A blog dedicated to photographs of churches and church architecture in the Rocky Mountain West.
Showing posts with label St. Anthony's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Anthony's. Show all posts
Thursday, June 15, 2023
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Centennial Postponed
St. Anthony of Padua Church in Casper, Wyoming was dedicated in August, 1920. It had planned to celebrate that event this August.
And then COVID 19 struck:
THE 100-YEAR CELEBRATION
For The Dedication of St.
Anthony's Church Building has been
POSTPONEĆ
Due to the requirements mandated from The Health Department and the limited gathering size, the Celebration Committee moved the event to next summer with the hope more people will feel comfortable attending and the requirement of everyone needing to wear a face mask won’t exist. This will make it a more enjoyable time to celebrate the church where it all began for our Catholic Community.
We wish to thank the following sponsors for their commitment to this event, and
Thank you to all who have supported, planned, and used their time and talents on this project. Stay tuned, we will be back in 2021.
Thursday, April 9, 2020
Saturday, December 2, 2017
St. Anthony Catholic Church, Guernsey Wyoming
This modern architecture church is St. Anthony Catholic Church in Guernsey Wyoming, the training headquarters of the Wyoming Army National Guard and a farming, ranching and railroad community. The church is served by St. Rose of Lima in Torrington, which was posted here just the other day.
There are an unusual number of St. Anthony's Catholic Churches in Wyoming. I'm not sure how this came about, but there are at least four, including this one.
Friday, August 18, 2017
St. Anthony's Catholic Church. Upton, Wyoming.
St. Anthony is a very popular patron saint for Catholic Churches in Wyoming for reasons of which I'm not aware. This is one of three churches in the Diocese of Cheyenne which is dedicated to St. Anthony.
This St. Anthony's is the smallest, being in the smallest town. This Prairie Gothic Catholic Church is located in small Upton, Wyoming, near the Black Hills. It's a mission church of the church in Newcastle.
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Stop! Don't change that Church!
A theme, if not always an obvious one, of this blog is architecture.
And nothing does more violence to traditional, serviceable, and beautiful architecture, than "updating" it for any reason.
Just don't.
A case in point.
The photograph above, unfortunately not entirely in focus and in black and white, dates from November 1958. It depicts St. Anthony's of Padua Church in Casper Wyoming on the occasion of my parents wedding.
Now, St. Anthony's remains a beautiful church today, but if we had a picture of the interior (which I don't from this angle) and if we had this picture in sharper focus (which it isn't) and in color (which it is not), we'd notice some changes right away.
And they aren't good ones.
The altarpiece and the altar are all still there. The cross painted on the wall behind the altarpiece is also still there. But many other things have changed.
Most obvious, the beautiful marble altar rail in this photograph, a gift of the Schulte family when the church was built, is gone. I was told that a part of it can be found now in a local restaurant, which I hope is not true. If it is true, I've never seen it, so it must be some place I don't go to. It's not clear here, but the gate for the altar rail was marble with heavy brass hinges. A true work of art in every sense.
The heavy brass lanterns hanging from the ceiling are also gone.
What appears to be a marble ambo is gone as well, replaced by a very nice wooden (walnut?) one.
The statute of St. Patrick moved across town to St. Patrick's, which sort of makes sense. The funds to build St. Patrick's came from St. Anthony's donors, many of whom were Irish, to that we'd ultimately send the statute of the Patron Saint of Ireland over there, which we did only fairly recently, does square with the general them there.. The statute of St. Anthony has been moved to a different spot, but it looks good where it is.
I'm not certain what sort of floor covering we're looking at here, probably carpet, and of course we have new carpet. But what would strike anyone looking at this photo about what is next to the carpet, the pews, is that the pews are now cantered to face towards the center of the alter.
Okay, what's up with all of that, and was it an improvement?
Well, I suppose that's in the eye of the beholder, as all such things are, but in my view, the answer is a very distinct "no".
It's funny how these things work. I can remember all of the features depicted here, including the altar rail, even though I was very young when at least that feature came out. But, at the time, I don't think I thought much about it, if I thought about it all. I don't remember the Mass being in Latin at all, although when I was very, very young, it must have been. Anyhow, while these things didn't bother me at the time, or the one change that I recall from when I was a bit older, the cantering of the pews, didn't bother me much, now they do.
