Puneet Varma (Editor)

United Methodist Church of Batavia

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Affiliation
  
Completed
  
1887

Opened
  
1887

Architect
  
Status
  
Active

Direction of façade
  
West

Phone
  
+1 630-879-7060

United Methodist Church of Batavia

Location
  
8 N. Batavia Ave.Batavia, Kane County, Illinois, U.S.

Leadership
  
Dr.Cynthia Anderson: Senior PastorJoshua Bailey-Green: Associate Pastor

Address
  
8 N Batavia Ave, Batavia, IL 60510, USA

Architectural style
  
Romanesque Revival architecture

Similar
  
First Methodist Church of, Batavia Depot Museum, Moore Park Spray Ground, Garfield Farm and Inn Muse, Mrs A W Gridley House

Profiles

The United Methodist Church of Batavia is a historical church in Batavia, Illinois. Funds for the church were donated by Rev. E. H. Gammon and Cpt. Don Carlos Newton in 1887 to replace the First Methodist Church of Batavia. It was designed by famed local architect Solon Spencer Beman in the Romanesque Revival style. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

History

The First Methodist Church of Batavia served the Methodist congregation in Batavia, Illinois from 1852 to 1887. The first minister of that church, Rev. E. H. Gammon, later entered the agricultural machinery business and became wealthy. He and industrialist Cpt. Don Carlos Newton donated a large sum of money to erect a new Methodist church in Batavia. Newton had recently visited southern France and was intrigued by the local French Romanesque Revival style. He recommended this style to prominent local architect Solon Spencer Beman, who was commissioned to design the building.

The exterior of the building was primarily constructed with local boulders, mostly from I. S. Stephens' Mill Creek Farm—Stephens also worked as the building's contractor. Limestone details were carefully crafted to provide contrast to the more erratic pattern of the boulders. The church is 106 by 60 feet (32 by 18 m) with a square nave featuring a barrel vault ceiling. The nave has thirteen rows of red oak pews in three segments. The tower rises 52 feet (16 m) from the ground with a pyramidal roof. Palladian archways on the north and south ends of the tower flank the bells.

The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 28, 1983. A three-story building was added as an extension in 1991. Services are still held in the church, which also organizes services in Herget Middle School in Aurora.

References

United Methodist Church of Batavia Wikipedia


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