Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Trinity Church (Newport, Rhode Island)

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Built
  
1726/1698

Designated NHL
  
November 24, 1968

Opened
  
1725

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Added to NRHP
  
24 November 1968

NRHP Reference #
  
68000004

Designated NHLDCP
  
November 24, 1968

Area
  
8,094 m²

Phone
  
+1 401-846-0660

Architect
  
Richard Munday

Trinity Church (Newport, Rhode Island)

Location
  
Queen Anne Square, Newport, Rhode Island

Part of
  
Newport Historic District (#68000001)

Address
  
141 Spring St, Newport, RI 02840, USA

Similar
  
Newport Artillery Company, Newport Country Club, Newport Reading Room, Salve Regina University, Rhode Island Historical

Profiles

Trinity Church, on Queen Anne Square in Newport, Rhode Island, is a historic parish church in the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island. Founded in 1698, it is the oldest Episcopal parish in the state. The current Georgian building was designed by architect Richard Munday and constructed in 1725–26. It is a National Historic Landmark.

Contents

History

The Newport, Rhode Island congregation began to gather about 1698. When Richard Coote, 1st Earl of Bellomont was investigating charges of the infractions of the Navigation Acts in Rhode Island, he requested that the Board of Trade send a minister from England to Rhode Island. The first church structure was built in 1700.

The present church building was constructed in 1725–26, designed by local builder Richard Munday, who based his designs on those that he had seen that Sir Christopher Wren had used in London churches in the late 17th century. The church's design is very similar to that of Old North Church in Boston. Trinity, however, was built entirely of wood. It is believed to be the only church building with its three-tiered wineglass pulpit remaining in its original position in the center of the aisle, in front of the altar. The building was enlarged in 1764, but otherwise retains its original character with box pews.

In 1731, Dean George Berkeley donated the first organ, whose wooden case, decorated with the Crown of England and the mitres of the archbishops of Canterbury and York, survives in place. The first organist was Charles Theodore Pachelbel, son of the famous German Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel.

The church was used as a garrison church by the British Army in 1776–1778. Local oral tradition reports that George Washington attended services there in 1781. The Chevalier de Ternay, the French admiral who died in December 1780, is buried in the churchyard.

Also interred here is Dr. Sylvester Gardiner, who in 1753 purchased an immense tract of Maine wilderness where he founded what is now the city of Gardiner. Many members of the Vanderbilt family attended the church when summering in Newport.

Historical architect, Norman Isham, restored several parts of the church in the 1920s. The church has been seen in several films, including Amistad, Moonrise Kingdom and Evening. The burial service for former Rhode Island Senator Claiborne Pell was held at the church in January 2009.

The current Rector is The Reverend Canon Anne Marie Richards.

Notable parishoners

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt II
  • George Berkeley
  • John Jacob Astor VI
  • Gilbert Stuart
  • Claiborne Pell
  • Charles Theodore Pachelbel
  • Richard Munday
  • Oliver Hazard Perry
  • Matthew C. Perry
  • Clement Clarke Moore
  • George P. Wetmore
  • Silvester Gardiner
  • Thomas Breese, U.S. Navy chaplain, Battle of Lake Erie
  • References

    Trinity Church (Newport, Rhode Island) Wikipedia