberhausen reports that Stanford used ] of biblical illustrations like '']'' by Charles Foster, which contained 300 illustrations and summarized the events and stories she wished to depict in the church's windows and mosaics.<ref name="oberhausen-3"/>
The church is a ] structure measuring {{convert|190|ft|m}} long and {{convert|150|ft|m}} wide, which originally included the clock and bell tower with an 80-foot (24 m) spire.<ref name="page21">Hall, p. </ref> The ] faces the Inner Quad, and is connected to other buildings by ]s which extend laterally. The entry is through a ] or porch extending across the building. The ] has a single aisle on either side, separated by an arcade with a ] above it. The crossing is formed by a structure of square plan which once supported the central tower. Over it is a shallow dome supported on ]s and rising to a skylit oculus. High semicircular Romanesque arches separate the crossing from the nave, ]s and ]. The chancel and transepts are ]. There are deep galleries with swept ] fronts in the transepts and an organ gallery above the narthex against the nave's west wall. The sanctuary, in the chancel, is raised and approached by steps.


Jane Stanford's design included inspirational messages placed throughout the church in the form of inscriptions carved into its walls and enclosed in carved frameworks.<ref>Hall, p. 39</ref> As Barbara Palmer of the ''Stanford Report'' stated, Stanford "had her religious beliefs literally carved into the church's sandstone walls".<ref name="palmer"/> For example, the following quotations can be found in the church's east transept:<ref group=note>For a complete list of the inscriptions, see Hall pp. 39–45.</ref>
===Exterior===
The chief building material of the church is ]. It is roofed with terracotta tiles of the Italian ] form. The nave, chancel and transepts appear to project from the robust square central structure which is now roofed with tiles and has a small skylight above its centre.


<blockquote>Religion is intended as a comfort, a solace, a necessity to the soul's welfare; and whichever form of religion furnishes the greatest comfort, the greatest solace, it is the form which should be adopted be its name what it will.</blockquote>
The ornate ] is divided into two zones with a gable roof of low pitch surmounted by a ].<ref name="page36">Gregg, p. 36</ref> In the lower zone, there are three arched entrances; the central one is slightly larger than the others. The surrounding stonework is intricately carved with stylized flora, twisted-cable moldings, and bosses of sculpted cherubim, a motif which occurs in different media throughout the church. In the spandrels are mosaic depictions of the Biblical concepts of Faith, Hope, and Love intertwined in a vine representing the "]".<ref group=note>Love is represented by a mother with wings encircling children.</ref>


<blockquote>The best form of religion is trust in God, and a firm belief in the immortality of the soul, life everlasting.<ref>Hall, p. 40</ref></blockquote>
In the upper zone of the facade, surrounded by more elaborate stonework, is a large central window, with groups of three smaller windows on each side. The original central window was a quatrefoil-shaped ], but after the 1906 earthquake, it was replaced by a "classical round-head window that more grandly restates the smaller flanking, articulated openings"<ref name="page28"/> and that corresponded with the ] of the Quad.<ref name="page26"/> Beneath the windows are inlaid panels of colored marble.


=== Plan ===
The gable and surrounding surfaces contain the church's largest mosaic, created by Paoletti, and recreated by him after the 1906 earthquake. Measuring {{convert|84|ft|m}} wide at the base and {{convert|30|ft|m}} in height, at the time of its completion, it was the largest mosaic in the US. It depicts a group of men, women and children, 47 in all, surrounding and "paying close heed"<ref name="page17">Hall, p. </ref> to Christ, the mosaic's central figure. Paoletti included a landscape with "waving palms and a gleaming sky"<ref name="page17"/> behind Christ.
[[File:Stanford Memorial Church Plan.jpg|thumb|Plan of the Stanford Memorial Church:
{{image key
|'''A''': ]
|'''B''': ]
|'''C''': ]
|'''D''': ]
|'''E''': ]s
|'''F''': ]
|'''G''': ]
|'''H''': East ] with transept gallery above
|'''J''': West transept/side chapel with transept gallery above
|'''K''': Round room}}
]]


The church is a ] structure; its original structure, which included a clock and bell tower with an 80-foot (24 m) spire, was {{convert|190|ft|m}} long and {{convert|150|ft|m}} wide.<ref name="history"/> The ] faces the Inner Quad, and is connected to other buildings by ] which extend laterally. The entry is through a ] or vestibule extending across the building. The ] has a single aisle on either side, separated by an arcade with a ] above it. The crossing is formed by a structure of square plan which once supported the central tower. Over it is a shallow dome supported on ]s and rising to a skylit oculus. High semicircular Romanesque arches separate the crossing from the nave, ]s and chancel. The chancel and transepts are ]. There are deep galleries with concave ] fronts in the transepts and an organ gallery above the narthex. The sanctuary, in the chancel, is elevated and approached by steps. A round-shaped room is at the back of the building, added in 1902 by architect Clinton Day.<ref name="joncas-28"/>
After Jane Stanford's death, the mosaic popularly gained the name "]", although Stanford University historian Richard Joncas insists that the mosaic does not depict the scene as described in the ] and has referred to it simply as "an indefinite biblical scene".<ref name="page28"/> In the Stanford University press release about the gift of watercolour cartoons for the church's mosaics, Paoletti's design for the facade is described as ''"Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God"'', based on Matthew 25:34.<ref name="watercolors"/>
{{multiple image
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| image1 = Memchu hopedetail.jpg
| width1 = 156
| alt1 = A carving of the head and wings of an angel: above the angel is the bottom of a mosaic with the label "HOPE" and a margin which has a head with flowering ivy.
| caption1 = Detail of the "lacy carvings" on the exterior of Stanford Memorial Church
| image2 = Exterior mosaic2.jpg
| width2 = 310
| alt2 = Jesus, with His arms stretched out, welcomes people who are coming towards him from both sides. A Middle eastern landscape is behind the group.
| caption2 = Detail of the exterior mosaic
| image3 = Front mosaic.jpg
| width3 = 150
| alt3 = Three men approach Jesus. One of them is pointing, and another kneeling.
| caption3 = Detail of the facade mosaic, to the left of the windows
}}


===Interior=== === Exterior ===
The chief building material of the church is buff ], which came from the Goodrich Quarry (also called the Greystone Quarry)<ref>{{cite web | title = Santa Clara County – List of Stone Quarries, Etc. | publisher = Stone Quarries and Beyond | url = http://quarriesandbeyond.org/states/ca/quarry_photo/ca-santa_clara_photos.html | access-date = 31 January 2018}}</ref> in the Almaden area of San Jose, was delivered by train and rough-cut in the university Quad. Gregg credits the high quality of the stonework to church and university builder John D. McGilvray.<ref name="gregg-22">Gregg, p. 22</ref> The church is roofed with terracotta tiles of the Italian ] form. The nave, chancel, and transepts appear to project from the square central structure, roofed with tiles and a small skylight above its center. Memorial Church originally had a central bell tower with an 80-foot tall, twelve-sided spire, but this was lost as a result of the 1906 earthquake.<ref name="quake"/>


The church's ] is surmounted by a simple ], a motif that appears several times throughout the building.<ref name="gregg-36">Gregg, p. 36</ref> The cross was added after the 1906 earthquake; its central shaft was destroyed in the Loma Prieta earthquake and replaced.<ref>Gregg, pp. 36–37</ref> There are three arched entrances below the exterior mosaic; the central one is slightly larger than the others.<ref name="hall-17"/> The surrounding stonework is intricately carved with stylized flora, twisted-cable moldings, and bosses of sculpted cherubim, a motif which occurs in different media throughout the church. In the spandrels are mosaic depictions of the biblical concepts of love, faith, hope and charity intertwined in a vine representing the "]".<ref name="hall-17"/><ref group=note>Love is represented by a mother with wings encircling children.</ref>
The nave is entered through a ] above which is an organ gallery. The nave is ] and has a single aisle on each side. The open wooden roof is constructed with tied ], which can be seen radiating in the chancel. The chancel and transepts are ], separated from the broad central space by large richly decorated semi-circular arches on stout columns with deeply carved capitals. The sanctuary within the chancel is raised on steps and decorated with an arcade at the lower level. The chancel is lit by large round-headed windows, while the central space has a small dome with a skylight. The architectural features of the interior are richly carved with formalized foliate ornament, and the walls are adorned with mosaics in the Byzantine manner.<ref name="glass"/> The stained-glass windows were crafted by ] of New York.<ref>Hall p. </ref>


In the upper zone of the facade, surrounded by more elaborate stonework and "lacy carving",<ref name="hall-17"/> is a large central window, with groups of three smaller windows on each side. The original central window was a quatrefoil-shaped ], but after the 1906 earthquake, it was replaced by a "classical round-head window that more grandly restates the smaller flanking, articulated openings"<ref name="joncas-28"/> and that corresponded with the ] of the Quad.<ref name="gregg-26"/> Beneath the windows are inlaid panels of colored marble.
The church's interior walls are made of buff sandstone, which emphasizes the lacy carvings in the arches over the entrance and windows, and emphasizes the bright colors in the windows and mosaics. The sandstone came from the Goodrich quarry in ], delivered to Stanford by train, rough-cut in the university Quad, and then installed in the church.<ref>Gregg, p. 22</ref> The walls' construction was supervised by John D. McGilvray, who also supervised the construction of many other buildings on campus. Jane Stanford's design included inspirational messages placed throughout the church in the form of inscriptions carved into its walls and enclosed in carved frameworks.<ref>Hall, p. </ref> For example, the following quotations can be found in the church's east transept:<ref group=note>For a complete list of the inscriptions, see Hall pp. 39–45.</ref>


The gable and surrounding surfaces contain the church's largest mosaic, created by Maurizio Camerino's studio, which they rebuilt after the 1906 earthquake.<ref name="watercolors"/> Measuring {{convert|84|ft|m}} wide at the base and {{convert|30|ft|m}} in height, at the time of its completion, it was the largest mosaic in the U.S. It depicts a group of men, women and children, 47 in all, surrounding and "paying close heed"<ref name="hall-17">Hall, p. 17</ref> to Christ, the mosaic's central figure, and includes a landscape with "waving palms and a gleaming sky"<ref name="hall-17"/> behind Christ. The exterior mosaic took 12 men two years to complete.<ref name="watercolors"/>
<blockquote>Religion is intended as a comfort, a solace, a necessity to the soul's welfare; and whichever form of religion furnishes the greatest comfort, the greatest solace it is the form which should be adopted be its name what it will.</blockquote>


After Jane Stanford's death, the mosaic popularly gained the name "]", although Stanford University historian Richard Joncas insists that the mosaic does not depict the scene as described in the ] and has referred to it as "an indefinite biblical scene".<ref name="joncas-28"/> In the Stanford University press release about the 1992 gift of three watercolor studies for the church's mosaics, Paoletti's design for the facade is described as ''"Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God"'', based on Matthew 25:34.<ref name="watercolors"/> Paoletti created another unfinished watercolor depicting "]", as another option for the facade mosaic, but it was evidently rejected by Stanford.<ref name="palmer"/>
<blockquote>The best form of religion is, trust in God, and a firm belief in the immortality of the soul, life everlasting.<ref>Hall, p. </ref></blockquote>


{{multiple image
The church's main entrance consists of three bronze scroll doors that bear angels, a repeating motif throughout the church. Jane Stanford had a "Victorian aversion to blank space",<ref name="page57">Gregg, p. 57</ref> so the church's interior is full of mosaics, windows, and other decorations. The doors open up into a ] full of mosaics that holds three arches; carvings decorate the arches' pillars and the small stone band above the lower mosaics. There are a variety of designs and motifs here because more than one carver worked on them. The mosaic that adorns the floor here depicts a lamb surrounded by the symbols of the ]: ] (the winged angel), ] (the winged lion), ] (the ox), and ] (the eagle). These symbols also appear in other areas of the church.<ref name="page38">Gregg, p. 38</ref> Another Celtic cross adorns the central wooden door that leads into the nave, and Latin epigraphs have been engraved above the two outer doors.<ref name="page39">Gregg, p. 39</ref>
| align = center
| direction = horizontal
| image1 = Memchu hopedetail.jpg
| width1 = 156
| alt1 = A carving of the head and wings of an angel: above the angel is the bottom of a mosaic with the label "HOPE" and a margin which has a head with flowering ivy.
| caption1 = Detail of the foliate carvings around the doors
| image2 = Exterior mosaic2.jpg
| width2 = 310
| alt2 = Jesus, with His arms stretched out, welcomes people who are coming towards him from both sides. A Middle eastern landscape is behind the group.
| caption2 = Detail of the exterior mosaic
| image3 = Front mosaic.jpg
| width3 = 150
| alt3 = Three men approach Jesus. One of them is pointing, and another kneeling.
| caption3 = Detail of the facade mosaic, to the left of the windows
}}


=== Interior ===
]
]|alt=Wide-angle view of Stanford Memorial Church interior]]
Jane Stanford has been described as having a "Victorian aversion to blank space"<ref name="gregg-57">Gregg, p. 57</ref> and so created a church that is "a dimly lit cavern of glowing mosaic surfaces&nbsp;... and vibrant, stained-glass windows".<ref name="joncas-28"/> The church is richly decorated throughout, its architectural features carved with formalized foliate ornament, and the walls adorned with mosaics in the Byzantine manner.<ref name="glass"/> Even though the church was dedicated in 1903, interior decoration took another two years to complete, with the installation of the mosaics and the carving of the extensive quotations on the walls occurring simultaneously.<ref>Gregg, p. 23</ref> There are 29 large carvings of ] that contain ancient religious symbols in the walls of church's west and east transepts.<ref>{{cite web|title=Memorial Church Quatrefoils|url=https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church-quatrefoils|website=Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University|access-date=3 May 2018}}</ref> The stained-glass windows were crafted by ] of New York.<ref name="hall-35">Hall, p. 35</ref> Its exposed-timber ceilings are modeled after Boston's Trinity Church.<ref name="joncas-28"/>


The church is entered through three bronze doors adorned with angels, a recurring motif throughout the church. The doors open up into a ] or ] decorated with mosaics on the walls, illuminated by the many colors of the stained glass windows, and stone carvings on the architectural details.<ref name="hall-17"/> There is a variety of styles and motifs reflecting the hands of different craftsmen. The mosaic that adorns the floor depicts the ] surrounded by the symbols of the ]: ] (the winged angel), ] (the winged lion), ] (the ox), and ] (the eagle). Some of these symbols also appear in other areas of the church.<ref name="gregg-38">Gregg, p. 38</ref> A Celtic cross adorns the stained glass above the central wooden door that leads into the nave, and Latin epigraphs have been engraved above the two side doors.<ref>Gregg, p. 39</ref><ref group=note>''Domus Dei Aula Coeli'' ("The house of God, the forecourt of heaven") above the right door; ''Domus Dei Locus Orationis'' ("The house of God, the house of prayer") above the left door.</ref>
Above "the dimly-lit cavern of glowing mosaic surfaces&nbsp;... and vibrant, stained-glass windows"<ref name="page28"/> rises the exposed-timber ceiling inspired by Trinity Church. The ] that hang from the ceiling were installed in the church in 1915, and with its gold decorative patterns cast in ], are inspired by the ] tradition. On both sides of the nave, stained glass windows, which were inspired by several famous works of arts in Europe, have been placed on the walls that rise from the church's forward sloping floor and in its ] above. As Joncas states, "The floor descends toward the crossing, where the space swells into three semicircular aspses, with those on either end having galleries supported by columns".<ref name="page28"/>


