A
sampling of histories of the Church of St. Anne in Morrison, Illinois
from various sources
**From: A History of Whiteside County by
Wayne Bastian (c1968) pg. 329-330
St.
Anne’s Episcopal Church goes back informally to Civil War times. For many years following the great conflict,
a group of worshippers met in homes and read morning and evening prayer
services. When their number increased,
they rented quarters. As late as 1880,
the Diocesan Journal listed Morrison as an unorganized mission.
In
1884, a gift of $120 from the diocese enabled the group to purchase a lot at
the corner of Cherry and Knox Streets.
The church was ready for formal services on March 16, 1884, and cost
$1800. For many years, pastors from
Grace Church, Sterling, officiated for the Morrison church and student
ministers served during summer vacations.
The
building remained essentially the same through the years. Repairs were made but St. Anne’s is the St.
Anne’s that an earlier generation knew.
A parsonage was acquired next to the church about 1955. The vicar has been full time and resident
since 1954. Confirmation, Sunday School
and Discussion Classes are held. St.
Anne’s Guild is active in church work.
**From
a: Handwritten History found in The Canonical Church Register (Register #2
1904-1993)
History
of St. Ann’s Mission
by Marcus M. Lucas (1956)
At
Morrison, Illinois, about the time of the Civil War, a small group of Churchmen
met from time to time in their homes to read the service of Morning and Evening
Prayer. A ??? to the number at length
required them to rent rooms or stores for services. For some time there was no affiliation with
the Diocese of Illinois, the only contact with the Church being provided by
passing priests who would pause on their way to other communities.
By
this means children were baptized, the young married and the dead buried
according to the Rites of the Church.
The Diocesan Journal of 1880 recorded the congregation at Morrison as an
“unorganized mission.” Later
arrangements were made with the Rev. Fr. J.E. Goodhue of Sterling to give them
such time as his parochial duties made possible.
This
Diocesan relation bore fruit. In 1884,
during the incumbency of the Rev. Fr. August Joss, an appropriation of $120
from Diocesan Funds purchase the lot on which the Church now stands. This money came from the sale of Church
property in the near-by town of Fulton.
At
the Diocesan Convention of 1884 Bishop McLaren announced “after a hard struggle
the congregation of St. Ann’s at Morrison has finally managed to erect a fine
Church building and it will be opened for solemn worship on Mid-Lent
Sunday.” That date was March 16,
1884. The Church was consecrated
November 22, 1888, At the Bishop’s first
visitation to the new mission he baptized the first white child born in
Morrison, whose name was Minnie E. Vroom born in 1855.
It
was in 1888 that the Bishop administered the Sacrament of Holy
Confirmation. At that time the Church
was declared free of debt and consecrated to the service of Almighty God.
The
Church building cost $1800.00 and a goodly portion of that was provided by Mrs.
Susan Murray. A number of years
previously Selina France’s left to the Mission a number of securities worth at
the time about $10,000.
The
character of the investments was such that today the endowment of St. Ann’s is
valued around $74,000. This includes a
small fund called the Ann Burr Fund.
Recent
pastors of the Church have been Frs. Church, Hibish, Thayer, Sculley, Bungen,
Wetherell, Morford.
Rev.
K.A. Morford came to Morrison and Sterling in 1942. After serving here at first he entered the
armed forces as chaplain, spending about three years in this country and abroad
in various military units. After being
released from active duty in January, 1945, Fr. Morford returned to his charges
in Morrison and Sterling, and he officiated until his death a few years later.
(1952)
For
several years while Fr. Morford was serving here the Church property was
improved and initiated a more active parish life.
It
is a small Church, but its faith and devotion are large. Its services alternated between 9 o’clock
Eucharist and the 5 PM Evening Prayer during Fr. Morford’s and Fr. Hibish
services.
During
the past year 1954 have held services here, with a Communion service once a
month by the Very Rev. V.S. Jones of Dixon.
Now since the Rev. Fr. M.M. Lucas became vicar in Dec 15, 1954,
Communion services are being held each Sunday at 10 A.M. and Holy Day’s are
observed.
Written
in the Year of Our Lord 1956 by: Marcus M. Lucas
**From
a: Handwritten history continued by Fr. Heschle
1958
– 60 Howell pipe Organ installed (1980 – revoiced) (1981 – rebuilt)
Since
Fr. Lucas left in 1965, the mission has been served by the following priests:
1965-1968 The Revd. Don Moon; 1968-1971 The Revd James L. Steele; 1971-1975 The
Revd John Reishus; 1976-1978 The Revd D. Robert Seay; 1979- The Revd. John H. Heschle Jr.+
The
Church was totally redecorated in a plain, simple manner under Fr. Moon. Fr. Steele, the first of the Sterling Curate-Vicar’s,
designed & obtained the Lenten Array & Gold Sets of Vestments. Fr. Seay began the present (’79 - ) renovation of the near 100 yr. old
Building. Restoration & practicality
are present Building projects Key Words.
April
1980 Fr. Heschle+
**From
a: History of an Endowed Mission continued. September 21, 1982, St.
