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CATHEDRAL
OF THE MADELEINE DEDICATED
August
14, 1909
A
procession of 100 choir boys preceded the cathedral's dedication,
200 young women in white, forty priests, eight bishops, five
archbishops and James Cardinal Gibbons--highest prelate in
the US. The 9:30 A.M. dedication service was followed by a
co-celebrated Pontifical Mass at 11 o'clock--the principal
celebrant the Right. Reverend Bishop Lawrence Scanlan and
the homily given by his eminence Archbishop John Joseph Glennon
of St. Louis.
To
some it is surprising that there were enough Catholics here
in 1909 to have a diocese, but Catholicism has a long history
in what is now Utah. Undoubtedly, they celebrated the first
mass during the Dominguez- Escalante expedition of 1776. Also,
many mountain men and explorers were Catholic. There is a
reference by an anti-papist officer of a Catholic clergyman
Franciscan Father Bonaventure Keller, present at Camp Floyd
in June of 1859. This priest reportedly performed 26 baptisms
and three marriages during his six-month stay. Also, he celebrated
Utah's first recorded requiem mass for Private John McKay
in July 1859. After Keller's short stay a permanent stream
of Catholic clergy came to the territory. Generally, they
were assigned to military posts that Irish immigrant soldiers
heavily populated. Yet, there were few secular parishes.
Over
the years, especially due to Camp Douglas in the 1860's, the
Catholic population grew here in the city and the parish of
St. Mary Magdalene was established in 1866. A folk legend
states that Brigham Young donated the land where the cathedral
stands but the facts are this: when the northwest corner of
1st S and 2nd E was purchased in good
faith by Fr. Edward Kelly in November 1866 to build a church,
the title was not legally clear. As Father Kelly did want
to go through litigation, he asked the contestant to summit
to the mediation of BrighamYoung. President Young found that
the good faith purchase was valid. But back to the cathedral.
On
August 14, 1873, Father Lawrence Scanlan became pastor of
St. Mary Magdalene, and the next 13 years showed a rapid growth
in the Catholic population in the city and the territory.
Fr. Scanlan became Bishop of Salt Lake City in 1886 and purchased
the site of the cathedral at South Temple and B St. for $35,000
in 1890. Ground breaking was July 4, 1899 and the cornerstone
was laid a year later. Designed by German born, Salt Lake
architect Carl Neuhausen, the cathedral progressed slowly
so the financial burden would be minimal.
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A
committee oversaw the project, headed by Senator Thomas Kearns.
Unfortunately, the project outlived the designer, so, with
Neuhausen's death in 1907, architect Bernard Mecklenberg took
over to finish the towers and roof. This was the year the
parish of St. Mary Magdalene began to use the auditorium in
the basement of the new cathedral and closed the old church
building. Bishop Scanlan admitted to not being an artist and
had the interior walls of the cathedral painted green with
white pillars just like St. Mary Magdalene Church. When the
right Carrara marble for the altar could not be found in Italy,
they decided to use a brown mottled marble from here in state
and many members of the Catholic community donated the stained
glass windows.
In
the 1920's, they enhanced the decorative interior with changes
made by Bishop Glass with architect John Theodore Comes overseeing
the work including frescoes on the ceiling and around the
altar. With these changes, Bishop Glass renamed the church
Cathedral of the Madeleine. There would be a renovation and
restoration in the 1990's, but that first dedication ceremony
and Pontifical Mass will always be the true hallmark in this
great building's history.
The
construction of this great building had many effects on the
community including festivities surrounding this first mass.
And while there is no known direct connection, it is interesting
that the day after the dedication, the Utah Ice and Cold Storage
Co. announced they had used the last of their 3,000-ton reserve
of natural and artificial ice. The 200+ tons needed each day
by the people of the city was not available, with roughly
100 tons a day shortfall in natural and artificial ice. There
was not enough ice to see the city through September. Although
it was noted there had been an unusually warm June and July,
it was clear, Salt Lake had outgrown its ice supply and there
was an ice famine.
Detailed
tours of the Cathedral are available Sunday afternoons.
Cathedral
of the Madeleine's website >>
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