Above the ] is an organ gallery. The nave is ] and has a single aisle on each side with clerestory windows above. Its walls, from the floor to the top of the clerestory, are decorated with 15 murals made of mosaics on each side, and depicts scenes from the Old Testament.<ref name="history"/> The exposed timber ceiling was inspired by Trinity Church and is constructed with tied ], which can be seen radiating in the chancel. The floor of the church slopes downward towards the crossing. The chancel and transepts are three semi-circular apses.<ref name="joncas-28"/> They are separated from the broad central space by large semi-circular arches on stout columns with carved capitals. The transept apses each have a balcony with a concave balustrade.
The ] is forward of the nave, whereas Hall states, it contains "artistic work of a kind seldom seen anywhere".<ref name="page17"/> There is a white marble ] table, which was carved from Carrara ] by ], in the middle of the chancel. The altar supports a "simple unadorned brass cross that reflects the colors of the mosaics surrounding it."<ref name="page50">Gregg, p. 50</ref> The cross was made by ] and was dedicated to the memory of Jane Stanford in 1948. Directly above the communion table is a ], which was constructed on a drum, or a cylindrical structure decorated with a painted intertwined leafy pattern attached to four ]. Jane Stanford originally designed the dome's golden band to be made of mosaic tiles depicting a variety of symbols, but the church's builders thought it would make the dome too heavy, so the band and its symbols were painted. The dome is surrounded by ] decorated with mosaics of four angels measuring {{convert|42|ft|m}} from wing tip to wing tip, rising from clouds and done in the ] style. The angels survived the 1906 earthquake, but the angel looking downward was severely damaged during the 1989 earthquake because an 8-foot section of its left wing fell {{convert|70|ft|m}}.<ref name="page53">Gregg, p. 53</ref>


Directly above the crossing is a ] supported on pendentives. Around the base of the dome are decorative gilt bands, the lower depicting a scrolling vine. Jane Stanford intended the dome's decoration to be of mosaic tiles showing a variety of symbols, but the church's builders thought it would make the dome too heavy, so the decorations were painted.<ref>Gregg, pp. 53, 57</ref> On the ] of the pendentives are mosaics of four angels measuring {{convert|42|ft|m}} from wing tip to wing tip, rising from clouds. The angels survived the 1906 earthquake, but the angel looking downward was severely damaged during the 1989 earthquake because an 8-foot section of its left wing fell {{convert|70|ft|m}}.<ref>Gregg, p. 53</ref>
]


The chancel, according to Hall, contains "artistic work of a kind seldom seen anywhere".<ref name="hall-17"/> The raised tiled floor of the chancel curves outward into the body of the church, and is approached by seven marble steps. The ] is raised further, and enclosed by a marble altar rail behind which is an altar carved from white Carrara ] by ]. The altar supports a "simple unadorned brass cross that reflects the colors of the mosaics surrounding it."<ref name="gregg-50">Gregg, p. 50</ref> The cross was made by ] and was dedicated to the memory of Jane Stanford in 1948.
A brass lectern in the shape of an angel holding a book, which Jane Stanford bought in Europe and dedicated to her husband on the anniversary of his birth in 1902, stands on the right side of the chancel.<ref name="page46">Gregg, p. 46</ref> Behind the communion table, in the church's apse, contains a raised floor originally used for commencement ceremonies, as well as a mosaic reproduction of Roselli's "Last Supper", and to its right are golden mosaic niches. The niches hold candles that originally held statues of the twelve apostles, but they were destroyed in 1906 and were never replaced. According to local legend, the winged angels carved in stone above the golden niches and in the pillars' capitals are illustrations of children living on campus at the time of the church's construction.<ref name="page50"/>


]
There are three stained glass windows in the apse depicting the ], ], and ] of Christ. These windows separate four sections of mosaics that depict an angelic choir. Four large mosaics of prophets and Jewish kings, surrounded by further angelic representations in mosaic, have been placed above these windows. More windows and mosaics abound in the transepts, clerestory, and choir loft at the northern end of the church. A series of mosaics in the upper transepts depict Christian saints; on Jane Stanford's direction, they alternate male and female.<ref name="page57"/> The arches, balcony rails, and pillars throughout the church have relief carvings created by a team of 10 men working two years from ].<ref name="page58">Gregg, p. 58</ref> For example, a large double pillar before the entrance of the west transept have inscriptions dedicated to members of the Stanford family. After the 1989 earthquake, a third of the west transept was converted into a small chapel. The altar and chairs in this chapel were designed by Bay Area artist ]. She decorated the chapel's altar by using Salvatti's original mosaics, which had been stored since the church's reconstruction following the 1906 earthquake.<ref>Gregg, pp. 42–43</ref>
Behind the altar is a mosaic reproduction of Rosselli's "]". Around the lower walls of the chancel are twelve niches decorated with golden mosaic tiles. They hold candles, but originally held statues of the twelve apostles, destroyed in 1906 and were never replaced. According to local legend, the cherubim carved in stone above the golden niches and in the pillars' capitals are illustrations of children living on campus at the time of the church's construction.<ref name="gregg-50"/> To the west side of the chancel stands brass lectern in the form of a reading angel, which Jane Stanford brought from Europe and dedicated to her husband on the anniversary of his birth in 1902.<ref>Gregg, p. 46</ref>


Three stained glass windows in the apse depict the ], ], and ] of Christ. The mosaics between them show angels, those on the left carrying a cross, those on the right carrying a crown. On the longer sections of the chancel wall, on either side of the windows, are mosaics depicting a choir of angels. Above them is a tier of mosaics with representations of the prophets and kings of Israel. Other mosaics abound in the transepts, clerestory, and the choir loft at the northern end of the church. A series of mosaics in the upper transepts depict Old Testament figures on the east side and Christian saints on the west side. On Jane Stanford's direction, they alternate male and female.<ref name="gregg-57"/>
====Windows====
]
According to architectural historian Willis L. Hall, the church's 20 large ] "are as much a feature of the church as the mosaics".<ref name="page35">Hall, p. </ref> The windows, designed by Frederick Stymetz Lamb (1863–1928) and fabricated by ], his father's firm in New York City, took three years to complete,<ref name="glass"/> and eight months to install at Stanford.<ref name="page60">Gregg, p. 60</ref> Jane Stanford hired Lamb because she felt he was more interested in "the ecclesiastical rather than commercial aspect of the work".<ref>Gregg, p. 21</ref> The installation of the windows at Stanford Memorial Church was the largest enterprise of its kind at the time, and the project is considered one of the best examples of Lamb's work.<ref>Gregg, p. 22</ref> Stanford chose the life of Christ for the windows' theme, inspired by the religious paintings by European master painters such as ] and ]. Her personal touch is shown in one of the ] windows, which is based on a cartoon by Paoletti and depicts Christ welcoming the soul of a child into Heaven before the eyes of its grieving mother, an allusion to the death of ],<ref name="glass"/> the Stanfords' only child and the university's namesake, who died in 1884 of ] shortly before his 16th birthday.


The arches, balcony rails, and pillars throughout the church have relief carvings created by a team of 10 men who worked for two years from ].<ref>Gregg, p. 58</ref> A large double pillar before the entrance of the west transept have inscriptions dedicated to members of the Stanford family. After the 1989 earthquake, a third of the west transept was converted into a small chapel. The altar and chairs in this chapel were designed by Bay Area artist ] who decorated the chapel's altar by using Salvatti's original mosaics, which had been stored since the church's reconstruction following the 1906 earthquake.<ref>Gregg, pp. 42, 45</ref>
Oberhausen, who has studied the source of the mosaics and windows, states that at least four stained glass windows were inspired by the paintings of Pre-Raphaelite artists that were enjoying a resurgence in popularity at the time. These windows are: "Christ in the Temple" in the east transept, based upon a painting by ]; "The Annunciation" in the east nave, inspired by a work by ]; "The Nativity" in the chancel, based upon a painting by ]; and "The Good Shepherd" in the west transept, inspired by a painting by Sibyl C. Parker, the only female artist represented in the artwork of the church.<ref name="page3"/> None of the windows of Stanford Memorial Church required replacement after the 1906 quake, except for "the famous rose window of the original structure" in the organ loft which was replaced by the current large, central arch window.<ref name="page35"/> This window, entitled "Lilies of the Field", is the only window in the church that cannot be viewed from the inside because it is blocked off by the central organ.<ref name="page37">Gregg, p. 37</ref> There is a cross in the center of this window made of "faceted pieces of glass that are inset like gems",<ref name="page37"/> which sparkle when light strikes it.


==== Windows ====
The church's clerestory contains many smaller windows of individuals from the Bible or Christian history. The windows in the nave above the east arcade depict the following Old Testament figures: ], ] and her child ], ], ], ], and ]. The windows in the east transept depict ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. In the nave above the west arcade feature saints and virtues: ], ], ], ], ], and ]. In the west transept are ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. The clerestory above the east and west doors are two windows of angels. Unlike the other windows throughout the church, they do not receive natural light from outside and are artificially illuminated instead.
]


According to architectural historian Willis L. Hall, the church's 20 large ] "are as much a feature of the church as the mosaics".<ref name="hall-35"/> The windows, designed by Frederick Stymetz Lamb (1862–1928) and fabricated by ], his father's firm in New York City, took three years to complete,<ref name="glass"/> and eight months to install at Stanford.<ref>Gregg, p. 60</ref> Jane Stanford hired Lamb because she felt he was more interested in "the ecclesiastical rather than commercial aspect of the work".<ref>Gregg, p. 21</ref> The installation of the windows at Stanford Memorial Church was the largest commission awarded to an American stained glass artist at the time, and the project is "considered the finest example of Lamb's work".<ref name="gregg-22"/> The window have a different appearance when viewed from the outside of the building because the reflected light highlights the textures of the glass panels, created by using many layers of different colored glass.<ref>Gregg, p. 62</ref>

Stanford chose the life of Christ for the windows' theme, inspired by the religious paintings by European master painters such as ] and ]. The windows have a section at the bottom with the scriptural quotations their images depict; the larger windows also include their titles.<ref name="hall-35"/> Stanford's personal touch is shown in one of the ] windows, which is based on a cartoon by Paoletti and depicts Christ welcoming the soul of a child into Heaven before the eyes of its grieving mother, an allusion to the death of ],<ref name="glass"/> the Stanfords' only child and the university's namesake, who died in 1884 of ] shortly before his 16th birthday.

Oberhausen, who has studied the source of the mosaics and windows, states that at least four stained glass windows were inspired by the paintings of Pre-Raphaelite artists that were enjoying a resurgence in popularity at the time. These windows are: "Christ in the Temple" in the east transept, based upon a painting by ]; "The Annunciation" in the east nave, inspired by a work by ]; "The Nativity" in the chancel, based upon a painting by ]; and "The Good Shepherd" in the west transept, inspired by a painting by Sibyl C. Parker, the only female artist represented in the artwork of the church.<ref name="oberhausen-3"/> None of the windows of Stanford Memorial Church required replacement after the 1906 quake, except for "the famous rose window of the original structure" in the organ loft which was replaced by the current large, central arch window.<ref name="hall-35"/> This window, entitled "Lilies of the Field", is the only window in the church that cannot be viewed from the inside because it is blocked off by the central organ.<ref name="gregg-37"/> There is a cross in the center of this window made of "faceted pieces of glass that are inset like gems",<ref name="gregg-37">Gregg, p. 37</ref> which sparkle when light strikes it.

The church's clerestory contains many smaller windows of individuals from the Bible or Christian history. The windows in the nave above the east arcade depict the following Old Testament figures: ], ] and her child ], ], ], ], and ]. The windows in the east transept depict ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. In the nave above the west arcade feature saints and virtues: ], ], ], ], ], and ]. In the west transept are ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. The clerestory above the east and west doors are two windows of angels. Unlike the other windows throughout the church, they do not receive natural light from outside and are artificially illuminated instead.
{{Clear}}
{{multiple image {{multiple image
| align = center | align = center
| direction = horizontal | direction = horizontal
| header = Stanford Memorial Church's stained glass windows, at the east side of the church | header = Stanford Memorial Church's stained glass windows, at the east side of the church
| header_align = center | header_align = center
| image1 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-2.jpg | image1 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-2.jpg
| width1 = 173 | alt1 = The Virgin Mary kneels to receive the God's message from an angel. The dove of the Holy Spirit descends in rays of light.
| width1 = 198
| caption1 = "The Annunciation"
| alt1 = The Virgin Mary kneels to receive the God's message from an angel. The dove of the Holy Spirit descends in rays of light.
| image2 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-1.jpg
| caption1 = "The Annunciation"
| width2 = 198 | alt2 = The Holy Family are outside their carpenter's shop where Joseph is working at his bench and Mary is sitting on the steps, spinning with a distaff. Joseph looks towards Mary as the child Jesus carries some wood resembling a cross.
| image2 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-1.jpg
| caption2 = "The Home at Nazareth"
| width2 = 242
| image3 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-3.jpg
| alt2 = The Holy Family are outside their carpenter's shop where Joseph is working at his bench and Mary is sitting on the steps, spinning with a distaff. Joseph looks towards Mary as the child Jesus carries some wood resembling a cross.
| width3 = 149 | alt3 = Christ standing on mountain, stretches his arm towards the people gathered to hear Him speak.
| caption2 = "The Home at Nazareth"
| caption3 = "The Sermon on the Mount"
| image3 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-3.jpg
| image4 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-4.jpg
| width3 = 191
| width4 = 165 | alt4 = Christ and his disciples are in a small boat caught in a tempest. While the disciples beseech him, Christ raises his hand to calm the storm.
| alt3 = Jesus standing on mountain, stretches his arm towards the people gathered to hear Him speak.
| caption3 = "The Sermon on the Mount" | caption4 = "Christ Calming the Tempest"
| image4 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-4.jpg | image5 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-5.jpg
| width4 = 185 | width5 = 152
| alt5 = Christ stands at bedside of a sick young girl, holding her hand and gesturing for her to rise, while her parents kneel in prayer.
| alt4 = Jesus and his disciples are in a small boat caught in a tempest. While the disciples beseech him, Jesus raises his hand to calm the storm.
| caption5 = "The Raising of Jairus' Daughter"
| caption4 = "Christ Calming the Tempest"
| image5 = USA-Palo Alto-Stanford Memorial Church-Glass Window-5.jpg
| width5 = 150
| alt5 = Jesus stands at bedside of a sick young girl, holding her hand and gesturing for her to rise, while her parents kneel in prayer.
| caption5 = "The Raising of Jairus' Daughter"
}} }}
{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}
<table border="0" style="width:100%;"><tr><td style="width:50%; vertical-align:top;">
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
'''East Nave'''
|+ East Nave
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
|- |-
! Title ! Title
Line 220: Line 208:
|- |-
| "The ]" | "The ]"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| "]" | "]"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| "The Home at ]" | "The Home at ]"
| ] | ]
|} |}
{{col-2}}
</td><td style="width:50%; vertical-align:top;">
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
'''West Nave'''
|+ West Nave
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
|- |-
! Title ! Title
! Inspired by ! Inspired by
|- |-
| "The Dream of ]" | "The Dream of ]"
| Doré | Doré
|- |-
| "The Angel at the Tomb"<ref group=note>Lamb created "subtle shadows" in the angel's robe by using layers of colored glass and white glass. He also created a luminescent effect by setting the angel against a dark background.</ref> | "The Angel at the Tomb"<ref group=note>Lamb created "subtle shadows" in the angel's robe by using layers of colored glass and white glass. He also created a luminescent effect by setting the angel against a dark background.</ref>
| ] | ]
|- |-
Line 244: Line 232:
| designed by Antonio Paoletti | designed by Antonio Paoletti
|} |}
{{col-end}}
</td></tr></table>
{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}
<table border="0" style="width:100%;"><tr><td style="width:50%; vertical-align:top;">
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
'''East transept'''<ref group=note>The best time to view these windows is in the early morning.</ref>
|+ East transept<ref group=note>The best time to view these windows is in the early morning.</ref>
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
|- |-
! Title ! Title
! Inspired by ! Inspired by
|- |-
| ] | ]
| "]" by ] | "]" by ]
|- |-
| "]" | "The ]"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| "]" | "]"
| Hofmann | Hofmann
|- |-
| "Christ Calming the Tempest" | "Christ Calming the Tempest"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| "The Raising of ]" | "The Raising of ]"
| Hofmann | Hofmann
|} |}
{{col-2}}
</td><td style="width:50%; vertical-align:top;">
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
'''West Transept'''
|+ West Transept
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin-top:1px; width:95%;"
|- |-
! Title ! Title
Line 278: Line 266:
| "Pan y Peces" by ] | "Pan y Peces" by ]
|- |-
| ] | ]
| Hofmann | Hofmann
|- |-
| "]" | "]"
| "The Door of the Fold" by ] | "The Door of the Fold" by ]
|- |-
| "Christ in the Home at ]" | "Christ in the Home at ]"
| Hofmann | Hofmann
|- |-
Line 290: Line 278:
| Hofmann | Hofmann
|} |}
{{col-end}}
</td></tr></table>
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1px auto 5px auto; width:auto"
<center>
'''Chancel''' |+ Chancel
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="margin-top:1px; width:50%;"
|- |-
! Title ! Title
! Inspired by ! Inspired by
|- |-
| "]" | "]"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| "]" | "]"
| ] | ]
|- |-
| ] | ]
| ] ("Carlotto")<ref group=note>Carlotto's painting was in turn probably inspired by ] of the ].</ref> | ] ("Carlotto"){{refn|group=note|Carlotto's painting was in turn probably inspired by ] of the ].}}
|} |}
</center>