Matthew’s Day
The
present Vicar, Father J.H. Heschle Jr. has committed the growing congregation
to a number of projects. Since the last
installment (April 1980) the Church, through a Venture in Mission grant gutted
the interior of the 1884 Church to restructure, insulate & improve
structural difficulties. The work lasted
from Jan – Mar 1981 at which time the congregation set up a chapel in the
Undercroft. The interior of the Nave,
Sanctuary & Sacristy were gutted & rebuilt with a new support system
which allowed the elimination of the tie-rods which previously held the
building up.
The
walls were straightened, rewired, insulated & new wall board with complete
remodeling. The Sanctuary floor was
parqued in hard wood, new lighting fixtures, pews refinished & better
stations of the cross as a continuance of the Fr. Lucas Memorial. A new altar rail replaced the 1966 round
one. A falling-apart pulpit (1954) was
disposed of as not fitting the original “Steam-boat Gothic” architecture. The McKim Memorial Lecturn now serves as
Lecturn-Pulpit, fitting the new liturgical idea that there be one place from
which the Word of God is read & proclaimed.
The St. Ann & Our Lady Shrine, originally a Faith Fitzgerald
Memorial that was destroyed in the 1966 modernization was restored by memorial
gifts. The new statue is solid carved
walnut carved by Mr. David Seagreaves, an Episcopalian from Elizabeth, IL. It took over a year from design to dedication
on All Saints Day 1981
By
Parishioners donations and the Robert Fitzgerald Memorial all the pews were
refinished by the Bishop’s Visitation in March of 1982. In 1981 the Organ was removed for the
rebuilding project at that time it was overhalled & improved by the
builder, Howell Pipe Organs of Dixon, IL.
It was originally installed for about $2,800.00 in 1958 and improved in
1981 for $9,000. A set of Display pipes
is yet to be installed in the new pipe chamber-room. The Sacristy was also totally rebuilt &
new cabinets, closets & piscina installed for the first time.
A
new kitchen was installed in the Undercroft sometime in 1980, the Women’s Guild
raised the money & men of the parish did the work. A new electrical box with circuit breakers
were put in. Also a new furnace was also
installed at that time with air-conditioning system & new duct work. This was also the year (1980) that the new
entry was competed & dedicated in memory of Bernice Tjarks. This year 1982 we have begun to renovate the
1860 Vicarage. First it was
insulated. then a garage & new
vinyl siding added. Finally re land scaping & repaired
shutters are added (1983). Our plans
include a new bell tower (rebuilt) for the Church, a new roof, and a new
bathroom in the Undercroft. In 1982 with
an increase in the congregation & Church School the Undercroft was divided
with curtains for more class room space, and room in the Farm Bureau used for
Christian Education.
Our
goals for the next 3 years is to begin in 1983 to be self supporting & seek
parish status by Jan. 1, 1986, God
willing he will prosper us. Fr. H+
1984. On June 1st we take possession of
the land and house on the North side of the Church property which will be
converted to the Vicarage/Rectory over the summer. This is to provide land for future expansion
and better living arrangements for the Clergy.
A driveway & garage are gained in this move. The Vicarage at 306 N. Cherry will be sold,
it has been the Vicarage since 1939, and was bought by the Endowment Fund,
which is selling it and buying the house at 403 N. Cherry. Also this year in preparation for the
Building’s 100th Anniversary of Dedication (March 16, 1984) we have
remodeled the Undercroft and put in a complete new bathroom – great
improvements. Future goals include
fixing the tower, repairing the outside of the Church and adding a
Church-school/offices wing. Also in
March of 1984 the Organ front façade was completed by Mr. Timothy Boles of
Howell Organ Co., Dixon, Il. It is a
memorial of 10 families in the parish.
Assistant
Ministers/Vicars
listed on page 32 of the Canonical Church Register (Register #2 1904 - 1993)
Mr.
Hay, Seminarian – began June 1903 – terminated November 15th 1903
Eli
Croft Gear, Seminarian – November 1903 – July 1905
Albert
Edward Selcer, Seminarian – June 5th
1907 – Sept. 22nd, 1907
Edwin
Weary, priest - Sterling – January 7, 1906
George
John Zinn – Nov. 1, 1908
A.B.
Whitcombe – 1910
William
O. Butler – March 1st 1910 – March 1st 1916
Robert
Phillips – 1915
Walter
B. Reed – 1917
Giles
Herbert Shapley – 1918
John
Henry Parsons – 1919 – 1924
Albert
Whitcombe – 1924 – 1931 July
H.B.
Zigler – July 1931 – Nov. 1931
H.T.
Bakewell – Nov. 1931
Holland
L. Church – Oct. 15, 1933 – March 15, 1936
Edwin
B. Thayer – April 19, 1936 – Nov. 13, 1938
Ernest
W.S. Scully – February 1, 1939 – 1941
Fr.
Bernger, supply – 1943 – 1946
Fr.
Wm. R. Wetherell – 1943 – 1946
K.A.
