St. Wenceslaus in Chicago
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St. Wenceslaus in Chicago, referred to in Polish as 'Kościół Świętego Wacława' is a historic church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago located in, Chicago, Illinois. One of the many Polish churches visible from the Kennedy Expressway, it is, along with St. Hyacinth Basilica, one of two monumental religious edifices that dominates over the Avondale skyline. Although the historic church is a stop for many of the tourists visiting the landmark Villa District, this majestic Romanesque-Art Deco hybrid is actually a few blocks south of the district's formal boundaries. St Wenceslaus is accessible via the Blue Line's Addison street station.
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[edit] History
St. Wenceslaus was founded in 1912 as a Polish parish to relieve overcrowding at St. Hyacinth parish, which first met in a small wooden frame structure at Roscoe Street and Lawndale Avenue. The present church was built in 1942 and was the first church to be consecrated by the newly appointed Cardinal Samuel Stritch in the Archdiocese of Chicago. One of Chicago's Polish Patches, the Polish term for the surrounding neighborhood, Wacławowo derives from the Polish name for the church's patron, Wenceslaus I of Bohemia. In recent years, the ethnic character of St. Wenceslaus parish has undergone a gradual change from an exclusively Polish parish to one that is multicultural and multiracial, as the neighborhood first witnessed an influx of Hispanic immigrants and later Yuppies as the neighborhood has begun to experience gentrification. Today Mass is celebrated in three languages: English, Polish and Spanish. St. Wenceslaus has been administered by the Congregation of the Resurrection from its founding into the present day.
St. Ladislaus in Portage Park was originally a mission of St. Wenceslaus in what was then a primarily rural area annexed to Chicago.
[edit] Architecture
The church was designed by the firm of McCarthy, Smith and Eppig, a firm that worked extensively with George Cardinal Mundelein and produced numerous Chicago area Catholic churches during the Great Depression era, including Queen of Angels in Chicago, St. Joseph and St. Francis Xavier churches in Wilmette, and St. Bernardine in Forest Park.
The building's overall design is a fusion of Byzantine and Romanesque elements with a host of Art Deco features that were current at the time of construction. The church is encased in walls of pressed brick trimmed with Indiana Limestone, some of it adorned with carved ornament to highlight the building's sacred function. At the point where the nave narrows to the apse, a campanile arises, designed to direct the attention of the viewer to the purpose of the edifice.
Two monumental angel sculptures loom over the façade of the main entrance, which leads into a spacious and commodious narthex or vestibule whose walls are lavishly lined with "Notre Dame" and "Oriental" marble on a base of Red Levanto, while the floor is paved in ceramic tiles. Beyond the narthex is the spacious and well-lit nave which can accommodate a congregation of up to twelve hundred worshipers. To a height of ten feet above the floor and against the entire exterior wall a wainscot of rich American Black walnut has been installed, a wood known for its exceptional beauty and sturdiness. The wainscot rests on top of a continuous base of "Windham Verde Antique" marble, and is indented by four confessionals and in the forward part of the nave four votive shrines that are set up against the wall. The aisles are paved in ceramic tiles while the pews are carved out of the same American Black walnut.
The apse or sanctuary is enclosed behind a heavy rail of rich "Breccia Orientale" penetrated at regular intervals with a lattice of brilliant bronze. A floor of "Oriental" and "Florida Deep Rose" marbles leads to the predella or platform of the church's dominant feature, the main altar. The church is designed to direct the eye to the central altar and its crucifix, set against a huge background or reredos of inlaid wood. The reredos was formed by inlaying some twenty-five precious woods on a foundation of Honduras mahogany rising to a height of thirty-seven feet above the sanctuary floor is the setting for the huge crucifix, which is cut from a mammoth block of bluish-black "Port D'Oro" marble.
The main altar from which this featured crucifix arises is a permanent altar in the liturgical sense that it rests on its own foundation, as is required by Roman Catholic liturgical law. The side, or votive altars are similarly constructed. The altar table rests on a predella or stylobate of "Verde Nicoli", the top platform which is inlaid with "Red Verona" and "Rose Coral" marbles. The sacrificial table or mensa is light colored "Trani" surmounted by a tabernacle of "Rose Coral" marbles. The votive or side altars conform and hence are in harmony with the principal altar, both in color and in form
The church's interior features a distinct historicizing Art Deco motif with a color scheme of light pastel tints, which includes the church's impressive stained glass windows. Although the church is filled with depictions of Polish Saints and folkloric motifs, it is much more subdued in comparison with Chicago's more well-known Polish Cathedrals. The church's most well-known asset, a set of mosaic stations of the cross that were executed in the Vatican City in Rome, line the sides of the building's interior. All the furnishings of the church such as altars, pulpit, pews and the like were executed from designs by the original architects at the expressed wish of Monsignor Czastka who was the pastor at St. Wenceslaus at that time in order to present a consistent and harmonious edifice.
Unfortunately, much of the intricate painted ornamental designs that appeared throughout the church were not saved while painting during a recent renovation of the church because of a lack of parish funds.
[edit] See also
- Polish Cathedral style churches of Chicago
- Polish Americans
- Roman Catholicism in Poland