====Mosaics==== ==== Mosaics ====
] contains a copy of Rosselli's "The Last Supper".|alt=A stained glass window shows the crucifixion. On either side mosaics show angels holding symbols of the Passion and Glory of Christ. Beneath is a mosaic depicting Christ and His apostles celebrating the Passover.]]


The mosaics that decorate Stanford Memorial Church, which Taylor considers "a perfect complement to ] stained-glass windows", are "virtually everywhere" inside the church.<ref name="history"/> According to Gregg, Jane Stanford came up with the idea, calling it "idiosyncratic by some architectural historians",<ref name="gregg-18">Gregg, p. 18</ref> of extensively decorating Memorial Church's interior and facade, similar in style to the mosaics in many of the churches she and her husband admired during their travels in Europe. One of the reasons she chose mosaics was because of the similar weather in Italy and Northern California, where the moderate climates and rainy seasons in both settings protect the images from erosion and clear the pollution that accumulates on many buildings in large cities. As Hall states, the "mosaics on the facade are always clear and brilliant."<ref>Hall, p. 19</ref> During the Stanfords' 1883 tour of Europe, they visited ] in ] and ] in Venice. They met and befriended Maurizio Camerino, the manager of the ] studios, which had just completed restoring the mosaics at St Mark's.<ref name="watercolors"/>
]


The mosaic project began in 1900 and took five years to complete.<ref name="history"/> Jane Stanford chose mosaics to decorate her church because of the similar weather in Italy and Northern California, where the moderate climates and rainy seasons in both settings protect the images from erosion and clear the pollution that accumulates on many buildings in large cities. As Hall states, the "mosaics on the facade are always clear and brilliant."<ref>Hall, p. 19</ref> Their "shimmering quality" were created by different tones of green and gold;<ref name="page38"/> the artists that installed the mosaics had over 20,000 shades of colors to choose from.<ref name="page52"/> The images cost US$97,000,<ref name="glass"/><ref group=note>This figure is the equivalent of almost US$2 million in 2002.</ref> and were based upon original watercolors created by artist Antonio Paoletti.<ref group=note>Salviati & Company also designed and built eight large mosaics in ] and decorated the vestibuile of ].</ref> Jane Stanford worked closely with Paoletti, planning a combination of ] and ] scenes that represented men and women equally. Stanford began working with Camerino, who by that time had bought the Salviati studios, in 1899, and spent two months in Venice in the fall of 1900, selecting the watercolors created as the mosaics' patterns by Camerino's chief designer, Antonio Paoletti.<ref name="gregg-18"/><ref name="palmer">{{cite news | last = Palmer | first = Barbara | title = Mosaic Exhibit Shows Rejected Design for Memorial Church | work = Stanford Report | url = http://news.stanford.edu/news/2004/february25/mosaic-225.html | date = 23 February 2004 | access-date = 27 August 2017}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|In 1992, Camerino's family, in honor of the friendship between the Camerino and Stanford families, donated three watercolor studies of the Memorial Church mosaics, painted by Paoletti, to Stanford University. They were displayed in a back room at the headquarters of Salviati & Company in Venice before the donation, which took two years to procure. The watercolors, which measured 3 feet by 6 feet, included Paoletti's rendering of the church's exterior mosaic. University archivist Maggie Kimball called the paintings "important pieces of university history."<ref name="watercolors"/>}} Camerino's firm worked exclusively on the Stanford mosaics for three years; the project, which included the mosaics created for ], was the largest mosaic project in the U.S. at the time.<ref name="watercolors"/> Stanford worked closely with Paoletti, planning a combination of Old Testament and New Testament scenes that represented men and women equally.<ref name="history"/>


The mosaic project began in 1900, took five years to complete, and cost US$97,000.<ref name="history"/><ref name="glass"/>{{refn|group=note|This figure is the equivalent of almost US$3 million in 2017.}} The "shimmering quality" of the mosaics, which resemble ], were created by different tones of green and gold;<ref name="gregg-38"/> the artists that installed them had over 20,000 shades of colors to choose from.<ref name="gregg-52">Gregg, p. 52</ref> Paoletti's watercolors were divided into two-foot-square sections, which were made into glass by other artists in Venice. The mosaics were then shipped in pieces by boat to New York and then by railroad to California, where they were placed on the church's walls.<ref name="palmer"/>{{refn|group=note|After the mosaics were destroyed in the 1906 earthquake, they were able to be recreated because the original designs had been stored in the Salviati & Company studios.}} Artisan ] was given the task of supervising the in-studio fabrication and ] at Stanford, which took 4 years to complete.<ref name="history"/><ref>Hall, p. 30</ref>
The mosaic adorning the church's ] is a reproduction of ] ] of the ] from the ] in the ]. Camerino obtained permission from ] to reproduce it at Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="history"/> Unlike other works, which were reproduced frequently, it was the only reproduction of Roselli's fresco at the time.<ref>Hall, p. </ref> Artisan ] was given the task of supervising the in-studio fabrication and ] at Stanford. There are 12 mosaics in each transept balcony that are split into two sets of six, creating an arc of six mosaics, ten windows, and six mosaics. Most of the church's mosaics were made from 1/8-inch tiles; larger 3/4-inch tiles were used on the higher mosaics, and smaller 1/4-inch tiles were used in "The Last Supper" mosaic.<ref name="page52">Gregg, p. 52</ref> Mosaics are "virtually everywhere" inside the church and have been described as "a perfect complement to ] stained-glass windows".<ref group=note>List taken from Hall, pp. 31–33</ref><ref name="history"/>


The mosaic adorning the church's chancel is a reproduction of ] ] of the ] from the ] in the ]. Camerino obtained permission from ] to reproduce it at Stanford Memorial Church.<ref name="history"/> Unlike other works, which were reproduced frequently, it was the only reproduction of Rosselli's fresco at the time.<ref>Hall, p. 32</ref> There are 12 mosaics in each transept balcony that are split into two sets of six, creating an arc of six mosaics, ten windows, and six mosaics. Most of the church's mosaics were made from 1/8-inch tiles; larger 3/4-inch tiles were used on the higher mosaics, and smaller 1/4-inch tiles were used in "The Last Supper" mosaic.<ref name="gregg-52"/>{{refn|group=note|List taken from Hall, pp. 31–33}}
{| class="wikitable" border="1" {| class="wikitable" border="1"
|- |-
Line 322: Line 310:
! Location ! Location
|- |-
| "Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God"<ref group=note>Commonly known as "The Sermon on the Mount"</ref> | "Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God"{{refn|group=note|Commonly known as "The Sermon on the Mount"}}
| Outside facade | Outside facade
|- |-
| Love, Faith, Hope, and Charity mosaics | Love, Faith, Hope, and Charity mosaics
| Below facade, between windows | Below facade, between windows
|- |-
| Monogram medallions<ref group=note>Forms the Greek letters ''alpha'' and ''omega'' and Christ's initials ('']'').</ref> | Monogram medallions{{refn|group=note|Forms the Greek letters ''alpha'' and ''omega'' and Christ's initials ('']'').}}
| Vestibule | Vestibule
|- |-
| Two cherub groups<ref group=note>Cherubs holding tablets with the inscriptions, ''Domus Dei Locus Orations'' ("The House of God, the place of prayer") and ''Domus Dei Aula Coeli'' ("The House of God, the forecourt of heaven").</ref> | Two cherub groups{{refn|group=note|Cherubs holding tablets with the inscriptions, ''Domus Dei Locus Orationis'' ("The House of God, the place of prayer") and ''Domus Dei Aula Coeli'' ("The House of God, the forecourt of heaven").}}
| In the frieze over the doors from the vestibule to the nave | In the frieze over the doors from the vestibule to the nave
|- |-
| "Our Lord on His Throne Surrounded by the ], ], Kings and Friends" | "Our Lord on His Throne Surrounded by the ], ], Kings and Friends"
| Under the organ loft and over the doors | Under the organ loft and over the doors
|- |-
| "The Prayer of ]", "] Selects ] to be his Queen", "The ]", "] Casts His Spear at ]", "God's Promise to Solomon when ]" | "The Prayer of ]", "] Selects ] to be his Queen", "The ]", "] Casts His Spear at ]", "God's Promise to Solomon when ]"
| East Nave, under the arches of the east wall | East Nave, under the arches of the east wall
|- |-
| "]"<ref group=note>This mosaic measures {{convert|12|ft|m}} by {{convert|15|ft|m}}.</ref> | "]"{{refn|group=note|This mosaic measures {{convert|12|ft|m}} by {{convert|15|ft|m}}.}}
| East door, near the pilaster | East door, near the pilaster
|- |-
| "]", "Driven From Eden", "]", "The ]", "] Saved From the Water" | "]", "The First Family",<ref name="gregg-61">Gregg, p. 61</ref> "]", "The ]", "] Saved From the Water"
| East clerestory over the arches | East clerestory over the arches
|- |-
| ], "] is Informed He Will Have a ], "Angel ] Announces to ] the Conception of ]", "Abraham Sees the ]", "] Prophecy" | ], "] is Informed He Will Have a ], "Abraham Sees the Promised Land", "Angel ] Announces to ] the Conception of ]", "] Prophecy"
| East clerestory between the windows | East clerestory between the windows
|- |-
| "]", "Seraph Choir"<ref group=note>Also called "The Glory of the Angels".</ref> | "]", "Seraph Choir"{{refn|group=note|Also called "The Glory of the Angels".}}
| The wall of the chancel | The wall of the chancel
|- |-
Line 358: Line 346:
| Above the west apse | Above the west apse
|- |-
| The four archangels emerging from clouds.<ref group=note>The ceiling of the dome is decorated in mosaic, a notable feature being a ] containing a large number of medallions.</ref> | The four archangels emerging from clouds.{{refn|group=note|The ceiling of the dome is decorated in mosaic, a notable feature being a ] containing a large number of medallions.}}
| Over the four pilasters supporting the dome | Over the four pilasters supporting the dome
|- |-
| Spandrels decorated in mosaic | Spandrels decorated in mosaic
| Dome ceiling | Dome ceiling
|- |-
| Child's face<ref group=note>This is the hidden mosaic in the church, and one of two mosaics to survive the 1906 earthquake.</ref> | Child's face{{refn|group=note|This is the hidden mosaic in the church, and one of two mosaics to survive the 1906 earthquake.}}
| Triangular area in front of dome | Triangular area in front of dome
|- |-
| "] and ]", "] Sees ] Approaching", "The Lord Speaks to Moses from the ]", "Moses is Ordered to take ]", "] finds a Captain for His Hosts" | "] and ]", "] Sees ] Approaching", "Moses is Ordered to take ]",<ref>Gregg, pp. 37, 52</ref> "Moses Sees the Promised Land", "] finds a Captain for His Hosts"
| Starting at the church entrance, the west wall of the nave, under the arches | Starting at the church entrance, the west wall of the nave, between the windows<ref>Gregg, pp. 42–43</ref>
|- |-
| "Old Testament Prophecies Concerning the ]" | "Old Testament Prophecies Concerning the ]"
Line 379: Line 367:
| West clerestory between windows | West clerestory between windows
|- |-
| "]", "Noah's Wife", "Isaac", "Rebecca", "Jacob", "Rachel", "]", "] (Tobias's wife)", "]", "]", "]", "]"<ref group=note>The ] over the doors are decorated with cherub singers and the remainder of the wall has tapestry mosaic work in a variety of colors.</ref> | "]", "Noah's Wife", "Isaac", "Rebecca", "Jacob", "Rachel", "]", "] (Tobias's wife)", "]", "]", "]", "]"{{refn|group=note|The ] over the doors are decorated with cherub singers and the remainder of the wall has tapestry mosaic work in a variety of colors.}}
| East Transept Gallery wall | East Transept Gallery wall
|- |-
| "]", "]", ]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]"<ref group=note> The lunettes of the doorways and the walls are decorated with tapestry mosaic work.</ref> | "]", "]", ]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]", "]"{{refn|group=note|The lunettes of the doorways and the walls are decorated with tapestry mosaic work.}}
| West Transept Gallery wall | West Transept Gallery wall
|} |}


