This past week was very difficult. Last Tuesday we lost one of our community members, Roger. The news of his death hit me very hard, so I was grateful that I was told the day before common art. That let me take care of myself first, so that I could be there for the community the next day. Moving through the day with the weight of this loss was challenging, but we found that we could share the burden together. Continue reading
Tag Archives: photography
2011
-
Sept. Working with Michael Scanlon and members of the Communication Commission, Matthew Griffing redesigned our website by adapting a WordPress theme. Joy Howard wrote the text of its ‘hub’ pages (seen in the horizontal purple menu bar above). Parish Historian Mary Chitty wrote many history pages (under Mission). Elizabeth Richardson launched blogs for our rector’s sermons and this timeline and created web versions of Mary’s building guide and Michael Shea‘s brochure Lindsey Chapel: Its History & Architecture.
- Oct. 9. The Emmanuel Center launched “Spirituality & the Arts”, a program of talk-back sessions moderated by Rabbi Howard Berman and our rector. They explored spiritual, ethical and social issues raised by five plays in Speakeasy Stage Company’s upcoming season.
1960
Our centennial was celebrated with a candlelit service and a dinner at the Plaza Hotel, Copley Square.
Emmanuel Church, 1860-1960: The First Hundred Years, compiled by Harriet Allen Robeson, was published by the Vestry. She credited these people for their help with her historical endeavor: The Rev. Harold Sedgwick, the Rev. Rollin J. Fairbanks, the Rev. David Siegenthaler, Eleanor S. Hunneman, Mrs. Wells Mitchell, Gladys McCafferty of the Diocesan Library, and daughters of former rectors Ellen Parks and Constance Worcester.
See its introduction and appendix. For its chapters about the tenures of particular rectors, please see these years:
1938
-
- The Rev. Samuel McComb, Associate Rector (1906-1916) died at the age of 74 in England. Educated at colleges in N. Ireland and Oxford University, he became a Presbyterian minister in England, Ireland, and New York City. Ordained to the diaconate in our diocese by Bishop William Lawrence and to the priesthood in RI, he then worked with Rector Elwood Worcester to create the Emmanuel Movement. After serving as canon of the Episcopal cathedral in Baltimore, he taught at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge MA. He finished his pastoral ministry as rector of the American Episcopal Church in Nice, France. After having written (with Worcester) Religion & Medicine (1908), he published The Making of the English Bible (1909) and many other works. The New York Times published his obituary on Sept. 12.
- Thanks to Nathaniel White Williams, Jr., we have these images of our choirs of men and boys, which were directed (c1930-1946) by Dr. Stone Thompson (2d from right in the banner image at the top of this page).
Nathaniel, (second from left in image above) born in 1929, lived with his parents Rose and NWW, Sr. at 113 Poplar St., Roslindale (Boston) until 1952, according to research by Julian Bullitt, who digitized the above images and many of our archival images.
1863
1862
- April 24. Emmanuel Church was consecrated. It was the first building constructed on Newbury Street.
- Pew deeds were issued.

- Publisher Edward Payson Dutton became Clerk of the Vestry.