That may be because I now have a greater appreciation for history and tradition than I did when I was just a boy, although I had a sense of that at the time.
The cocked angle of the pews, remnants of a decision made by a Priest in the 1970s or perhaps early 80s, has been something I've never liked, even if I understand the intent behind it. Not visible in this photograph, a row of pews that were in the middle of the church were taken out to facilitate twice as many Communion servers. It's awkward and always has been and should not have been done. Indeed, as this was the only Catholic Church in town with it was built, it was probably jam packed nearly every Mass and they seemed to manage to get by just fine. For that matter, I've been in plenty of packed Catholic churches where everyone came up to the front of the church and it always worked just fine as well. Having said that, changing the angle of the pews didn't do a great disservice to the church even if it didn't really help it any.
Another matter, however, is the altar rail.
Now altar rails turn out to be a surprisingly hot button item to people not familiar with them.
All Latin Rite Catholic Churches and Anglican Churches had altar rails. Chances are very high that other churches close in form to the Catholic Church also had them, I just don't know. Their purposes was to provide a place for communicants to kneel when receiving communion. Prior to Vatican II (1962 to 1965) all Latin Catholic in modern times received communion on the tongue. Communicants would kneel at the altar rail and receive communion.
You'd think that finding a public domain photograph of communicants receiving communion at an altar rail would b easy, but it isn't. This almost illustrates it in a better fashion, however. British solders lined up, as if there is an altar rail, and receiving communion in teh field in North Africa. Off hand, I suspect that this is an Anglican service.
Now, before we get too far down this road it should be noted that people can get really up in arms about this in all sorts of ways and some traditionalist will insist that communion can only properly be received kneeling and on the tongue. This doesn't seem to be true and certainly wasn't universally the case. Indeed, originally, the very first Christians, received communion in the hand and you can find very early writings that effect. However, traditionalist will hotly dispute what those writings and the other evidence actually means. Given as I'm not getting into that debate, I'm not going there and that isn't the point of this entry.
What is the point is that altar rails were an integral part of the design of churches for an extremely long time. Take anything out of a well designed building and you risk subtracting from its design. That's exactly what I think occurred here.
Which isn't to say that I feel that St. Anthony's is a bad looking Church now, far from it. It's still a beautiful church. But it was more beautiful before the marble altar rail was taken out.
Indeed, the problem with making alterations to these well designed structures is that any time that this is done it risks giving into a temporary view in favor of a more traditional element that was integral in the design of the structure while doing damage to its appearance. All Catholic churches up until the id 1960s were designed to have altar rails. Taking them out may have served what was, and perhaps is, the view of the day in regards to worship, but it also means that a major feature of the interior of the building, to which careful consideration had been given, was now missing.
And it turns out that, contrary to widely held belief, they did not have to be removed.
Most people believe that the altar rails were taken out as it was somehow required post Vatican II. It wasn't. Rather, for whatever reason changes in the Mass now allowed them to be. They didn't have to be. Theoretically it was apparently up to individual Pastors on whether they thought an altar rail should be removed, but given as in Wyoming they are nearly all missing, it might have been the case that the decision to remove them was made at the Diocesan level. The motivating thought here was that the altar rail served to act as a sort of barrier to connection between the people and the Offering of the Mass, and those who supported altar rail removal often felt fairly strongly about that (as we'll see below). This was, I think, part of an overall change in the Mass at that time, when it went from Latin to the local vernacular, as the Celebrant had faced Ad Oreintum while offering the Mass. That is, the Priest faced his altar, as a rule, with his back to the Congregation.
Now all of this gets into some fairly complicated symbolic matters. There's some truth to the view held by those who argued for the new position and removing the altar rails, in at he "we're all one together sense". There a counter point, however, that maybe the Ad Oreintum orientation actually served that better, as the Priest was facing the same direction for significant portions of the Mass that the parishioners were. That is, by way of a poor example, if somebody faced you in a large group they're more likely to have some elevated authority over you than if somebody has their back to you, in which case they can be argued to be working with you. Interestingly in recent years there's been a slow return in some areas to the Ad Oreintum orientation, particularly following Cardinal Sarah's suggestion that this was a better form. The Cardinal occupies a high position at the Vatican and therefore his views cannot be easily discounted. As has been noted in regards to this there's actually never been an official position on which orientation is better, and in some ancient and modern churches the Ad Orientum position is actually impossible.