====Organs==== ==== Organs ====
] and the ], rising from the organ loft|alt=The metal pipes of two organs are in wooden cases of different dates and styles in the organ loft. To the side of the organ is a mosaic showing God as creator.]]
Stanford Memorial Church houses four ], a "situation only a few places in the nation can boast",<ref name="morgan">{{cite news | last = Trevino | first = Laramie | title = Staff profile: Morgan on organ | work = Stanford News Service | date = 1999-11-10 | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/1999/november10/organist-1110.html | accessdate = 2008-10-10}}</ref> since most churches only have one. The presence of multiple and high-quality organs makes Stanford an ideal location for accomplished musicians, and the sanctuary one of California's best settings for instrumental and choral performance.<ref>Gregg, p. 8</ref> The organs produce "powerful music";<ref name="morgan"/> as ] ] states, "The vibrations go right through you. Some of the pitches you can actually feel in your bowels."<ref name="morgan"/> Morgan also claims that the instruments are "extremely fun to play",<ref name="morgan"/> and reports that the best place to hear the "full effect" of the church's organs is "down in the church, about halfway down the nave".<ref name="machine"/>


Stanford Memorial Church houses five ], a "situation only a few places in the nation can boast".<ref name="morgan"/>{{refn|group=note|According to Charles Hendrickson, president of the Associated Pipe Organ Builders of America, "Any church with more than two organs gets your attention".<ref name="unique">{{cite news|last1=Treviño|first1=Laramie|title=Unique organs to come alive at Stanford celebration|url=https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Unique-organs-to-come-alive-at-Stanford-2512318.php|access-date=3 March 2018|work=San Francisco Chronicle|date=7 November 2003}}</ref>}} The presence of high-quality organs makes Stanford an ideal location for accomplished musicians, and the sanctuary one of California's best settings for instrumental and choral performance. The church's ] is ].<ref>Gregg, p. 8</ref><ref name="morgan"/>
]
Stanford Memorial Church's original organ is still in use. It was built by ] in 1901 and sits in the upstairs galley. In 1915, an echo division with eight ] was added.<ref name="january">{{cite journal | last = Cross | first = Angela Kraft | title = January organ crawl | journal = SF/AGO Newsletter | work = San Francisco Chapter, American Guild of Organists | month = January | year = 2004 | url = http://sfago.org/SFAGO-01-2004.pdf | format = PDF | accessdate = 2008-11-21}}</ref> Damaged in the 1906 earthquake, the organ was rebuilt in 1925, enlarged in 1933, and thoroughly restored in 1996. It features three ] (keyboards for the hands), 57 stops, and over 3,700 pipes.<ref name="history"/><ref name="organs"/>


Stanford Memorial Church's first organ, the 1901 Murray Harris, named for its builder ], sits in the upstairs gallery and is still in use.<ref name="morgan"/> Damaged in the 1906 earthquake, the organ was rebuilt in 1925, enlarged in 1933, and thoroughly restored in 1996. It features three ] (keyboards for the hands), 57 stops, and over 3,700 pipes.<ref name="morgan"/><ref name="organs">{{cite web | title = Memorial Church Organs | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church/memorial-church-organs | access-date = 19 February 2018}}</ref> The Murray Harris plays music from the Romantic period;{{refn|group=note|Every organ specializes in a different period or style of music; the organs in Memorial Church create music from the 14th century up to contemporary times.<ref name="unique"/>}} its sound has been described as "romantic undulating" and "like a low-decibel airplane engine revving up"<ref name="unique"/> Morgan compares the Murray Harris to both a Rolls-Royce and a Bentley.<ref name="machine">{{cite news | last = Wallace | first = Rebecca | title = Video: 'A Fascinating Machine' | work = Palo Alto Weekly | date = 2009-06-05 | url = http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=12616 | access-date = 16 March 2018 | archive-date = August 20, 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130820170727/http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=12616 | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref name="unique"/>
Morgan, who has said that he "worships" the Fisk-Nanney organ, states that it is "a desperately famous instrument" and that it "rings with 'incredible clarity' and 'dark color'". He also calls it "a fascinating machine" and "the most beautiful instrument I've ever played".<ref name="machine">{{cite news | last = Wallace | first = Rebecca | title = Video: 'A fascinating machine' | work = Palo Alto Weekly | date = 2009-06-05| url = http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=12616 | accessdate = 2009-05-08}}</ref> The Fisk-Nanney is a four-manual instrument with 73 ranks and almost 4,500 pipes built in 1985 by the ] company. It is named after its designer, Charles Fisk, and for Herbert Nanney, the church's organist for 39 years.<ref name="morgan"/> The Fisk-Nanny organ originally was commissioned in 1973, when the church received a special endowment. Its completion was delayed for over 25 years due to logistical and financial problems. Its case is made of ] and the keyboards are fashioned from ]. The ] and ] are ] capped with bone. Its pipes are composed of various alloys of tin and lead. In order to accommodate the organ's weight, the ] had to be rebuilt and reinforced.<ref name="organs"/>


The Fisk-Nanney organ, which many consider one of the best organs in the world, was built in 1985 and is also housed in the church's upstairs gallery.<ref name="morgan"/><ref name="organs"/> It is named after its builder, ], and for Herbert Nanney, who was the church's organist for 39 years.<ref name="morgan"/> Although it was commissioned in 1973, its completion was delayed for many years, due to logistical, financial, and construction issues. The organ's case is made of poplar wood and its almost 4,500 pipes are made of varying sizes of lead and tin.<ref name="organs"/> Its keyboards, which Morgan calls the "flight deck,"<ref name="machine"/> are made with ], with ] making up its natural and sharps, and are capped with bone.<ref name="organs"/> The organ's keyboards are black on white, instead of the modern white on black.<ref name="machine"/> The ] create "a huge array of sounds".<ref name="machine"/>
], organist of Stanford Memorial Church, plays Bach's ] on the church's Fisk-Nanney.]]
The Fisk-Nanney, which Morgan compares to a "]",<ref name="machine"/><ref group=note>Morgan makes this comparison to the church's Murray Harris organ, another high-quality instrument he calls a "]".</ref> is able to "reproduce the sound of Baroque music as authentically as possible".<ref name="organs">{{cite web | title = Organs | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/memchuOrgans.html | accessdate = 2008-10-12}}</ref> It uses a "combination of elements from historic East German, North German, and French organs plus dual ]",<ref name="organs"/> and is the only organ in the church capable of authentically reproducing nearly all organ music written from the 16th through the 18th centuries.<ref name="organs"/> The organ features both French- and German-style ] and ]. It is equipped with a Brustpositiv division in ] that offers two split keys per octave (D-sharp/E-flat and G-sharp/A-flat). A lever allows the remaining divisions to alternate between ] and meantone temperament, a feature made possible by the inclusion of five extra pipes (two for each sharp key) per ].<ref name="organs"/> Morgan performed the complete organ works of ] during a series of recitals, eight hours in all, to celebrate the organ's 20th anniversary in 2005. He is giving a series of concerts during the 2009–2010 season to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Fisk-Nanney organ and his 10th year at Stanford by performing every pipe organ composition written by ], which will take him 18 hours.<ref name="machine"/>


] plays Bach's ] on the church's Fisk-Nanney.]]
The side chapel houses the Katherine Potter-Brinegar organ, a one-manual Renaissance-style instrument built by ] and modeled after the work of the 17th-century German organbuilder Esias Compenius.<ref name="organs"/> Built in 1995, it "further enhances"<ref name="organs"/> the diversity of the church's musical capacity. It has eight ], of which three are reeds. The majority of its pipework is made of wood. The organ can be moved easily to different locations in the building with the aid of hidden retractable wheels.<ref name="organs"/>


The Fisk-Nanney is a four-manual Baroque-type organ with 73 ranks. It uses a "combination of elements from historic East German, North German, and French organs plus dual ]", and is "the first instrument in the history of organ building that is capable of reproducing nearly all organ music written from the 16th through the 18th centuries".<ref name="organs"/> The organ, which "has remarkable complexity",<ref name="machine"/> features both French- and German-style ] and ]. It is equipped with a Brustpositiv division in ]. A lever allows the remaining divisions to alternate between ] and meantone temperament, a feature made possible by the inclusion of five extra pipes (two for each sharp key) per ].<ref name="organs"/>
The ] built by ] of Roy, Washington was acquired in June 2001. It contains three stops. The case and most of its pipes are made of walnut, and the keys are made of English boxwood and ebony.<ref name="memchu"/>


Morgan describes the organ's sound as "delicious" and "visceral", ringing with "'incredible clarity' and 'dark color'", and compares it to driving a Maserati.<ref name="machine"/> He insists that the best place to listen to the Fisk-Nanny is not upstairs in the gallery where it sits, but in the church, "about halfway down the nave".<ref name="machine"/> In 2005 Morgan performed the complete organ works of ] during a series of recitals, eight hours in all, to celebrate the organ's 20th anniversary. During the 2009–2010 school year, Morgan commemorated the 25th anniversary of the Fisk-Nanney organ and his 10th year at Stanford in a concert series of the complete organ works of ], which took 18 hours to complete.<ref name="machine"/>
== Services and facilities ==
]
Although the Stanfords were religious and viewed "spiritual and moral values as essential to a young person's education and future citizenship", they were not formally committed to any Christian denomination.<ref name="overview"/> As a result, Jane Stanford decreed, from the beginning of Stanford Memorial Church's history, that the church be ]. She believed that adopting this philosophy would "serve the broadest spiritual needs of the university community".<ref name="overview">{{cite web | title = Overview | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/memchu.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> The church's first chaplain, Charles Gardner, declared on the day of its dedication that the church's goal was to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way.<ref name="overview"/> The Stanfords' goal was that moral instruction would occur at the church, as demonstrated in the inscriptions carved into its walls, which was influenced by the late 19th-century liberal Protestantism they embraced.<ref name="page9">Gregg, p. 9</ref> As former Stanford chaplain Robert C. Gregg states, "The Stanfords sought to protect free intellectual inquiry&mdash;in classroom, laboratory, and church&mdash;from any interference prompted by the caution or dogmatism of religious authorities".<ref>Gregg, p. 10</ref>


]
Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest interdenominational church on the west coast of the US and has remained "among the most prominent".<ref name="memchu">{{cite web | title = Stanford Memorial Church | publisher = The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/docs/memchu_brochure.pdf | format = PDF | accessdate = 2008-10-13}}</ref> Multi-faith services are held at Stanford Memorial Church, in addition to denominational and non-denominational Christian services. As many as 150 weddings take place in the church each year<ref name="page29"/> as well as many memorial services for people affiliated with the university.<ref name="overview"/><ref name="weddings"/><ref name="memorial">{{cite web | title = Memorial services | publisher = The Office of Religious Life | url = http://www.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/serviceMServices.html | accessdate = 2009-04-30}}</ref> Members of the university community use it for "quiet, for reflection, and for private devotions".<ref name="page9"/> The church also hosts frequent musical performances from Stanford's own choirs and orchestra, as well as visiting groups such as the vocal ensemble ].<ref>{{cite news | last = Gant | first = Michael S. | title = Lively Days | work = Metro Santa Cruz Weekly | date = 2008-04-28 | url = http://www.metrosantacruz.com/metro/04.23.08/stage-livelyarts-0817.html | accessdate = 2008-11-18}}</ref> Catholic masses are held in the church several times a week. ] at the principal Sunday services are donated to local charitable organizations.<ref name="memchu"/>


Memorial Church's third organ, the Katherine Potter-Brinegar organ, was built in 1995 and was named for the spouse of Stanford alumni ].<ref name="unique"/> It "further enhances" the diversity of the organs in Stanford Memorial Church,<ref name="organs"/> and was inspired by a famous chamber organ designed by German organ maker Esias Compenius in 1610. It is self-contained, with its blower and bellows encased in its walnut case, and has hidden, retractable wheels that allow it to moved anywhere in the church. It is a single-manual organ; most of its pipework is made of different types of wood, and has 8 speaking stops, 3 of which are made of reed pipes.<ref name="organs"/> Its sound has been described as "relaxed and refined to the listener".<ref name="organs"/>
==Footnotes==

{{reflist|group=note}}
The ] built by ] of ] was acquired in June 2001. It contains three stops. The case and most of its pipes are made of ], and its keys are made of ] and English ].<ref name="organs"/>

In 2010 the church received on long-term loan a five-rank ]-style organ built by Hupalo & Repasky Pipe Organs. It is a recreation based upon the work of English organ builders and restorers ] and of the discovery in 1995 of the upper boards, grid, and table of a rare English organ, one of only three out of the five organs of the type in existence. It is a "small but tonally versatile" organ typical of the Tudor era of the 16th century.<ref name="organs"/>

The Tudor organ's 200 pipes are made from metals with high tin content, and its façade pipes have been gilded and embossed. Its case, which was inspired by organ cases in churches in Wales and ], is made of stained white oak, with hand-carved panels of linen fold and ] (inspired by the Tudor rose on Shrewsbury Tower at ] in Cambridge) carvings. The Tudor's keys are made of European pear wood; its sharps are made of ebony. It has two large feeder bellows that supply the organ's wind. The organ's sound is "surprisingly full and has a singing bell-like quality".<ref name="organs"/>

== Services and facilities ==
]
Although the Stanfords were religious and viewed "spiritual and moral values as essential to a young person's education and future citizenship", they were not formally committed to any Christian denomination.<ref name="aboutmemchu"/> As a result, Jane Stanford decreed, from the beginning of Stanford Memorial Church's history, that the church be non-denominational. She believed that adopting this philosophy would "serve the broadest spiritual needs of the university community".<ref name="aboutmemchu"/> The church's first chaplain, Charles Gardner, declared on the day of its dedication that the church's goal was to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way.<ref name="aboutmemchu"/> The Stanfords' goal was that moral instruction would occur at the church, as demonstrated in the inscriptions carved into its walls, which was influenced by the late 19th-century liberal Protestantism they embraced.<ref name="gregg-9">Gregg, p. 9</ref> As former Stanford chaplain Robert C. Gregg states, "The Stanfords sought to protect free intellectual inquiry—in classroom, laboratory, and church—from any interference prompted by the caution or dogmatism of religious authorities".<ref>Gregg, p. 10</ref>

Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest and has been "among the most prominent" ] churches on the West Coast of the United States.<ref name="aboutmemchu"/> Multi-faith services are held at Stanford Memorial Church, in addition to denominational and non-denominational Christian services. As many as 150 weddings or renewal ceremonies take place in the church each year, for current and former students and their children or grandchildren, for Stanford faculty and staff members, and for others connected to the university.<ref name="gregg-29"/><ref>{{cite web|title=Weddings|url=https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church/weddings|website=Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University|access-date=4 March 2018|archive-date=December 11, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191211015959/https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church/weddings|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|The first wedding, of 1902 Stanford graduates William A. and Ethel Rhodes Holt, took place at Memorial Church in February 1903.<ref name="gregg-29"/>}} Memorial services, conducted by Stanford's dean and other chaplain officials, for students, alumni, faculty, and staff are also conducted at the church.<ref>{{cite web|title=Memorial services|url=https://religiouslife.stanford.edu/memorial-church/memorial-services|website=Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University|access-date=4 March 2018}}</ref>

