Mother church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston, designed in the Gothic Revival style
General Information
Sunday 1pm to 5pm
How to Get There
Head west on Broad St toward King St.
Overview
The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist is the mother church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston, located in Charleston. Designed by Brooklyn architect Patrick Keely in the Gothic Revival style, it opened in 1907.
History
The first brownstone cathedral was built in 1854 and named the Cathedral of Saint John and Saint Finbar. It burned in a great fire in December 1861. The rebuilt cathedral was named for St. John the Baptist and was constructed on the foundations of the earlier structure. Architect Patrick Keely designed both the original cathedral and its replacement.
The cornerstone was laid in 1890 by James Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore, and the church opened in 1907. The Cathedral seats 720 people and is noted for its Franz Mayer & Co. stained glass, hand-painted Stations of the Cross, and neo-gothic architecture. The lower church includes a crypt where Bishop England (with his sister, Joanna) and four other Charleston bishops are buried.
Sacred Heart - The chapel is situated just to the left of the cathedra. It originally served as the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament, reflecting the fact that in certain Masses prior to 1968, when the bishop sat in front of the altar, the Blessed Sacrament was removed to this altar so that he would not have his back to the reserved Sacrament. It contains seven windows depicting symbols related to the Eucharist. In 2008, it briefly became the Chapel of Saint Paul for the Year of Saint Paul. Then in 2009, it became the Sacred Heart Chapel, housing an early 1900s statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus with hands extended in blessing.
Blessed Virgin Mary - The altar in this chapel is adorned with an Italian Marble statue of the Madonna and Child, sculpted by the German artist Ferdinand Pettrich. The statue is considered unique as it depicts Mary without a head covering, holding the child Jesus as a toddler. It is sometimes referred to as Our Lady of the South or Our Lady of the Confederacy (though not officially) having been purchased by Bishop Lynch, the Confederate Ambassador to the Holy See and third Bishop of Charleston. The chapel is adorned with seven windows depicting symbols related to Mary, Mother of God, and one floral design window completely obscured by the altar.
Our Lady of Grace - The main lower chapel used for daily Masses. The Chapel is adorned on one side with eight stained-glass windows removed from the former Immaculate Conception Church in Charleston. It originally had 20 windows from the church, but 12 were removed for various reasons over the years.
Saint John the Baptist Crypt Chapel - The resting place of the first five bishops of Charleston and Joanna Monica England, sister of the first Bishop of Charleston, John England. The bishops vest here for Holy Mass. The chapel contains one altar with a custom hand painted altarpiece depicting St. John the Baptist over the South Carolina landscape holding a lamb with two adoring angels, one holding a crosier and the other the diocesan coat of arms. In this chapel is a niche holding a statue of St. Joseph and the child Jesus. The crypt chapel is adorned with windows made from pieces of windows recovered from that were removed from Immaculate Conception Church.
The return of the prodigal son is one of the many beautiful windows of the Cathedral.
The three sets of doors are all surmounted by rose windows that are of a unique design (the design is only known to be used by Patrick Keely). Each window has a coat of arms in its center.
- The Main Doors - Bishop Northop's Coat of arms
- The East Doors - the State of South Carolina's Coat of arms
- The West Doors - Pope Pius X's Coat of arms
The large Life of Christ windows adorn the sides of the lower nave.
The large Life of Christ windows adorn the sides of the lower nave.
The windows in the upper nave are known as the Gallery of the Saints. They depict 28 saints.
The clerestory in the Sanctuary is adorned with windows depicting the four evangelists
Above the High Altar is the Chancel window. The top section is a rose window depicting St. John the Baptist baptizing Jesus with the Holy Spirit above. It is surrounded by 8 adoring angels playing instruments. Above the Rose window is a Sacred Heart. To the left of the Rose window is a pelican feeding her three newborn pelicans, and to the right is the Lamb of God. Below all of this is a five-light replica of Da Vinci's Last Supper.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist (Charleston, South Carolina)", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0