The Cathedral Church of Saint Matthew is an Episcopal cathedral church located at 5100 South Ross Avenue in Dallas, Texas, in the United States.
The cathedral is the official seat of the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas and is sometimes called the mother church of the diocese. It is listed by the Texas Historical Commission as a historic landmark.
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The first Episcopal church service held in Dallas, was conducted by the Reverend George Rottenstein on May 25, 1856. The services were held on the second floor of a general store. At the time, Dallas was a town of about 400 people. The small congregation grew, and Mr Rottenstein submitted Articles of Association to the Episcopal Church for the creation of the Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew to be effective September 21, 1857. The articles were ratified at the General Convention.
On July 8, 1860, a fire broke out in Dallas that consumed most of the businesses on the town square as well as the rented facilities and all church belongings and records of Saint Matthew’s. The fire has been attributed to abolitionists by several historians. When the Right Rev. Alexander Gregg, first bishop of Texas, visited Dallas in October 1860, he found no church building, no records, and only six communicants. Bishop Gregg gave assistance to the small congregation so that the parish could continue.
The parish recovered and grew such that by 1870, the parish had enough funds for the construction of its own church. Its church bell was added later that same year.
As the city grew, it became necessary to move the church to another location. In 1877, it was put on heavy rollers pulled by oxen. However, the building collapsed. Parishioners, with the help of citizens, carried the boards by hand to the new location and another church was built.
The Diocese of the Missionary District of Northern Texas was formed, led by the Right Reverend Alexander Garrett, and on February 2, 1875, Bishop Garrett named Dallas his see city and Saint Matthew’s as his cathedral church. On December 20, 1895, the Diocese of the Missionary District of Northern Texas became the Diocese of Dallas.
In 1893, a fine new stone cathedral was constructed on the corner of Elm and Lamar. But within a few years, the growing industrious city life encroached. Train tracks were laid close by, and one of the train services had noisy steam engines arriving at a nearby station at noon each Sunday. By the late 1920s, the Cathedral Church of Saint Matthew decided to relocate the church to a temporary location and then assess the possibilities.
At that same time, Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women was facing substantial financial struggles as new schools opened in the city. Bishop Garrett closed his beloved school and purchased the property for the cathedral. The cathedral moved into its current location in July 1929. The Wall Street Crash of 1929 occurred in October, and the cathedral, like its parishioners and citizens of Dallas, suffered greatly. The cathedral was unable to afford another move, and so the temporary move to Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women became permanent.
The Cathedral Church of Saint Matthew remains at the former location of Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women. The tree-lined college campus is now the cathedral close and the dormitories, class rooms, and offices are still in use.
The cathedral has a beautiful collection of stained-glass windows dating from the late 19th century. Many of them were installed in the 1970s. These impressive windows include the Nativity, the Resurrection, the Stations of the Cross, the cathedral’s patron saint Saint Matthew, the sacraments, and the founding fathers of the church. Because the history of the church is in Texas, some of the windows contain interesting images, such as cowboys, Native Americans, and a stagecoach.
In addition, there is a magnificent collection of paintings dating from the Victorian era. Some of these paintings were gifts to Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women, so it is not surprising to find the subject matter of many of the paintings to be Saint Mary.
The cathedral contains The Right Reverend James M. Stanton Center for Ministry Formation , whose primary mission is to serve people who feel called to the Diaconate; both to aid them in their discernment process and to provide the necessary theological training for possible ordination as deacons. The Cathedral Center is a place where deacons-in-training can be part of a community, attend graduate-level classes, and experience spiritual growth.
The cathedral also offers its facilities to various groups in the diocese and community for a variety of instruction. Not all classes are of a religious nature; classes are also offered for people preparing to take the General Educational Development Test, sign language, and more.
The cathedral is the seat of the Bishop of Dallas. The Right Reverend James Monte Stanton was consecrated the sixth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas March 6, 1993.