Members of the university community use Memorial Church for "quiet, for reflection, and for private devotions".<ref name="gregg-9"/> Catholic masses are held in the church several times a week.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sunday Mass |url=https://web.stanfordcatholic.org/sunday-mass |website=Catholic Community at Stanford |access-date=4 May 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |access-date=4 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190608202256/https://web.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/docs/memchu_brochure.pdf |archive-date=8 June 2019|title=Stanford University: Memorial Church|url=https://web.stanford.edu/group/religiouslife/docs/memchu_brochure.pdf|website=The Office for Religious Life|publisher=Stanford University}}</ref>

== See also ==
{{Portal|San Francisco Bay Area}}
*]

== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist|group=note}}


== Notes == == Notes ==
{{Reflist|3|refs=
{{reflist|2}}
}}


== References == == Bibliography ==
* Gregg, Robert C., Karen Bartholowmew, & Lesley Bone (1995). ''Stanford Memorial Church: Glory of Angels.'' Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Alumni Association. {{ISBN|0-916318-54-0}}
* Davis, Erik and Michael Rauner (2006). ''The visionary state: A journey through California's spiritual landscape''. San Francisco, Calif.: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-4835-3
* Gregg, Robert C., Karen Bartholowmew, & Lesley Bone (1995). ''Stanford Memorial Church: Glory of angels.'' Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Alumni Association. ISBN 0-9163-1854-0 * Hall, Willis Lincoln (1917). ''''. Palo Alto, Calif.: Times Publishing Co.
* Harvey, Van (Spring/Summer 1998). "". In ''Sandstone & Tile,'' Vol. 22, Nos. 2 and 3, pp.&nbsp;3–10.
* Hall, Willis Lincoln (1917). ''''. Palo Alto, Calif.: Times Publishing Co.
* Joncas, Richard, David J. Neuman, and Paul V. Turner (2006). ''The Campus Guide: Stanford University''. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. {{ISBN|1-56898-538-X}}
* Harvey, Van (Spring/Summer 1998). "Religious studies at Stanford: An historical sketch". In '''' Vol. 22, Nos. 2 and 3, pp. 3–10.
** Turner, Paul V., "The Stanford Campus: Its Place in History", pp.&nbsp;2–7.
* Joncas, Richard, David J. Neuman, and Paul V. Turner (2006). ''Stanford University''. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 1-5689-8538-X
** Joncas, Richard, "Part 1: The Stanford Farm and Other Early Buildings", pp.&nbsp;14–19.
* Oberhausen, Judy (Spring 2005). "Stanford Memorial Church: A late Victorian jewel". In '''' No. 10, pp. 3–4.
** Joncas, Richard, "Part 2: The Original Campus, 1886–1906", pp.&nbsp;20–53.
* Oberhausen, Judy (Spring 2005). "Stanford Memorial Church: A Late Victorian Jewel". In ''The Pre-Raphaelite Society Newsletter of the United States,'' No. 10, pp.&nbsp;3–4.


== External links == == External links ==
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Latest revision as of 08:54, 12 January 2025

Church at Stanford University in California, US

Floodlit view at night of the façade of the church. The facade has two stories, At the lower level are three arched doorways. In the upper level is a large central arched window flanked by tall narrow triplet windows. Above the windows rises a gable, richly decorated with a mosaic of a biblical theme and surmounted by a cross.
North façade of the Stanford Memorial Church from the Main Quad
12 An interior view looking from high in the gallery, past two large arches which support the dome, and into the lofty semi-circular chancel. The building is of very large scale, and every part of the interior is covered with mosaic or carved decoration. In the chancel, a priest officiates for a bride and groom with eleven attendants.
A wedding ceremony in the chancel

Stanford Memorial Church (also referred to informally as MemChu) is located on the Main Quad at the center of the Stanford University campus in Stanford, California, United States. It was built during the American Renaissance by Jane Stanford as a memorial to her husband Leland. Designed by architect Charles A. Coolidge, a student of Henry Hobson Richardson, the church has been called "the University's architectural crown jewel".

Designs for the church were submitted to Jane Stanford and the university trustees in 1898, and it was dedicated in 1903. The building is Romanesque in form and Byzantine in its details, inspired by churches in the region of Venice, especially, Ravenna. Its stained glass windows and extensive mosaics are based on religious paintings the Stanfords admired in Europe. The church has five pipe organs, which allow musicians to produce many styles of organ music. Stanford Memorial Church has withstood two major earthquakes, in 1906 and 1989, and was extensively renovated after each.

Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest and has been "among the most prominent" non-denominational churches on the West Coast of the United States. Since its dedication in 1903, the church's goal has been to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way. The church's first chaplain, David Charles Gardner, began a tradition of leadership which has guided the development of Stanford University's spiritual, ethical, and academic relation to religion. The church's chaplains were instrumental in the founding of Stanford's religious studies department, moving Stanford from a "secular university" at the middle of the century to "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford" in the late 1960s, when the study of religion at the university focused on social and ethical issues like race and the Vietnam War.

History

Early history

Half-length profile of a fashionable woman. Her hair is swept up, and she is wearing a modest pearl earring.
Jane Stanford commissioned the church and its artwork, and said, "While my whole heart is in the University, my soul is in that church".
Elderly Caucasian male, wearing a formal suit, with a watch fob, sitting in a chair and holding a cane.
Leland Stanford Sr., in 1890. Stanford Memorial Church is dedicated to his memory.

Stanford Memorial Church is located at the center of Stanford University, and is "the principle building that is seen as the visitor approaches the University along Palm Drive from Palo Alto". It sits the middle of the long southern range of the school's Main Quad. The church was commissioned by Jane Stanford (1828–1905) as a memorial to her husband, Leland Stanford (1824–93). The Stanfords had intended that a church should become "the centerpiece of the university complex". They were deeply religious, and for their day and social standing, "open-minded ecumenicalists", so Jane Stanford was determined that a church built on campus be a "nondenominational—if essentially Protestant—house of worship". Robert C. Gregg, who was chaplain of Memorial Church during the 1980s and 1990s, stated that the Stanfords had two objectives in building the church: to ensure that Stanford students had an opportunity to develop their ethics as well as their studies, and to provide comfort and strength to the community.

Leland Stanford died in 1893; legal disputes tied up the Stanford estate and prevented the completion of the university for several years. When the disputes were settled in Jane Stanford's favor, she was finally able to put into motion her wish for a church. In 1898, she and the university trustees requested design submissions for the church. In 1890, Jane Stanford visited her friend Maurizio Camerino in Venice, an artist with a reputation for producing high-quality mosaics; she and her husband had met him years earlier during one of their many trips to Europe. Stanford commissioned Camerino and his company, the Antonio Salviati studios, to produce mosaics for the church. Stanford was involved in every part of the church's design and construction. She was determined that the quality of the stonework of Memorial Church should equal the medieval churches she admired in Europe. According to Memorial Church chaplain Robert C. Gregg, "The grandeur of the church, articulated in its details, greatly occupied Jane Stanford—the structure was to be without flaw".

Groundbreaking for the church took place in May 1899; construction began in January 1900. After a delay of almost a year, Stanford Memorial Church was dedicated on January 25, 1903, with "impressive ceremonies". Demonstrating Jane Stanford's goal of ecumenicism, Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger of San Francisco's Congregation Emanu-El read the first Bible lesson. The church's pastor, Heber Newton, gave the sermon. A second service was held later that day, and D. Charles Gardner, the chaplain, gave the sermon. Stanford Memorial Church's first christening was held between the two services.

Jane Stanford once remarked: "While my whole heart is in the university, my soul is in that church". She died in 1905, and so did not live to see the damage caused by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Her funeral took place in the church, which was called one of her most important accomplishments and "the truest reflection of her visionary leadership", in March 1905. Clergy from several religious traditions, including a Rabbi, a Presbyterian minister, a Methodist minister, an Episcopal bishop, and a Baptist minister, officiated at the service.

Earthquakes

The same church at day, this time with a tower and spire rising to 80-foot (24 m) spire, over its centre.
The original church, before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake

Stanford Memorial Church has suffered two major earthquakes, in 1906 and in 1989. Although extensively damaged, the church was restored after each. The 1906 quake wrecked much of the church, felled the spire, cracked the walls, and "injured beyond repair" the mosaics and Carrara marble statuary in the chancel. The main cause of the severity of the damage was that the church's original construction failed to attach the crossing structure to the surrounding masonry and roof structures. When the earthquake hit the church, the crossing structure moved independently from the rest of the building, gouging gaping holes in the roofs over the east and west transepts, the nave, and chancel. Its original 12-sided, 80-foot spire and its adjoining clock tower fell on top of the chancel roof, destroying the tower dome's "frescoed Victorian interpretation of God's eye—complete with tear—surrounded by cherubs and shooting star". The debris hit and destroyed the marble sculptures of the twelve apostles that decorated the altar.

The spire was never repaired and the tower was removed and replaced by a simpler structure; however, the clock was saved and preserved in a temporary structure behind the church before eventually being placed in another building on campus, the Stanford Clock Tower. University trustees considered re-building the tower, and even looked at possible designs, but eventually chose not to rebuild it because they could not agree on its design, and chose instead to replace the tower with a domed skylight. The crossing structure also pushed the roof of the nave forward. The roof's weak connection to the church's front facade caused the facade to fall into the Inner Quad courtyard; as mosaic expert Joseph A. Taylor put it, "its wondrous mosaic was blown out and totally destroyed". The only mosaics not destroyed in the quake were the four angels that decorated the crossing. The back of the church, with several hundred feet of arcades, was also completely leveled because it too was not joined to the rest of the building.

Repairs of the earthquake damage began in 1908, despite misgivings from some university administration regarding its cost; it was closed between 1906 and 1913 while it was repaired. The university president had to postpone academic projects to pay for the church's restoration, as well as the restoration of the entire campus. Ultimately, they chose to repair Memorial Church because they recognized that it was "integral to the identity of the young university". The church and the Old Chemistry building were the only two buildings in the university's Inner Quad that were repaired. The extent of the damage was such that the church had to be completely rebuilt. The entire church, except for its surviving crossing structure and offices, was dismantled stone by stone, which, along with the windows, were labelled and stored, and were later relaid in their original positions. According to architecture historian Willis L. Hall in his 1917 book about the church, "In reconstruction great care has been taken to assure permanence". The stones were securely bolted to each other, "making the whole structure practically one massive hollow rock on a great steel foundation skeleton". The tile floor was replaced with cork. The building's crossing received a tiled hipped roof and an oculus, which lit the interior of the church, and was added above the renovated dome, which had a frescoed ceiling decorated with bronze designs as opposed to the gold leaf present before the earthquake. The original rose window above the front facade was replaced with one with a simpler arch shape because it was more similar to the style of the rest of the buildings in the Inner Quad.

Rectangular dedication plaque, which states, "Memorial Church erected by Jane Lathrop Stanford to the glory of God and in loving memory of her husband Leland Stanford"
The replacement dedication plaque installed after the 1906 earthquake

The dedication, which was engraved in large letters below the facade mosaic, was replaced by a smaller dedication plaque placed at the lower left of the facade, a choice the university alumni magazine called "a tremendous improvement". Camerino's design of the mosaics that were to fill in the empty space created by the removal of the original dedication, which he offered free of charge, were rejected in favor of a simple version created by John K. Branner (son of university president John Casper Branner) in 1914. Camerino, who did not appraise the damage until 1913, restored the interior mosaics. He had saved the original drawings in Venice, so he removed and re-fabricated the chancel mosaic, and redesigned the entire exterior mosaic. The Stanford alumni magazine, in early 1917, after the completion of the interior mosaics, declared the renovation complete, stating that "the church, for almost the first time since it was begun, is finished". Its appearance after the renovation was "significantly transformed".

In 1989 the church was damaged again, in the Loma Prieta earthquake. Although the damage was not as serious as the '06 earthquake, it "spurred intricate strengthening and restoration work" to protect further damage from future earthquakes. The Stanford Quake ‘06 Centennial Alliance stated that the damage was not devastating, even though the building did not fulfill the more stringent earthquake codes in place in 1989, because of the previous renovation after the '06 earthquake. The Alliance also stated that if the earthquake had been stronger or lasted longer, the damage would have been more extensive. The integrity of the structure remained, but the crossing structure, the only major part of the building that was not dismantled and replaced after the 1906 earthquake, buckled and caused several stones in the north and west arches to slip as much as 2 inches (5.1 cm).

The four mosaic angels in the pendentives, which decorated its high rounded walls directly below the church's dome and served as the setting beds for hundreds of thousands of tesserae, were severely damaged. Parts of the fallen mosaics were stolen, but later returned anonymously. The angels' damage caused large chunks of mortar and glass to fall to the floor 80 feet (24 m) below, while other sections "were left hanging by the sheer geometry of their arched shape". An eight-foot mosaic section of an angel's left wing in the church's northeast corner fell 70 feet (21 m) to the floor. Several stones from the east arch wall fell onto pews in the balcony, and the organ-loft railing collapsed inward. Although the damage was minor, the church remained closed until 1992 while restoration, as well as a bracing project to protect the building from future earthquakes, without changing the building's decorations, was carried out. The university hired a team of contractors, structural engineers, architects, and conservation specialists to develop a renovation plan, which was paid for by a $10 million fundraising drive. Many donations came from undergraduates, and the university's board of trustees approved the plan before its funding was in place because they recognized the church's importance to Stanford.

In this restoration, the entire crossing was strengthened by bracing it behind the dome and securing it to the superstructure of the building. The restoration team evaluated every decoration in the church and made improvements and changes as necessary, in order to preserve the building's interior elements. They also discovered that the crossing's four large arches were hollow; they also found remnants of the steel frame that supported the original clock tower within a 20" void space in the church's arched walls. They had to fill the void with more than 470 tonnes of concrete and several layers of reinforcing steel in order to improve the walls' stability, an accomplishment the Alliance called "one of the most challenging retrofit feats implemented at Stanford".

The roofs, which had not been replaced since 1913, were rebuilt with plywood diaphragms, 30,000 new red clay tiles were installed, and the stones from the decorative arches were reinserted. The wing of the damaged angel was restored; Stanford University hired William Kreysler and Associates to create a new backing system to secure this angel and three other mosaic angels to the base of the dome, which included replacing the original bonding materials (a weak lime mortar), with steel angles that anchored the mosaics to the walls and with a stronger polymer resin. The renovators found a piece of the original mosaic from the vestibule wall, which had a Chi Rho design, in the foundation, and inserted it into the Communion Table in the chancel, linking the current building with the pre-1906 church. The Victorian chandeliers were repaired and rewired, and the transept balconies, which had been closed for twenty years because they were declared unsafe, were reopened, after the false doors on the south side of each balcony were replaced by emergency exits and connected to existing staircases on the other side of the wall. A new sprinkler system and a new audio system was also installed. Stanford Memorial Church was rededicated by chaplain Robert C. Gregg on November 1, 1992.

Influence

Gifted as a preacher as well as a jazz pianist, Napier turned the chapel into what some regarded as Christian theater—the introduction of jazz and other types of experimental worship as well as provocative preaching. Suddenly a jam-packed Memorial Church became the fashionable place for undergraduates to congregate on weekends.

