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St. Peter's Cathedral (Helena, Montana)

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Country
  
United States

Completed
  
1932

Phone
  
+1 406-442-5175

Architect
  
Harold C. Whitehouse

Founded
  
March 28, 1869

Opened
  
1932

Construction cost
  
90,000 USD

St. Peter's Cathedral (Helena, Montana)

Location
  
511 N. Park Ave. Helena, Montana

Denomination
  
Episcopal Church in the United States of America

Website
  
www.stpeterscathedral.net

Address
  
511 N Park Ave, Helena, MT 59601, USA

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Diocese
  
Episcopal Diocese of Montana

Similar
  
Cathedral of Saint Helena, Rocky Mountains, Montana State Capitol, Spring Meadow Lake Stat, Missouri Baptist Medical

St. Peter’s Cathedral is located in Helena, Montana, United States. It is the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of Montana.

Contents

History

The first Episcopal services were held in Helena on August 11, 1867 by Bishop Daniel Sylvester Tuttle and the Rev. E. N. Goddard. On March 28, 1869 Bishop Tuttle formed a Bishop's committee to establish an Episcopal mission in Helena; he celebrated Holy Eucharist in the courthouse.

He paid $1,200 for property on Warren and Grand Streets to build a church, known as St. Peter's Episcopal Church. A stone structure with a bell tower was completed for $12,000. Holy Eucharist was first celebrated there on October 19, 1879 and the church was consecrated on November 11, 1881.

By 1920, St. Peter's was led by Rev. Sidney Douglass Hooker, originally from Watertown, New York, who was rector through initial planning of the new cathedral. Fundraising for the present church building was begun 1927. Spokane, Washington architect Harold Whitehouse designed it in the English country Gothic style. He also crafted a myrtlewood cross for the church. (He was elected as a Fellow to the American Institute of Architects for his work.)

The cornerstone was laid by Bishop William F. Faber on September 10, 1931. The stones for the cathedral were quarried in the Helena area. The new St. Peter's Church was completed for $90,000 and dedicated by Bishop Faber on Easter Sunday, March 27, 1932. The bell and brass altar from the first church were used in the new one. It was designated as the pro-cathedral for the diocese.

Contemporary

St. Peter's served as a pro-cathedral until the mid-1990s, when it was redesignated as a parish church. It was re-designated a cathedral in 2004. Other buildings on the property included the deanery, completed in 1941 and now serving as the Bishop’s Office, and Wilson Hall, an education building completed in 1959.

It hosts the Togendowagon Society - a Native American ministry. Togendowagon means 'awakening'. Father Ray Brown celebrates Eucharist with drums, with offerings of sweet grass and sage, on the 2nd and 4th Saturdays of each month except July and August, due to powwow season.

St. Peters is also home to the group, Musikanten Montana, artistic director Kerry Krebill. They sponsor two music festivals early in the year and regularly tour.

References

St. Peter's Cathedral (Helena, Montana) Wikipedia