As of Easter 2006, the cathedral's vestry called the Very Rev. Kevin E Martin to be the new dean.
The cathedral usually has several assisting priests and deacons, many of whom are canons of the cathedral.
There are several groups and guilds headed by lay people.
There is a large guild of cathedral vergers. The primary responsibility of the cathedral vergers is to assist with worship services. Vergers work with acolytes and altar guild to ensure that the church is ready for worship services. After services, vergers assist with returning vestments and vessels to their proper places. The cathedral usually has one to three vergers at regular worship services. Vergers also assist with tours and special events at the cathedral. The cathedral provides facilities from time to time for the Vergers Guild of the Diocese of Dallas to conduct training, workshops, and retreats.
The church is part of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America and worship services are based on the 1979 Book of Common Prayer. There are a number of important worship services, such as the Solemn Mass of Easter and Midnight Mass at Christmas. While most of the services are High Church other services are more Broad church in style. As an inner city church, its congregation and services are quite diverse.
Incense is used at most of the principal feasts of the church year.
Music is an important element at the cathedral, which boasts a pipe organ with an estimated 2,800 pipes. The organ has been added to several times and now features three manuals, 35-40 stops (depending on method used to count them) and around 40 ranks of pipes. The cathedral has hosted various festivals of music with renowned musicians over the years, including such local talent as concert organists James Diaz and Bradley Welch. The current Director of Music and Arts (and also principal organist) is Michie Akin. Mr Akin is assisted by long-time assistant organist and choirmaster Jim Stillson, who is also a local pipe-organ builder. Past organist-choirmasters include John Emory Bush and Gerald Near.
On Sunday, there are three worship services with Mass held at the cathedral. The third service of the day is conducted in Spanish.
Most weekday services are held in the oratory, with Mass each morning, and Evening Prayer from the Daily Office each evening. Noonday Prayer is offered on the last Saturday of each month.
Twice each month, Chanted Vespers is held in the cathedral.
In addition, from time to time, the cathedral hosts Taizé services. People from many places and many denominations attend these services of devotion and meditation. Taizé services at the cathedral are led by lay people.
The cathedral is also host of several diocesan services and events including ordinations, confirmations, conventions, annual vergers’ conferences as well as a variety of retreats for religious and civic groups.
In addition, the cathedral hosts for the community a number of civic events each year, including plays, dances, festivals, tea parties and summer camps for youth.
The cathedral is inner city, and the neighborhood continuously evolves. A large Hispanic community has grown in the area for the past several decades. In addition, developers are purchasing portions of land in the area and building expensive apartment and condominium complexes. The cathedral close is not far from downtown, and sits in this transitional neighborhood that is half-way between two expensive neighborhoods. As a result, there is a great range of population characteristics evident in the congregation. The cathedral is known for its offerings to a wide range of people.
The architectural style of the church building is Gothic, marked, among other things, by pointed arches, flying buttresses, vaulted ceilings, stained-glass windows, stone-carved decorations, and a bell tower. Cornerstones, plaques, and stained-glass windows from the earlier locations of the cathedral are also incorporated around the cathedral close.
The architectural style of the oratory is modern. There is a columbarium in the oratory of the cathedral.
The Great Hall holds a large parish hall, stage and two industrial kitchens. It was built in 1955, and its architectural style is 1950s modern.
Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women had a chapel constructed in 1907. The chapel was designed in the traditional shape of a cross. In 1929, the chapel was enlarged to hold the large congregation of the cathedral, changing the traditional cross configuration into a rectangle.
The central stained-glass window of Saint Mary’s Episcopal College for Women is the Nativity scene, and on each side of it are windows relating to patron saints of women. Rather than replace these windows with the cathedral’s patron Saint Matthew, a stained-glass window of Saint Matthew was installed in the south transept.
Terwilliger Library & Archives at the Cathedral Church of Saint Matthew, Dallas, Texas.