Stanford professor Dr. Van Harvey

According to Stanford professor Van Harvey, Stanford "had the reputation of being a completely secular university" before the 1950s, calling the period a "background of aggressive secularism and the almost complete neglect of the academic study of religion". In 1946, Merrimon Cuninggim, a visiting chaplain at Stanford Memorial Church, criticized the serious lack of religious and spiritual resources available at Stanford for its students and criticized the university's lack of academic courses offered in the study of religions. Cuninggim insisted that the university's administration and trustees were responsible because they had interpreted the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter in "a negative and restrictive fashion rather than as enabling the tolerance and the flourishing of many religious faiths on campus".

Cuninggim also charged that Stanford's religious policies were inadequate compared to other prominent U.S. universities. Two attempts were made to found a seminary to train pastors and religious leaders at Stanford, in 1921 and in 1940, but both failed. Harvey speculated that if Stanford had established a seminary like other prestigious universities, its religious studies department and the "ethos" of the entire institution would be different. In 1966, however, the university's board of trustees got a court order that allowed them to change the non-sectarian clause in Stanford's charter so that they could expand the university's religious program, which included permitting sectarian worship services at Stanford Memorial Church.

A white-haired man in a suit and pink tie is standing at a lectern, speaking into a microphone. Behind him is a plaque reading "FOREIGN PRESS CENTER WASHINGTON".
Michael Novak (shown here in 2004), has been one of the many speakers at Stanford Memorial Church in its history.

Stanford did not employ a full-time professor in religion until 1951 and did not establish a religious studies department until 1973, later than most other universities in the U.S. Earlier courses in religion were largely offered by the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church. David Charles Gardner offered a course in Biblical history and literature beginning in 1907, and by 1910, he was teaching New Testament Greek and Bible classes. Gardner's successor, D. Elton Trueblood, whose goal was the establishment of a non-denominational graduate school in religious studies at Stanford, taught classes about the philosophy of religion. In 1941 Trueblood's efforts to expand the study of religion resulted in the creation of a minor in religion, as well as twenty-one courses offered by him and four faculty members. By 1960, the chaplains of Stanford Memorial Church no longer had to run the program, which had expanded to allow students the option of majoring in the study of religion. By the mid-1960s, the religious studies program at Stanford was enjoying "enormous success".

In the 1960s, the study of religion at Stanford began to focus more on social and ethical issues like race and the Vietnam War. Leading this focus was Stanford Memorial Church Dean of the Chapel and Professor of Religion B. Davie Napier, who was "a powerful critic of U.S. policy in Vietnam". Napier, along with Stanford professors Michael Novak and Robert McAfee Brown, who had previously been faculty members of seminaries, were the subject of a Time Magazine article in 1966, describing "the renaissance of faith and learning at Stanford". Students crowded into the church to hear anti-war speeches by them, as well as by "notables" such as Linus Pauling and William Sloan Coffin. Harvey credited Napier for making the church a popular meeting place on campus for undergraduates and for turning it into "Christian theater—the introduction of jazz and other types of experimental worship as well as provocative preaching".

Stanford University was the first major educational institution in the United States that conducted same-sex commitment ceremonies at its chapel. Its first ceremony was held in 1993, and was officiated by Associate Dean Diana Akiyama. In 2017, a campus organization attempted to have Stanford Memorial Church declared a sanctuary church for the undocumented immigrant student population, but was unsuccessful due to university policies regarding the status of the church as part of the university.

Chaplains

Stanford Memorial Church, throughout its history, has been served by chaplains who have been influential amongst the Stanford University student body and community at large. R. Heber Newton, "distinguished writer" and former rector at All Souls Church in New York, was handpicked by Jane Stanford to serve as the church's first pastor; he resigned after four months in 1903 "because he disagreed with Mrs. Stanford on some aspects of church management". According to Stanford biographer Robert W. P. Cutler, "Newton's tenure had been a disappointment to Mrs. Stanford". David Charles Gardner, who replaced Newton, served the church from 1902 to his retirement in 1936. Stanford also handpicked Gardner as Newton's assistant because she was impressed with his "parish work" in Palo Alto. Gardner went on to teach courses in Biblical history and literature at Stanford. Influential English professor and Stanford historian Edith R. Mirrielees called Gardner "a preacher of only indifferent ability", but considered him "a strength to the whole university". Mirrieless considered Gardner the prime mover behind the creation of the Stanford Home for Convalescent Children, established in 1919, which eventually became the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital.

D. Elton Trueblood, a lifelong Quaker, was the church's chaplain from 1936 to 1946. Trueblood was also a professor of philosophy of religion at Stanford and established the university's first major in religious studies; his tenure there provided him with "the public visibility and financial freedom that made a national ministry possible". He wrote 33 books, including one about Abraham Lincoln. Trueblood and his wife hosted monthly Friends meetings in their home, and met weekly with Orthodox Jewish students in the vestry of Stanford Memorial Church. George J. Hall was the church's chaplain from 1946 to 1947, followed by Paul C. Johnson, who served between 1949 and 1950. Robert M. Minto was chaplain twice, in 1947–1948, and again from 1950 to 1973. Minto, an associate chaplain at Stanford for two years prior, was a pastor in Scotland and a former British naval chaplain during World War II.

Stanford's next two chaplains, B. Davie Napier (Dean of the chapel, 1966–72) and Robert McAfee Brown (Acting Dean of the chapel, 1972–73), were among the most politically active chaplains. Napier was an ordained Congregational minister. He was born in China to missionary parents, grew up in the American South, and went to seminary at Yale. He became known at Stanford "for his efforts to relate Scripture to the turbulent political times of the late 1960s". Napier was a "charismatic biblical scholar  ... a powerful critic of U.S. policy in Vietnam". Napier was also a "gifted" preacher and jazz pianist. Brown, the author of 29 books, became "an international leader in civil rights, ecumenical and social justice causes". He also protested U.S. involvement in Vietnam and taught religion and ethics in relation to contemporary life and literature.

Robert Hamerton-Kelly (1972–86), born in South Africa, was a United Methodist minister. He taught religion, classics, and Greek at Stanford. Thomas Ambrogi was acting dean for "a challenging year" in 1986. Robert C. Gregg (1987–98) was born in Texas and ordained as an Episcopal priest. He was also Professor of Religious Studies (now emeritus). Kelly Denton-Borhaug (1999–2000), a Lutheran minister, came to Stanford in 1996 as an associate dean. The Rev. Scotty McLennan (2001–2014), a Unitarian Universalist minister, was "an activist neighborhood lawyer" in Boston before becoming a university chaplain, first at Tufts University. Garry Trudeau, who was McLennan's roommate when they were students at Yale University, based his Doonesbury character, the Rev. Scot Sloan, in part on McLennan. He was replaced by the Very Rev. Jane Shaw, an Episcopal priest and "a historian of modern religion", in the fall of 2014.

Staff

Stanford Memorial Church is run by the Stanford Office for Religious Life, headed by the current Dean for Religious Life, Tiffany Steinwert. She replaced the Very Rev. Prof. Jane Shaw who was the dean for 4 years, 2014–18. Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann serves as Senior Associate Dean. Stanford has two associate deans: the Rev. Joanne Sanders and Sughra Ahmed.

Rabbi Karlin-Neumann is Stanford's first associate dean from outside the Christian tradition. Before coming to Stanford, Karlin-Neumann had been a Hillel director and chaplain at UCLA, the Claremont Colleges, and Princeton, and was a rabbi in Alameda, California. She has taught courses in Jewish feminism, rabbinical ethics, education, and social justice. The university changed the title of her position to accommodate a Jewish rabbi, from "Associate Dean of Memorial Church" to "Associate Dean of Religious Life at Stanford". She calls her title at Stanford "Mem Chu and a Jew, too".

Joanne Sanders, an Episcopal priest, has worked at Stanford since 2000. She has degrees in theology, sports administration and physical education. She "provides liturgical leadership for Memorial Church on campus for a variety of religious and other events".

Muslim dean Sughra Ahmed was appointed in 2017, for the purpose of, as Provost Persis Drell stated, to assist "the Stanford community develop a broader understanding of the Islamic faith, particularly at this time". She was named Muslim Woman of the Year in the United Kingdom in 2014, and is a recognized Muslim leader.

Robert Huw Morgan, a native of Wales, has been Stanford Memorial Church's organist since 1999. He attended St John's College, Cambridge, where he was an organ scholar, and earned two doctorates at the University of Washington in Seattle, where he served on staff as a pianist and conductor. At Stanford, he serves as a lecturer in organ, director of the Stanford University Singers, and director of the Memorial Church Choir.

Murder of Arlis Perry

Arlis Perry, a 19-year-old who lived on-campus, was murdered there on October 12, 1974.

Architecture

Memorial Church at night

Stanford Memorial Church is part of a linked, complex system of arcades that make up the Quad, which serves to unify the entire complex, is more reminiscent of European public spaces than American ones, and "is probably one of the most important feature of the original Stanford architecture". It was built during the American Renaissance period. Gregg called the church "a perfect example of the movement", with elements of the Renaissance, Byzantine and Medieval art, the Romanesque period, and the Pre-Raphaelites. The architectural style of Stanford Memorial Church has been referred to as "a stunning example of late Victorian ecclesiastical art and architecture with echoes of Pre-Raphaelitism". Stanford historian Richard Joncas called the church "an opulent example of high Victorian architecture with sumptuous materials and arts".

The original designs for Memorial Church and much of the university were made in 1886 by prominent American architect Henry Hobson Richardson; when he died that same year, his student Charles A. Coolidge completed them. Coolidge loosely based his design of Memorial Church on Richardson's design of Trinity Church in Boston. The church's heavy red tile roofs, round turrets, low arches, and rough-hewn stonework matches the design of other buildings in the Quad. After Jane Stanford's legal difficulties after her husband's death were resolved, she hired San Francisco architect Clinton E. Day to review and update the church's blueprints. Charles E. Hodges was the supervising architect for the project. Jane Stanford hired builder John McGilvray, who was responsible for constructing the St. Francis Hotel, the City Hall complex in San Francisco, and much of Stanford University, for the actual construction of Stanford Memorial Church.

The upper windows of the facade are surrounded by rich carvings.
Details of the upper windows of the facade

Jane Stanford's taste and knowledge of both contemporary and classical art is evident in several aspects of the plan, appearance, and architecture of the church, which "dazzle the eye yet also produce an atmosphere of quiet contemplation". According to Joncas, "the church emulates the 'glorious color' of the great European cathedrals", especially those in Italy. Although the iconography in the church is Christian, Stanford was a "late Victorian progressive", and chose the art less for its religious themes and more for its "humanitarian ethics". She requested that the designs include women, "to show the uplifting influence of religion for women"; Architectural historian Willis L. Hall claims that there are more depictions of women than in most church imagery at the time. Art historian Judy Oberhausen reports that Stanford used compendium of biblical illustrations like The Story of the Bible by Charles Foster, which contained 300 illustrations and summarized the events and stories she wished to depict in the church's windows and mosaics.

Jane Stanford's design included inspirational messages placed throughout the church in the form of inscriptions carved into its walls and enclosed in carved frameworks. As Barbara Palmer of the Stanford Report stated, Stanford "had her religious beliefs literally carved into the church's sandstone walls". For example, the following quotations can be found in the church's east transept:

Religion is intended as a comfort, a solace, a necessity to the soul's welfare; and whichever form of religion furnishes the greatest comfort, the greatest solace, it is the form which should be adopted be its name what it will.

The best form of religion is trust in God, and a firm belief in the immortality of the soul, life everlasting.

Plan

Plan of the Stanford Memorial Church:

The church is a cruciform structure; its original structure, which included a clock and bell tower with an 80-foot (24 m) spire, was 190 feet (58 m) long and 150 feet (46 m) wide. The facade faces the Inner Quad, and is connected to other buildings by arcades which extend laterally. The entry is through a narthex or vestibule extending across the building. The nave has a single aisle on either side, separated by an arcade with a clerestory above it. The crossing is formed by a structure of square plan which once supported the central tower. Over it is a shallow dome supported on pendentives and rising to a skylit oculus. High semicircular Romanesque arches separate the crossing from the nave, transepts and chancel. The chancel and transepts are apsidal. There are deep galleries with concave balustraded fronts in the transepts and an organ gallery above the narthex. The sanctuary, in the chancel, is elevated and approached by steps. A round-shaped room is at the back of the building, added in 1902 by architect Clinton Day.

Exterior

The chief building material of the church is buff sandstone, which came from the Goodrich Quarry (also called the Greystone Quarry) in the Almaden area of San Jose, was delivered by train and rough-cut in the university Quad. Gregg credits the high quality of the stonework to church and university builder John D. McGilvray. The church is roofed with terracotta tiles of the Italian imbrex and tegula form. The nave, chancel, and transepts appear to project from the square central structure, roofed with tiles and a small skylight above its center. Memorial Church originally had a central bell tower with an 80-foot tall, twelve-sided spire, but this was lost as a result of the 1906 earthquake.

The church's facade is surmounted by a simple Celtic cross, a motif that appears several times throughout the building. The cross was added after the 1906 earthquake; its central shaft was destroyed in the Loma Prieta earthquake and replaced. There are three arched entrances below the exterior mosaic; the central one is slightly larger than the others. The surrounding stonework is intricately carved with stylized flora, twisted-cable moldings, and bosses of sculpted cherubim, a motif which occurs in different media throughout the church. In the spandrels are mosaic depictions of the biblical concepts of love, faith, hope and charity intertwined in a vine representing the "tree of life".

In the upper zone of the facade, surrounded by more elaborate stonework and "lacy carving", is a large central window, with groups of three smaller windows on each side. The original central window was a quatrefoil-shaped rose window, but after the 1906 earthquake, it was replaced by a "classical round-head window that more grandly restates the smaller flanking, articulated openings" and that corresponded with the mission-style architecture of the Quad. Beneath the windows are inlaid panels of colored marble.

The gable and surrounding surfaces contain the church's largest mosaic, created by Maurizio Camerino's studio, which they rebuilt after the 1906 earthquake. Measuring 84 feet (26 m) wide at the base and 30 feet (9.1 m) in height, at the time of its completion, it was the largest mosaic in the U.S. It depicts a group of men, women and children, 47 in all, surrounding and "paying close heed" to Christ, the mosaic's central figure, and includes a landscape with "waving palms and a gleaming sky" behind Christ. The exterior mosaic took 12 men two years to complete.

After Jane Stanford's death, the mosaic popularly gained the name "The Sermon on the Mount", although Stanford University historian Richard Joncas insists that the mosaic does not depict the scene as described in the Gospel of Matthew and has referred to it as "an indefinite biblical scene". In the Stanford University press release about the 1992 gift of three watercolor studies for the church's mosaics, Paoletti's design for the facade is described as "Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God", based on Matthew 25:34. Paoletti created another unfinished watercolor depicting "The Last Judgment", as another option for the facade mosaic, but it was evidently rejected by Stanford.