In any event, what that did was in part to remove an item that was closely connected to the church and hence the parish and the parishioners. In this case, the altar rail itself had been a gift from a family early in the parish's history. In Catholic parishes the pastor is usually there for about seven years and bishops can be in office for long or short periods. However, as the parishioners are often there for decades, that means the traditional in which they participated was removed by individuals who were there on a more temporary basis. It was certainly "legal", if you will, but it might not have been well advised.
The same is true of most, but not all, of the interior changes to the church. A person can debate the aesthetics of the heavy brass lighting, but the church was built with it in mind and the features that once decorated where it attached to the building remain there to this day. The removal of one confessional, the relocation, in an awkward fashion, of a place for "music ministers" to stand that resulted, and all of that, were done in a heartfelt fashion, but often to the ascetic detriment of the church which was not built with remodels in mind.
This touches, moreover, on the larger topic of church architecture itself, which as been addressed in another one of our rare commentary threads here. These older churches are better looking as the architecture and design that came in during the 1970s was not as good as earlier architecture, and according to some focused more on the congregation than on the Divine. This blog was at one time going to avoid all such churches in general, but as time has gone on its put up posts of quite a few. Many of these churches are just not good looking. By the same token, many alterations to older churches are not good looking either.
As I noted when I started off, a lot of this stuff did not bother me when I was a child and experiencing it, but it does now. Indeed, the removal of the altar rail in this church frankly makes me mad when I think of it. I wish it could go back in. It won't, of course, but the whole thing upsets me. I'm not alone, I think, on this sort of thinking and I think it reflects a generational befuddlement with the generations immediately preceding us which seems to have had, in many instances, low respect for tradition in general. In civil society, in terms of structures, this is probably why we now see all sorts of effort to restore the appearance of old buildings whose owners in the 50s, 60s, and 70s didn't give a second thought about making them ugly through renovation. A prime example of that is the Wyoming National Bank building in Casper Wyoming which was made to look hideous by the additional of a weird steel grating in the 1950s to its exterior which was supposed to make it look modern. It mostly served to house pigeons and was removed in the 2000s when the building was redone and converted to apartments.
Now, not every one feels this way, I should note. Particularly in regards to churches. When I posted this same photograph on Facebook, a friend of mine with a few years on me posted this reply (I hadn't commented on the altar rails in my original post):
So happy that the railings have come down and the hats came off! The church is still so beautiful.
I agree that the church remains beautiful, and I agree that the women wearing head coverings is a tradition that I don't miss, but I don't feel that way about the altar rail at all.
I suspect my friends comment goes to a "spirit of Vatican II" feeling that she's old enough to have experienced and which I not only am not, but which I don't really share enthusiasm for. It's important to note that Vatican II and "the spirit of Vatican II" are not the same thing. "The spirit" thing was a zeitgeist of the times which took a decidedly more liberal and less traditional view of things, no doubt an "open the windows and doors and let some fresh air in". Some of that was likely needed but as is often the case with people who are in a "let in the fresh air" movement the realization that cold winds high winds can come in through the same windows and doors and do damage is rarely appreciated.
And its all too easy when traditions which are simply traditions are tossed to begin to toss out with them things that are more than tradition. I'm not saying that occurred here with altar rails but I will be frankly that the 1970s saw a lot of innovations, some of them very local poorly thought out that were, in some cases, quite problematic. The generation that thought removing the altar rails was a good idea proved willing to entertain a lot of things in this area that turned out to be big problems for everyone else.
Part of that is because traditions are anchors in a way; moorings to the the past. People of a "fresh air" bent will claim that a person shouldn't be bound by the past. That's true, but tradition is also in some cases the vote, or the expression of experience, of the dead and should not be lightly discounted. Not only does casting out traditions tend to sever anchors, but all too often the severing simply puts people adrift in seas that they're not well prepared to handle. At its worst, the severing of traditions is a rejection of the long and carefully thought out in favor of the temporarily current and the poorly thought out.
