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Saint
Luke's, Newtown
William Penn's
"New Town" was established in 1684 as the hub of his
"New Township", and was the Bucks County seat of
government for eighty-eight years.
As early as 1766, a parish of the Church of England was
founded in Newtown, and by 1768 was reported to have begun
building a brick church. However,
this first parish effort was discontinued (probably during the
War of Independence), and the presence of the Episcopal Church
was not felt again in Newtown for over a half century.
In 1832, a group of laity, under the leadership of Dr.
Phineas Jenks, made financial commitments, and secured the
assistance of St. James, Bristol, the new parish of "Saint
Luke's Church in the County of Bucks" was established to
the glory of God. A
plot was purchased and a building started with $1,341 in
subscriptions. St.
Luke's was consecrated, and received into the Diocese in 1835,
with the Rt. Rev'd Henry Onderdonk acting for the Rt. Rev'd
William White. The
Parish was incorporated in 1836.
The first rector, the Rev'd G. W. Ridgely officiated also
at St. Andrew's, Yardley; and other early rectors made visits to
Grace, Hulmeville, and Trinity, Centreville (now Buckingham).
Through the
decades, each generation of the faithful have made additions and
renovation to our building to enhance their worship of Almighty
God: a pipe organ
was added in 1834, and replaced in 1905 and 1958, and renovated
in 1995; a wooden bell tower was erected in 1876, and replaced
by the present brick tower in 1904; a separate sacristy was
added in 1929; the "east" wall was restyled in
1929-1933, including a beautiful copy of Andrea dellaRobbia's
1485 masterpiece "The Coronation of the Virgin" as a
reredos.
In 1995, it was
necessary to replace the flooring system and the pews.
However, by using random-width floor boards and by installing
custom-made pews patterned on the original pews from 1832, it
was possible to retain the style and "feel" of the
original interior. The box pews had doors to keep out
drafts in the unheated church. Tin foot warmers filled
with hot coals were often brought by the parishioners to ward
off the cold. Pew were rented as a means of supporting the
parish, and pews varied in rental value according to their
location. ( Note that some of the brass plaques from the
original pew indicating the renters have been retained for
historical purposes.) Pew rents were collected yearly and were
due on January 1. This practice continued in this parish until
1955.
The ceiling and
false beams are of hammered tin. The floor is sloped to improve
visibility. The Altar was give in 1904 by a Boston parish in
memory of their rector, who was a son of this parish. The
mezzanine was added in 1834.
Three of the eight stained
glass windows were made in 1983 at the Edward Bryne studio
in Doylestown for the sesquicentennial of the church. Starting
from the front left they are:
St. Mary and St. Martha in their home in Bethany with Jesus- new
St. Luke holding the Gospel ( unknown saint)
St. Margaret, shown with lilies ( symbol of the resurrection )
Jesus with angel in the Garden of Gethsemane- new
Jesus as the Good Shepherd/St. Ann, mother of the Blessed Virgin
Mary
St. Cecilia, patron saint of church musicians
Jesus blessing the children ( Tiffany style )
Jesus calling St. Peter and St Andrew on the Sea of Galilee -
new
A pipe organ, the first in
Newtown, was installed in 1834. It was build by the Hale
Brothers in the house at the southeast corner of South State
Street and Centre Avenue, now Jean-Pierre's Restaurant. The cost
of $200 included installation and lessons for the organist. This
original organ was replaced in 1905, from which the facade pipes
remain. The present pipe organ was built and installed in
1958, and is still serviced by the builder, who in 1996
renovated it by upgrading its circuitry, and adding a MIDI
synthesizer.
Our reredos
over the altar, the beautiful Italian Renaissance sculpture,
The Coronation of the Virgin, is a copy of the 1485
creation by Andrea Della Robbia. It was cast in heavy plaster
for our centennial celebration in 1932 from a first generation
cast owned by the Boston Museum. Although we obtained a
perfect cast, when the mold forms were removed, the Museum copy
was cracked beyond repair. The terra cotta original is in a
convent chapel in Siena, Italy. Della Robbia is noted for
the individual faces of his figures and especially for the use
of cherubs. Our reredos is under the care of Mr. Behrooz
Salimnijad, conservator of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
This magnificent sculpture shows
the Blessed Virgin Mary being crowned as Queen of Heaven,
supported by angels and surrounded by five saints. (
Starting from the left is St. Girolamo, holding a stone, gazing
upward; then in Franciscan habit, St. Anthony of Padua, holding
a book mounted with a flame; to the right of the angel holding a
scroll, St. Chiara is on her knees adoring; a young female
probably St. Lucy with a martyr's palm; and to the right, St
Francis holding the cross. )
On top of the coronation scene
there is an arched pediment featuring cherubs. Beneath the main
scene are three panels showing the Annunciation on the left, the
Nativity on the right, and the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin
Mary in the center.
During the Renaissance period,
only the very wealthy could afford to commission marble and
bronze artwork. The Della Robbia family produced works in terra
cotta which were less expensive but not as durable. Luca Della
Robbia perfected a colored glaze with which he covered his
sculpted clay and fired to create a longer lasting beauty.
Our copy lack the heraldry of the Italian family that
commissioned the original. The Cloisters of the New York
Metropolitan Museum in New York City owns a terra cotta reredos
of similar theme, but which is smaller in size than the one over
our altar.
Outside the sacristy door is the
churchyard ( graveyard
or cemetery ) The land for the churchyard was purchased in
1835. Directly outside the door is the fenced area containing
the crypts of the families of the three founders of the parish:
Dr. Phineas Jenks, James Worth, and William Paff. Directly
south of the sacristy is the crypt of Sir Henry Thornton, a
life-long member of St. Luke's who was in charge of all overseas
transportation during World War I, and was knighted by George V
of Great Britain. Thornton was later approached by a delegation
of Russians to upgrade their rail system; however, he was unable
to do so, perhaps due to poor health.
The Chambers family crypt, also
enclosed by an iron fence, is against the property line. The
Chambers family who made their fortune in Pennsylvania oil
donated the former Community Center to Newtown.
Another family whose fortune was
made in Pennsylvania oil was the Pickering family. They donated
Pickering Field and Pickering Manor to the community. Russell
Pickering donated money for the Manor because his wife was very
ill and at that time there were no nursing facilities in the
are. The Pickering family is also buried here.
The Barnsley family, many
of whom are buried here, has recently donated the large rose
granite cross in the Garden of Repose in the northeast
corner of the churchyard. This Garden was opened in 1990 as a
memorial to Violet Gert, and is a repository that can
accommodate hundreds of urns of ashes.
September 29, 2004
Additional information about St.
Luke's Cemetary can be found by clicking on the following link. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gsr&GScid=2134017
St. Luke's
parish is blessed with a strong, vital lay leadership whose
faith is firmly placed in Jesus Christ as expressed through
traditional Anglicanism. Parish
membership is a wonderful cross-section of ages, income levels,
interests and abilities. And,
because in recent years growth has been steady, the Vestry and
Rector have been studying the needs and changes of moving
from a pastoral size to a program size parish, with special
attention given to the needs of the congregation in worship,
pastoral care and youth ministries.
The
present rector is the Rev'd Ernest Curtin.
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