A carving of the head and wings of an angel: above the angel is the bottom of a mosaic with the label "HOPE" and a margin which has a head with flowering ivy.Detail of the foliate carvings around the doorsJesus, with His arms stretched out, welcomes people who are coming towards him from both sides. A Middle eastern landscape is behind the group.Detail of the exterior mosaicThree men approach Jesus. One of them is pointing, and another kneeling.Detail of the facade mosaic, to the left of the windows

Interior

Wide-angle view of Stanford Memorial Church interior
Interior view from the organ loft looking towards the chancel

Jane Stanford has been described as having a "Victorian aversion to blank space" and so created a church that is "a dimly lit cavern of glowing mosaic surfaces ... and vibrant, stained-glass windows". The church is richly decorated throughout, its architectural features carved with formalized foliate ornament, and the walls adorned with mosaics in the Byzantine manner. Even though the church was dedicated in 1903, interior decoration took another two years to complete, with the installation of the mosaics and the carving of the extensive quotations on the walls occurring simultaneously. There are 29 large carvings of quatrefoils that contain ancient religious symbols in the walls of church's west and east transepts. The stained-glass windows were crafted by J. and R. Lamb of New York. Its exposed-timber ceilings are modeled after Boston's Trinity Church.

The church is entered through three bronze doors adorned with angels, a recurring motif throughout the church. The doors open up into a narthex or vestibule decorated with mosaics on the walls, illuminated by the many colors of the stained glass windows, and stone carvings on the architectural details. There is a variety of styles and motifs reflecting the hands of different craftsmen. The mosaic that adorns the floor depicts the Lamb of God surrounded by the symbols of the four gospel writers: St. Matthew (the winged angel), St. Mark (the winged lion), St. Luke (the ox), and St. John (the eagle). Some of these symbols also appear in other areas of the church. A Celtic cross adorns the stained glass above the central wooden door that leads into the nave, and Latin epigraphs have been engraved above the two side doors.

Above the narthex is an organ gallery. The nave is arcaded and has a single aisle on each side with clerestory windows above. Its walls, from the floor to the top of the clerestory, are decorated with 15 murals made of mosaics on each side, and depicts scenes from the Old Testament. The exposed timber ceiling was inspired by Trinity Church and is constructed with tied hammer beams, which can be seen radiating in the chancel. The floor of the church slopes downward towards the crossing. The chancel and transepts are three semi-circular apses. They are separated from the broad central space by large semi-circular arches on stout columns with carved capitals. The transept apses each have a balcony with a concave balustrade.

Directly above the crossing is a dome supported on pendentives. Around the base of the dome are decorative gilt bands, the lower depicting a scrolling vine. Jane Stanford intended the dome's decoration to be of mosaic tiles showing a variety of symbols, but the church's builders thought it would make the dome too heavy, so the decorations were painted. On the spandrels of the pendentives are mosaics of four angels measuring 42 feet (13 m) from wing tip to wing tip, rising from clouds. The angels survived the 1906 earthquake, but the angel looking downward was severely damaged during the 1989 earthquake because an 8-foot section of its left wing fell 70 feet (21 m).

The chancel, according to Hall, contains "artistic work of a kind seldom seen anywhere". The raised tiled floor of the chancel curves outward into the body of the church, and is approached by seven marble steps. The sanctuary is raised further, and enclosed by a marble altar rail behind which is an altar carved from white Carrara marble by L.M. Avenali. The altar supports a "simple unadorned brass cross that reflects the colors of the mosaics surrounding it." The cross was made by William van Erp and was dedicated to the memory of Jane Stanford in 1948.

A view into the chancel is framed on the right by the lectern supported by a standing brass angel. The chancel is semi-circular and has a roof on wooden beams. The upper walls have brightly coloured mosaics of prophets and angels. The white marble altar and mosaic reredos of "The Last Supper" can be seen.
Wide view of the chancel in Stanford Memorial Church

Behind the altar is a mosaic reproduction of Rosselli's "Last Supper". Around the lower walls of the chancel are twelve niches decorated with golden mosaic tiles. They hold candles, but originally held statues of the twelve apostles, destroyed in 1906 and were never replaced. According to local legend, the cherubim carved in stone above the golden niches and in the pillars' capitals are illustrations of children living on campus at the time of the church's construction. To the west side of the chancel stands brass lectern in the form of a reading angel, which Jane Stanford brought from Europe and dedicated to her husband on the anniversary of his birth in 1902.

Three stained glass windows in the apse depict the nativity, crucifixion, and ascension of Christ. The mosaics between them show angels, those on the left carrying a cross, those on the right carrying a crown. On the longer sections of the chancel wall, on either side of the windows, are mosaics depicting a choir of angels. Above them is a tier of mosaics with representations of the prophets and kings of Israel. Other mosaics abound in the transepts, clerestory, and the choir loft at the northern end of the church. A series of mosaics in the upper transepts depict Old Testament figures on the east side and Christian saints on the west side. On Jane Stanford's direction, they alternate male and female.

The arches, balcony rails, and pillars throughout the church have relief carvings created by a team of 10 men who worked for two years from scaffolding. A large double pillar before the entrance of the west transept have inscriptions dedicated to members of the Stanford family. After the 1989 earthquake, a third of the west transept was converted into a small chapel. The altar and chairs in this chapel were designed by Bay Area artist Gail Fredell who decorated the chapel's altar by using Salvatti's original mosaics, which had been stored since the church's reconstruction following the 1906 earthquake.

Windows

This stained-glass window shows two angels carrying a small child up towards Christ seated on golden clouds in while a group of people below are watching.
A window in the nave shows Christ welcoming a soul into Heaven, a reference to the death of Leland Stanford Jr.

According to architectural historian Willis L. Hall, the church's 20 large stained glass windows "are as much a feature of the church as the mosaics". The windows, designed by Frederick Stymetz Lamb (1862–1928) and fabricated by J&R Lamb Studios, his father's firm in New York City, took three years to complete, and eight months to install at Stanford. Jane Stanford hired Lamb because she felt he was more interested in "the ecclesiastical rather than commercial aspect of the work". The installation of the windows at Stanford Memorial Church was the largest commission awarded to an American stained glass artist at the time, and the project is "considered the finest example of Lamb's work". The window have a different appearance when viewed from the outside of the building because the reflected light highlights the textures of the glass panels, created by using many layers of different colored glass.

Stanford chose the life of Christ for the windows' theme, inspired by the religious paintings by European master painters such as Frederic Shields and Gustave Doré. The windows have a section at the bottom with the scriptural quotations their images depict; the larger windows also include their titles. Stanford's personal touch is shown in one of the nave windows, which is based on a cartoon by Paoletti and depicts Christ welcoming the soul of a child into Heaven before the eyes of its grieving mother, an allusion to the death of Leland Stanford Jr., the Stanfords' only child and the university's namesake, who died in 1884 of typhoid shortly before his 16th birthday.

Oberhausen, who has studied the source of the mosaics and windows, states that at least four stained glass windows were inspired by the paintings of Pre-Raphaelite artists that were enjoying a resurgence in popularity at the time. These windows are: "Christ in the Temple" in the east transept, based upon a painting by William Holman Hunt; "The Annunciation" in the east nave, inspired by a work by Frederic Shields; "The Nativity" in the chancel, based upon a painting by Edward Fellowes-Prynne; and "The Good Shepherd" in the west transept, inspired by a painting by Sibyl C. Parker, the only female artist represented in the artwork of the church. None of the windows of Stanford Memorial Church required replacement after the 1906 quake, except for "the famous rose window of the original structure" in the organ loft which was replaced by the current large, central arch window. This window, entitled "Lilies of the Field", is the only window in the church that cannot be viewed from the inside because it is blocked off by the central organ. There is a cross in the center of this window made of "faceted pieces of glass that are inset like gems", which sparkle when light strikes it.

The church's clerestory contains many smaller windows of individuals from the Bible or Christian history. The windows in the nave above the east arcade depict the following Old Testament figures: Abraham, Hagar and her child Ishmael, Moses, Pharaoh's Daughter, Joshua, and Deborah. The windows in the east transept depict David, Ruth, Solomon, The Queen of Sheba, Elijah, Esther, Isaiah, Judith, Daniel, and Hannah. In the nave above the west arcade feature saints and virtues: Stephen, Agnes, Peter, Priscilla, John, and Hope. In the west transept are Simeon, Anne, Matthew, Faith, Mark, Charity, Luke, Dorcas, Paul, and Martha. The clerestory above the east and west doors are two windows of angels. Unlike the other windows throughout the church, they do not receive natural light from outside and are artificially illuminated instead.

Stanford Memorial Church's stained glass windows, at the east side of the churchThe Virgin Mary kneels to receive the God's message from an angel. The dove of the Holy Spirit descends in rays of light."The Annunciation"The Holy Family are outside their carpenter's shop where Joseph is working at his bench and Mary is sitting on the steps, spinning with a distaff. Joseph looks towards Mary as the child Jesus carries some wood resembling a cross."The Home at Nazareth"Christ standing on mountain, stretches his arm towards the people gathered to hear Him speak."The Sermon on the Mount"Christ and his disciples are in a small boat caught in a tempest. While the disciples beseech him, Christ raises his hand to calm the storm."Christ Calming the Tempest"Christ stands at bedside of a sick young girl, holding her hand and gesturing for her to rise, while her parents kneel in prayer."The Raising of Jairus' Daughter"
East Nave
Title Inspired by
"The Annunciation" Frederic Shields
"The flight into Egypt" Bernhard Plockhorst
"The Home at Nazareth" Heinrich Hofmann
West Nave
Title Inspired by
"The Dream of Pilate's Wife" Doré
"The Angel at the Tomb" Axel Ender
"Lo, I Am with You Always" designed by Antonio Paoletti

East transept
Title Inspired by
"The Child Jesus in the Temple" "The Finding of the Saviour in the Temple" by William Holman Hunt
"The Baptism of Christ" Gustave Doré
"The Sermon on the Mount" Hofmann
"Christ Calming the Tempest" Anton Dietrich
"The Raising of Jairus' Daughter" Hofmann
West Transept
Title Inspired by
"The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes" "Pan y Peces" by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo
"Christ and the Adulteress" Hofmann
"The Good Shepherd" "The Door of the Fold" by Sibyl C. Parker
"Christ in the Home at Bethany" Hofmann
"Christ in Gethsemane" Hofmann

Chancel
Title Inspired by
"The Nativity" Edward Fellowes-Prynne
"The Crucifixion" Ernst Deger
The Ascension Johann Karl Loth ("Carlotto")

Mosaics

A stained glass window shows the crucifixion. On either side mosaics show angels holding symbols of the Passion and Glory of Christ. Beneath is a mosaic depicting Christ and His apostles celebrating the Passover.
Part of the Seraph choir mosaics located on the chancel wall. The reredos contains a copy of Rosselli's "The Last Supper".

The mosaics that decorate Stanford Memorial Church, which Taylor considers "a perfect complement to Frederick Lamb's stained-glass windows", are "virtually everywhere" inside the church. According to Gregg, Jane Stanford came up with the idea, calling it "idiosyncratic by some architectural historians", of extensively decorating Memorial Church's interior and facade, similar in style to the mosaics in many of the churches she and her husband admired during their travels in Europe. One of the reasons she chose mosaics was because of the similar weather in Italy and Northern California, where the moderate climates and rainy seasons in both settings protect the images from erosion and clear the pollution that accumulates on many buildings in large cities. As Hall states, the "mosaics on the facade are always clear and brilliant." During the Stanfords' 1883 tour of Europe, they visited Byzantine churches in Constantinople and St Mark's Basilica in Venice. They met and befriended Maurizio Camerino, the manager of the Antonio Salviati studios, which had just completed restoring the mosaics at St Mark's.

Stanford began working with Camerino, who by that time had bought the Salviati studios, in 1899, and spent two months in Venice in the fall of 1900, selecting the watercolors created as the mosaics' patterns by Camerino's chief designer, Antonio Paoletti. Camerino's firm worked exclusively on the Stanford mosaics for three years; the project, which included the mosaics created for the university museum, was the largest mosaic project in the U.S. at the time. Stanford worked closely with Paoletti, planning a combination of Old Testament and New Testament scenes that represented men and women equally.

The mosaic project began in 1900, took five years to complete, and cost US$97,000. The "shimmering quality" of the mosaics, which resemble tapestry, were created by different tones of green and gold; the artists that installed them had over 20,000 shades of colors to choose from. Paoletti's watercolors were divided into two-foot-square sections, which were made into glass by other artists in Venice. The mosaics were then shipped in pieces by boat to New York and then by railroad to California, where they were placed on the church's walls. Artisan Lorenzo Zampato was given the task of supervising the in-studio fabrication and final installation at Stanford, which took 4 years to complete.

The mosaic adorning the church's chancel is a reproduction of Rosselli's fresco of the Last Supper from the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. Camerino obtained permission from Pope Leo XIII to reproduce it at Stanford Memorial Church. Unlike other works, which were reproduced frequently, it was the only reproduction of Rosselli's fresco at the time. There are 12 mosaics in each transept balcony that are split into two sets of six, creating an arc of six mosaics, ten windows, and six mosaics. Most of the church's mosaics were made from 1/8-inch tiles; larger 3/4-inch tiles were used on the higher mosaics, and smaller 1/4-inch tiles were used in "The Last Supper" mosaic.

Title(s) Location
"Christ Welcoming the Righteous into the Kingdom of God" Outside facade
Love, Faith, Hope, and Charity mosaics Below facade, between windows
Monogram medallions Vestibule
Two cherub groups In the frieze over the doors from the vestibule to the nave
"Our Lord on His Throne Surrounded by the Four Evangelists, Apostles, Kings and Friends" Under the organ loft and over the doors
"The Prayer of Hannah", "Ahasuerus Selects Esther to be his Queen", "The Judgement of Solomon", "Saul Casts His Spear at David", "God's Promise to Solomon when Building the Temple" East Nave, under the arches of the east wall
"The Garden of Eden" East door, near the pilaster
"God Separating Light from Darkness", "The First Family", "The Deluge", "The Tower of Babel", "Moses Saved From the Water" East clerestory over the arches
"Noah is Ordered to Build the Ark", "Abraham is Informed He Will Have a Son", "Abraham Sees the Promised Land", "Angel Gabriel Announces to Zacharias the Conception of John the Baptist", "Daniel's Prophecy" East clerestory between the windows
"Last Supper", "Seraph Choir" The wall of the chancel
"John the Baptist", "Ezekiel", "Samuel", "Jeremiah" Above the east apse
"David", "Elijah", "Moses", "Isaiah" Above the west apse
The four archangels emerging from clouds. Over the four pilasters supporting the dome
Spandrels decorated in mosaic Dome ceiling
Child's face Triangular area in front of dome
"Rebekah and Isaac", "Rachel Sees Jacob Approaching", "Moses is Ordered to take Israel out of Egypt", "Moses Sees the Promised Land", "Joshua finds a Captain for His Hosts" Starting at the church entrance, the west wall of the nave, between the windows
"Old Testament Prophecies Concerning the Coming of Christ" Over the west door, near the pilaster
"Moses Receiving the Tablets of the Law", "Joshua Successor of Moses", "David Anointed for the First Time", "Meeting of David and Abigail", "David Singing His Psalms" West clerestory, over the arches
"Joseph Sold by His Brothers", "Jacob Going to Canaan", "Isaac Blessing Jacob", "Dream of Jacob", "Abraham Restrained From offering up Isaac" West clerestory between windows
"Noah", "Noah's Wife", "Isaac", "Rebecca", "Jacob", "Rachel", "Tobias", "Sarah (Tobias's wife)", "Nathan", "Deborah", "Aaron", "Naomi" East Transept Gallery wall
"St. Helena", "St. James", St. Margaret", "St. Andrew", "St. Philemon", "St. Thaddeus", "St. Elizabeth", "St. Bartholomew", "St. Mary Magdalene", "St. Barnabas", "St. Gertrude", "St. Philip" West Transept Gallery wall

Organs

The metal pipes of two organs are in wooden cases of different dates and styles in the organ loft. To the side of the organ is a mosaic showing God as creator.
The wooden cases and metal pipes of the two largest organs, the Murray Harris and the Fisk-Nanney, rising from the organ loft

Stanford Memorial Church houses five organs, a "situation only a few places in the nation can boast". The presence of high-quality organs makes Stanford an ideal location for accomplished musicians, and the sanctuary one of California's best settings for instrumental and choral performance. The church's organist is Robert Huw Morgan.