Which is why, for many people of the post Vatican II generation the "Spirit of Vatican II" generation, when moored in their own changes, can seem now old fashioned. Ironically younger generations have been busy for some time "reforming the reform", which means in the mainstream keeping the reforms that proved worthwhile and reversing those that did not. Tradition has, in some instances, come back in the opened door after having been swept out it, but with a younger generation.
All of which is well off point on what this thread started out being about. And I'm not going to start a "restore the altar rail" movement, locally or on the internet. But I feel it was a shame that it was taken out, and to the extent that alterations that should not have taken place for ascetic reasons in regards to older structures can be repaired, they ought to be.
Sunday, December 20, 2015
St. Anthony's of Padua Convent, Casper Wyoming
Not a church, but a former convent located next to the former St. Anthony's School, which can be seen to the right of this photograph. This convent included a chapel within it. It has not served as a convent for many years. This building is located one block from Our Savior's Lutheran Church, also depicted on this blog, and St. Mark's Episcopal Church is located on the next block, across the street from the school. The structure was built in 1954.
Postscript:
An article in today's Casper Star Tribune reveals that his building has been converted into luxury apartments, with no two being the same as no two rooms in the building were the same. It is presently at 60% occupancy. The developer, who owns the neighboring school, chose the name The Marian for it, recalling its role as a convent. The plan noted in the comments fell through, and he came up with this new one.
Date of original post: January 25, 2011.
Date of update: December 20, 2015.
Sunday, December 7, 2014
St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church, Casper Wyoming
This large Roman Catholic Church is located one block from St. Mark's Episcopal Church, the First Presbyterian Church, and the St. Anthony's Convent otherwise pictured on this blog. Built in the late teens and completed in 1920, funds to construct the church were raised from the parishioners. The church was formally dedicated by Bishop McGovern on August 15, 1920. The church rectory is next to it, and can be seen in the bottom photograph. To the far right, only partially visible in this photograph, is the Shepherd's Staff, the church offices.
This church served as the only Roman Catholic church in Casper Wyoming up until 1953, when Our Lady of Fatima was opened. The church also currently serves the St. Francis Mission in Midwest Wyoming.
St. Anthony's was recently updated (Spring 2014) to include a Ten Commandments monument.
My parents were married in this church in 1958 and I was baptized here.
The church has, within the entryway, a memorial to its parishioner's killed during World War Two.
I've noticed that this particular entry had tended to remain in the top three of the most observed entries on this blog, not that there's a lot of traffic on this blog. My theory is that people are hitting it looking for the Parish website. That being the case, you can find the parish website by hitting this link here.
Epilog:
St. Anthony's recently received a new set of steps. The old cement was decaying after a century of use. So, as a result, the front of the church now has a slightly different appearance.
Updated: December 7, 2014.
St. Anthony's Tri-Parish School, Casper Wyoming
This is not a church, but it is a school that includes a chapel. This is the current St. Anthony's Tri-Parish school, a grade school and middle school.
The original St. Anthony's School was located in the downtown area of Casper, but that school, having been built in 1927, was worn out by the 2000s. The new school, built with substantial private donations, is a much more modern school and quite a bit larger. Located on the grounds where Our Lady of Fatima Church is located, this structure is an impressive modern school.
The photo above is the old school, which is no longer used.
Cornerstone at the old St. Anthony's school with the phrase "For God and Country" in Latin. This also gives the year of construction, 1927, but that is difficult to see in this photograph.
Peace pole at the old St. Anthony's school.
Updated: December 7, 2014.
Friday, November 7, 2014
St. Anthony's of Padua Catholic Church, Cody Wyoming
This is St. Anthony's of Padua Catholic Church in Cody Wyoming. This Catholic Church is the largest parish in the United States, in geographic extent, as it covers over 6,000 square miles of territory. The Romanesque style church was built in 1954, replacing an earlier church. It's one of two Catholic Churches named for St. Anthony's of Padua, the other church so dedicated being located in Casper.
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