|
HISTORY
At
a public meeting held in August, 1883, a movement was begun to erect
a Chapel in the community. On a plot of ground on North Franklin
Street donated by George Sholl, a brick edifice, costing $7000,
forty by seventy feet, and crowned with a steeple more than one
hundred feet high with a bell weighing 2,034 pounds was erected. The
cornerstone was laid on September 28, 1883, and the Chapel was
dedicated in October, 1884, "for the use of any denomination
professing the teachings of Christ and His followers, on proper
consent obtained from the board of trustees controlling the
house."
By
1911 the flourishing condition of the Sunday School made it
necessary to add a two-story annex. Because the Chapel was so
conveniently situated, the congregations began to hold more of their
services in it; consequently, the Chapel was maintained principally
by them. On September 25, 1921, by a decree from the Court of Berks
County, the Church Council and the Consistory of St. Paul’s Union
Church were given absolute rights to all matters pertaining to St.
Paul’s Chapel.
In
1936 a renovation program was undertaken: a Dorner Organ was
installed, the choir loft lowered, and the chancel entirely
refurnished.
On
October 24, 1954, when definite action had been taken by both
congregations to build separate churches, the Ladies Aid Society
conducted a Dissolution Service. An auction was held on September
15, 1958, to dispose of items from both churches which could not be
equitably divided or which neither congregation desired to own. The
building was to be sold.
In
the summer of 1959 the Chapel was demolished and became the site of
the new Post Office.
By
1911 the flourishing condition of the Sunday School made it
necessary to add a two-story annex. Because the Chapel was so
conveniently situated, the congregations began to hold more of their
services in it; consequently, the Chapel was maintained principally
by them. On September 25, 1921, by a decree from the Court of Berks
County, the Church Council and the Consistory of St. Paul’s Union
Church were given absolute rights to all matters pertaining to St.
Paul’s Chapel.
In
1936 a renovation program was undertaken: a Dorner Organ was
installed, the choir loft lowered, and the chancel entirely
refurnished.
On
October 24, 1954, when definite action had been taken by both
congregations to build separate churches, the Ladies Aid Society
conducted a Dissolution Service. An auction was held on September
15, 1958, to dispose of items from both churches which could not be
equitably divided or which neither congregation desired to own. The
building was to be sold.
In
the summer of 1959 the Chapel was demolished and became the site of
the new Post Office.
ST.
PAUL’S UNION SUNDAY SCHOOL
St.
Paul’s Union Sunday School had its beginning shortly after the
Civil War on the first floor of the Old Church built in 1841. The
members were divided into small classes of four or five, according
to age, and each class had its own teacher. Accompaniment for the
singing was provided by the church organ probably played by Richard
Peter, then organist. Oil lamps in wall brackets and a long oil lamp
chandelier hanging from the ceiling made it possible to have
Christmas entertainments in the evening. These programs were well
attended since the town offered very little other entertainment.
When
the four-room high school was erected in 1877, the Sunday School was
moved from the Old Church to the second floor of the school
building. The two rooms on this floor had a partition made of
sliding panels; when these were opened, the resulting area provided
a large space for Sunday School activities. A small organ provided
music, the children sat at the desks, and the teachers stood before
the pupils to teach.
In
1883 George Sholl donated a tract of land on North Franklin Street
for the erection of a Chapel to be used especially for Sunday
School, Commencements, Christmas festivals, and
interdenominational services. The Sunday School was then moved
from the school building into the Chapel in 1884. Each class
occupied the halves of two benches with reversible backs which made
it possible for ten or twelve pupils and a teacher to sit facing
each other during the lesson period.
By
1911 the school had reached such large proportions that it was
necessary to build a two-story annex. The first floor was used by
the Primary Department and the second floor as a storeroom until
1914 when the Everyman's Bible Class arranged it as a classroom for
their lesson period using seats from the defunct Onyx Theater on
West Main Street.
In
1913 the Everyman’s Bible Class secured a charter from the
Pennsylvania Sabbath School Association; the Ladies’ Bible Class
(later Willing Workers’ Class) organized about two years later,
followed by the Sunshine Class, and several others. St. Paul’s
also boasted a Ladies’ Bible Class conducted in German
from about 1906 to 1926. This class occupied four benches in the
forward right hand corner of the Chapel, later occupied by the
officers of the school. Mr. Franz Kurzweg was the teacher and his
wife served as substitute.
The
superintendents and officers, although elected by the members,
stayed in office as long as they desired to serve. Mr. Calvin H.
Adam was superintendent continuously for thirty-two years and Mr.
Oscar M. Koller was treasurer for fifty-four. In 1926 a Lutheran and
a Reformed superintendent were elected, who alternated in opening
and closing the sessions and coordinated all Sunday School
activities.
The
ticket system of awards was used in the Old Church, continued in the
school building, and in the Chapel until about 1906 when Little’s
Cross and Crown System for perfect attendance took its place.
Because of the many bars accumulated by some faithful attendants,
which became cumbersome to wear, the Sunday School, about 1923,
devised its own system of attendance awards.
One
of the important annual events was the picnic or excursion on the
first Saturday in August. The earliest picnics were held in Dumns’
Grove, east of the Old Church. About 1876 the children were piled
into farmers’ hay wagons and conveyed to
woods opposite the present Kirbyville Hotel. Another year,
about 1882, an excursion went to Calipso Island Park located on an
island in the Lehigh River that was reached by a ferry. Other
picnics were held at Mt. Gretna, Lititz Park, Menlo Park, Dunkle’s
Park, Rittersville Park, Hilbert’s Grove, Willow Grove,
Fogelsville Park, Ontelaunee Park, Carsonia Park, Dorney Park, and
for many years, Hershey Park. The Hershey Park Picnic was a joint
community endeavor for a number of years.
On
June 9, 1957, the Union Sunday School became a part of history when
the Lutheran Sunday School held its first session in the new church
on East Arch and Laurel Streets. |