Stanford Memorial Church's first organ, the 1901 Murray Harris, named for its builder Murray M. Harris, sits in the upstairs gallery and is still in use. Damaged in the 1906 earthquake, the organ was rebuilt in 1925, enlarged in 1933, and thoroughly restored in 1996. It features three manuals (keyboards for the hands), 57 stops, and over 3,700 pipes. The Murray Harris plays music from the Romantic period; its sound has been described as "romantic undulating" and "like a low-decibel airplane engine revving up" Morgan compares the Murray Harris to both a Rolls-Royce and a Bentley.

The Fisk-Nanney organ, which many consider one of the best organs in the world, was built in 1985 and is also housed in the church's upstairs gallery. It is named after its builder, Charles Brenton Fisk, and for Herbert Nanney, who was the church's organist for 39 years. Although it was commissioned in 1973, its completion was delayed for many years, due to logistical, financial, and construction issues. The organ's case is made of poplar wood and its almost 4,500 pipes are made of varying sizes of lead and tin. Its keyboards, which Morgan calls the "flight deck," are made with grenadilla, with rosewood making up its natural and sharps, and are capped with bone. The organ's keyboards are black on white, instead of the modern white on black. The stop controls create "a huge array of sounds".

Robert Huw Morgan plays Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in G minor on the church's Fisk-Nanney.

The Fisk-Nanney is a four-manual Baroque-type organ with 73 ranks. It uses a "combination of elements from historic East German, North German, and French organs plus dual temperaments", and is "the first instrument in the history of organ building that is capable of reproducing nearly all organ music written from the 16th through the 18th centuries". The organ, which "has remarkable complexity", features both French- and German-style reeds and principal choruses. It is equipped with a Brustpositiv division in meantone temperament. A lever allows the remaining divisions to alternate between well temperament and meantone temperament, a feature made possible by the inclusion of five extra pipes (two for each sharp key) per octave.

Morgan describes the organ's sound as "delicious" and "visceral", ringing with "'incredible clarity' and 'dark color'", and compares it to driving a Maserati. He insists that the best place to listen to the Fisk-Nanny is not upstairs in the gallery where it sits, but in the church, "about halfway down the nave". In 2005 Morgan performed the complete organ works of Dieterich Buxtehude during a series of recitals, eight hours in all, to celebrate the organ's 20th anniversary. During the 2009–2010 school year, Morgan commemorated the 25th anniversary of the Fisk-Nanney organ and his 10th year at Stanford in a concert series of the complete organ works of Johann Sebastian Bach, which took 18 hours to complete.

five rank organ from the front
The Hupalo and Repasky five-rank Tudor-style organ shown against the walls of the side chapel

Memorial Church's third organ, the Katherine Potter-Brinegar organ, was built in 1995 and was named for the spouse of Stanford alumni Claude S. Brinegar. It "further enhances" the diversity of the organs in Stanford Memorial Church, and was inspired by a famous chamber organ designed by German organ maker Esias Compenius in 1610. It is self-contained, with its blower and bellows encased in its walnut case, and has hidden, retractable wheels that allow it to moved anywhere in the church. It is a single-manual organ; most of its pipework is made of different types of wood, and has 8 speaking stops, 3 of which are made of reed pipes. Its sound has been described as "relaxed and refined to the listener".

The continuo organ built by Martin Pasi of Roy, Washington was acquired in June 2001. It contains three stops. The case and most of its pipes are made of walnut, and its keys are made of ebony and English boxwood.

In 2010 the church received on long-term loan a five-rank Tudor-style organ built by Hupalo & Repasky Pipe Organs. It is a recreation based upon the work of English organ builders and restorers Martin Goetze and Dominic Gwynn and of the discovery in 1995 of the upper boards, grid, and table of a rare English organ, one of only three out of the five organs of the type in existence. It is a "small but tonally versatile" organ typical of the Tudor era of the 16th century.

The Tudor organ's 200 pipes are made from metals with high tin content, and its façade pipes have been gilded and embossed. Its case, which was inspired by organ cases in churches in Wales and Stanford-on-Avon, is made of stained white oak, with hand-carved panels of linen fold and Tudor rose (inspired by the Tudor rose on Shrewsbury Tower at St. John's College in Cambridge) carvings. The Tudor's keys are made of European pear wood; its sharps are made of ebony. It has two large feeder bellows that supply the organ's wind. The organ's sound is "surprisingly full and has a singing bell-like quality".

Services and facilities

Looking down the center aisle at a bride and groom standing before a minister in front of the altar: a red carpet covers the floor of the aisle, and the church is full of on-lookers.
As of 1995, there had been over 7,000 weddings at Stanford Memorial Church.

Although the Stanfords were religious and viewed "spiritual and moral values as essential to a young person's education and future citizenship", they were not formally committed to any Christian denomination. As a result, Jane Stanford decreed, from the beginning of Stanford Memorial Church's history, that the church be non-denominational. She believed that adopting this philosophy would "serve the broadest spiritual needs of the university community". The church's first chaplain, Charles Gardner, declared on the day of its dedication that the church's goal was to serve the spiritual needs of the university in a non-sectarian way. The Stanfords' goal was that moral instruction would occur at the church, as demonstrated in the inscriptions carved into its walls, which was influenced by the late 19th-century liberal Protestantism they embraced. As former Stanford chaplain Robert C. Gregg states, "The Stanfords sought to protect free intellectual inquiry—in classroom, laboratory, and church—from any interference prompted by the caution or dogmatism of religious authorities".

Stanford Memorial Church was the earliest and has been "among the most prominent" non-denominational churches on the West Coast of the United States. Multi-faith services are held at Stanford Memorial Church, in addition to denominational and non-denominational Christian services. As many as 150 weddings or renewal ceremonies take place in the church each year, for current and former students and their children or grandchildren, for Stanford faculty and staff members, and for others connected to the university. Memorial services, conducted by Stanford's dean and other chaplain officials, for students, alumni, faculty, and staff are also conducted at the church.

Members of the university community use Memorial Church for "quiet, for reflection, and for private devotions". Catholic masses are held in the church several times a week.

See also

Footnotes

  1. The Stanfords built the university, which opened in 1891, to honor their only child, Leland Stanford Jr., who died in 1884 of typhoid shortly before his sixteenth birthday. A church had been envisioned but not started when the senior Leland Stanford died in 1893.
  2. When the Stanfords' son died in Florence in 1884, Camerino, who spoke fluent English, rushed to their side to help them as an interpreter.
  3. Salviati & Company also designed and built eight large mosaics in Stanford's museum and decorated the vestibule of the university's mausoleum.
  4. Both Gregg and ceramic expert Joseph Taylor recount what Taylor called the "legend" about Stanford's practice of using her notched parasol to gauge if Memorial Church's stone carvings were as deep as the churches she admired in Europe. Both Gregg and Taylor reported that Stanford would personally examine construction with the church's architect and builder, carrying her parasol and wearing long skirts, even up to the highest scaffolding.
  5. According to the Stanford Quake ‘06 Centennial Alliance, an organization dedicated to studying the effect of the 1906 earthquake on Stanford University, the choice improved the church's design. The alliance also reported that contemporary engineers praised the quality of the reconstruction, which was said to be the best of its kind at the time.
  6. William Kreysler described the repair in detail in Flash Point Magazine in 2013.
  7. Gregg also wrote Glory of Angels, the 1995 book about MemChu.
  8. For a complete list of the inscriptions, see Hall pp. 39–45.
  9. Love is represented by a mother with wings encircling children.
  10. Domus Dei Aula Coeli ("The house of God, the forecourt of heaven") above the right door; Domus Dei Locus Orationis ("The house of God, the house of prayer") above the left door.
  11. Lamb created "subtle shadows" in the angel's robe by using layers of colored glass and white glass. He also created a luminescent effect by setting the angel against a dark background.
  12. The best time to view these windows is in the early morning.
  13. Carlotto's painting was in turn probably inspired by Raphael's painting of the Transfiguration of Christ.
  14. In 1992, Camerino's family, in honor of the friendship between the Camerino and Stanford families, donated three watercolor studies of the Memorial Church mosaics, painted by Paoletti, to Stanford University. They were displayed in a back room at the headquarters of Salviati & Company in Venice before the donation, which took two years to procure. The watercolors, which measured 3 feet by 6 feet, included Paoletti's rendering of the church's exterior mosaic. University archivist Maggie Kimball called the paintings "important pieces of university history."
  15. This figure is the equivalent of almost US$3 million in 2017.
  16. After the mosaics were destroyed in the 1906 earthquake, they were able to be recreated because the original designs had been stored in the Salviati & Company studios.
  17. List taken from Hall, pp. 31–33
  18. Commonly known as "The Sermon on the Mount"
  19. Forms the Greek letters alpha and omega and Christ's initials (Chi Rho).
  20. Cherubs holding tablets with the inscriptions, Domus Dei Locus Orationis ("The House of God, the place of prayer") and Domus Dei Aula Coeli ("The House of God, the forecourt of heaven").
  21. This mosaic measures 12 feet (3.7 m) by 15 feet (4.6 m).
  22. Also called "The Glory of the Angels".
  23. The ceiling of the dome is decorated in mosaic, a notable feature being a frieze containing a large number of medallions.
  24. This is the hidden mosaic in the church, and one of two mosaics to survive the 1906 earthquake.
  25. The lunettes over the doors are decorated with cherub singers and the remainder of the wall has tapestry mosaic work in a variety of colors.
  26. The lunettes of the doorways and the walls are decorated with tapestry mosaic work.
  27. According to Charles Hendrickson, president of the Associated Pipe Organ Builders of America, "Any church with more than two organs gets your attention".
  28. Every organ specializes in a different period or style of music; the organs in Memorial Church create music from the 14th century up to contemporary times.
  29. The first wedding, of 1902 Stanford graduates William A. and Ethel Rhodes Holt, took place at Memorial Church in February 1903.

Notes

  1. Nguyen, Ivy; Najarro, Ileana (October 17, 2011). "Jobs honored at MemChu service". The Stanford Daily. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  2. ^ Gregg, p. 34
  3. Joncas, p. 16
  4. ^ "About Memorial Church". Office for Religious Life. Stanford University. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  5. ^ Harvey, p. 3
  6. ^ Harvey, p. 7
  7. ^ Gregg, p. 17
  8. Gregg, p. 14
  9. ^ Joncas, p. 27
  10. ^ Barr, Sheldon (September 2002). "Venetian Glass at Stanford University". Magazine Antiques.
  11. ^ Davis, Erik; Rauner, Michael (2006). The Visionary State: A Journey through California's Spiritual Landscape. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. p. 36. ISBN 0-8118-4835-3.
  12. Gregg, p. 11
  13. ^ Hall, p. 21
  14. ^ "Venetian Family Donates Historic Watercolors of Church Mosaics" (Press release). Stanford University. March 3, 1992. Retrieved January 2, 2018.
  15. ^ Taylor, Joseph A. "Memorial Church History". The Office for Religious Life at Stanford University. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  16. Hall, p. 25
  17. Gregg, pp. 22–23
  18. ^ Gregg, p. 22
  19. Gregg, pp. 10–11
  20. ^ "Stanford Memorial Church Dedicated Yesterday with Impressive Ceremonies". San Francisco Chronicle. January 26, 1903.
  21. Oberhausen, p. 4
  22. "Obituary Jane Stanford". The New York Times. March 25, 1905. p. 9.
  23. ^ Hall, p. 22
  24. Gregg, p. 24
  25. ^ "Repair of Monuments 4: Memorial Church". Quake '06 Walking Tour. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  26. Gregg, pp. 25, 28
  27. ^ Gregg, p. 25
  28. Palmer, Barbara (July 13, 2001). "His Ph.D. Beckoning, Clock Tower Caretaker Winding Down His Volunteer Duties". Stanford Report. Archived from the original on July 18, 2007. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  29. ^ Gregg, p. 29
  30. Junkerman, Charles (Fall 2010). "A Biography of Stanford Sandstone: From Greystone Quarry to Stone River" (PDF). Sandstone & Tile. 34 (3): 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 22, 2013. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  31. ^ Gregg, p. 26
  32. ^ Gregg, p. 30
  33. ^ Kreysler, William. "In Defiance of Gravity: The Restoration of Stanford's Angels". Flash Point. 6 (2).
  34. Gregg, pp. 30–31
  35. Gregg, pp. 38–39
  36. ^ Gregg, p. 31
  37. ^ Harvey, pp. 3–4
  38. Bartholomew, Karen; Claude Brinegar; Roxanne Nilan (2001). A Chronology of Stanford University and Its Founders. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Historical Society. p. 90. ISBN 0-9664249-1-3.
  39. Harvey, pp. 4–6
  40. Harvey, p. 6
  41. Honan, William H. (July 22, 1997). "Harvard Allows Gay Couples to Hold Ceremonies at Its Chapel". The New York Times. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  42. Chaung, Angie (October 18, 1993). "A First for Mem Chu". Vol. 204, no. 16. Stanford Daily. p. 1. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  43. Samrai, Yasmin (October 26, 2017). "Campaign to make Memorial Church a 'sanctuary church' meets obstacles". The Stanford Daily. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
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Bibliography

  • Gregg, Robert C., Karen Bartholowmew, & Lesley Bone (1995). Stanford Memorial Church: Glory of Angels. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Alumni Association. ISBN 0-916318-54-0
  • Hall, Willis Lincoln (1917). Stanford Memorial Church: The Mosaics, the Windows, the Inscriptions. Palo Alto, Calif.: Times Publishing Co.
  • Harvey, Van (Spring/Summer 1998). "Religious Studies at Stanford: An Historical Sketch". In Sandstone & Tile, Vol. 22, Nos. 2 and 3, pp. 3–10.
  • Joncas, Richard, David J. Neuman, and Paul V. Turner (2006). The Campus Guide: Stanford University. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 1-56898-538-X
    • Turner, Paul V., "The Stanford Campus: Its Place in History", pp. 2–7.
    • Joncas, Richard, "Part 1: The Stanford Farm and Other Early Buildings", pp. 14–19.
    • Joncas, Richard, "Part 2: The Original Campus, 1886–1906", pp. 20–53.
  • Oberhausen, Judy (Spring 2005). "Stanford Memorial Church: A Late Victorian Jewel". In The Pre-Raphaelite Society Newsletter of the United States, No. 10, pp. 3–4.

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