During Open House Chicago on Saturday, we dropped by a number of open churches, as usual. Chicago has many. Our first religious site was the United Church of Hyde Park, a Romanesque Revival structure designed by Gregory A. Vigeant, dating from 1889.
“United Church of Hyde Park is a tri-denominational faith community (United Church of Christ, Presbyterian Church USA, and United Methodist Church),” the church web site says. A Protestant parfait, I guess.
They’re barely visible, but the names of the Apostles are inscribed around the dome.
There are 12 places for names, and while I can’t read them, I assume they include Matthias rather than Judas. I’d hope so, anyway.
Elsewhere in Hyde Park is Augustana Lutheran Church.
It’s a mid-60s modernist design by Edward Dart, who is better known for Water Tower Place on Michigan Ave., though he did a lot of churches as well.
“A church more than any other building should reflect today’s culture, feeling, and the renaissance of our own era,” Dart said. That meant midcentury brick and concrete, and for all that not a bad design.
The Augustana grounds also include a spot of green space behind a brick wall near the street. Part of the space is given over to a columbarium.
Interestingly, the plaques on the wall (to the right in the above picture) don’t mark niches. Rather, they name people whose ashes have been scattered in the churchyard.
I suppose that’s Paul, though the only thing that tells me so is text on the wall nearby, from his Epistle to the Romans.
One more neighborhood Protestant church: Hyde Park Union Church, a 1906 design by James Gamble Rogers.
A bit dark inside, but I understand the acoustics are really good.
Plus some impressive Tiffany windows, such as one depicting Joshua and Moses.
As the name indicates, the current church was formed by a merger between congregations. In this case, American Baptist Churches-USA and United Church of Christ.
During the course of the day, we passed by a few other churches that I’d have peeked inside, had they been open. Such as a Baptist church in Bronzeville, which is otherwise home to a number of fine churches.
And a Unitarian church of considerable heft, back in Hyde Park.
I can’t remember visiting a Unitarian church before, though I probably have. Still, I was definitely curious to know how this one is decorated inside. Like this, turns out.