Morford – Feb. 1942-43 & 46-51 – died 1952
Marcus
M. Lucas – Dec. 1954 – July 1, 1965*[First Vicar resident in Morrison]
Don
Pardee Moon – July 1, 1965 – July 1, 1968
James
L. Steele+ - July 1, 1968 – June 30, 1971
John
H. Reishus – July 1, 1971 – Dec. 1975
D.
Robert Seay – June 6, 1976 – July 31, 1978
John
Henry Heschle, Jr.+ Vicar – January 1979
(Deacon – 12/20/78 – Priest 6/29/79 at
Grace, Sterling. 6/30/79 1st
Mass at St. Anne’s Morrison. Received as
Vicar by Dean Willoughby on Sept. 14, 1979 at St. Anne’s Morrison.)
1st
Rector of Parish Jan. 12, 1986 Annual Meeting.
From:
St. Anne’s ECW Recipe Collection, September
1991
Children
of Grace:
Historical
Notes on an Episcopal Parish in Morrison Known as the Church of St. Anne
About
the time of the War Between the States, churchmen from the East and families
arriving from Canada, Scotland and England met in their homes to read Mattins
and Evensong from the 1789 Prayerbook.
The Parochial Register of the Church in Sterling, Illinois records their
priest, The Rev’d Father Oscar Thayer, coming to Morrison in 1865 to solemnize
the Sacrament of Holy Matrimony. In 1869
Father Goodhue came in February and June to baptize fourteen persons. He also buried John Burr on July 26, 1870 at
Grove (Rose) Hill Cemetery.
The
Rev’d Father J.E. Goodhue set up a place to worship in the Hall above the First
National Bank on the southwest corner of Main and Cherry Streets in the same
year he came to baptize fourteen, which was 1869. In 1877, the mission work in Fulton, Illinois
known as “Grace Church,” collapsed and the property sold for $600. Bp. McLaren, Bishop of Chicago, visited
Whiteside County that year and assigned the proceeds of that sale to aid in the
building of a Church in Morrison. In 1878, Bp. McLaren again visited the
congregation in Morrison, on November 19th, to baptize three persons. Later in 1891, Bp. McLaren described that
visit as “a few dry bones,” indicative of previous activities in the shape of a
small Altar, Cross and Lectern of wood painted white.
Services
continued to be held by the laity and Mass said when Fr. Goodhue visited. In 1880 he baptized four more persons. That year, Bp. McLaren listed St. Anne’s as
an unorganized mission at the Diocesan Convention. Later, Fr. A.A. Joss continued to guide the
mission congregation in the rented hall.
In 1883, the corner lot at Knox and Cherry Streets was acquired for $120. On October 11, 1883, the present wood frame
structure was begun and a large portion paid for by Mrs. Susan Murrey. The structure was completed by Thanksgiving,
but not officially opened until the Bishop could dedicate it, which was not
until March of 1884.
At
Diocesan Convention in 1884, Bp. McLaren’s address included these words: “After
a hard struggle, the Church of St. Anne at Morrison has finally managed to
erect a fine church building which will be opened for Solemn Worship on
Mid-Lent Sunday (Lent IV, Rose Sunday).”
That year Rose Sunday was March 16th. Later the bishop continued: “I visited the
mission Church of St. Anne in Morrison.
In the morning I celebrated the Holy Communion, christened two children
and preached. At night I preached again.”
After
the debt of the building, $1800 was retired, Bishop McLaren returned on
November 22, 1888, to consecrate the building and administer the Sacrament of
Holy Confirmation. The Rev’d Father
Brittain was the first resident priest and vicar of Morrison. In 1891, Bp. McLaren again returned to
confirm five and celebrate Mass. By
1904, the present stone Undercroft was added and the parish register recorded
sixteen families and twenty-seven communicants in good standing.
In
the first decade of this century, the mission was served by a long line of
priests and seminarians who stayed less than a year at a time. In the next two decades, the incumbent-vicars
tended to stay for three years or less.
In this period, three priests were well beloved and of note. From 1933 to 1936, Father Church, a faithful
priest, served as vicar and died here in Morrison. He was followed by Father Edwin B. Thayer,
1936 – 1938, who in 1960 became The Right Reverend, The Bishop of Colorado. In 1939, Fr. Ernest W. Scully followed Bishop
Thayer, and during his vicarate, the house on 306 N. Cherry Street was
purchased for $3500 by our endowment fund.
It served as the Vicarage until 1984, when it was sold and the home
adjacent to the Church at 405 N. Cherry was purchased for the Rectory.
Often
until 1954, and especially in the 40’s with a shortage of priests, the Church
was served by the Rector of the parish in Sterling. Fr. Kenneth Morford was one of the much loved
priests-in-charge during this period. In
December of 1954, the Rev’d Fr. M.M. Lucas came as vicar and still holds the
longest record of the cure of souls here, ten-and-a half years. He was followed by the Reverend Fathers:
Donald P. Moon (’65-’68), James L. Steele (’68-’71), John R. Rieshus (’71-’75),
D. Robert Seay (’76-’78) and the present priest who arrived on the 27th
of December, 1978 as Vicar and became the first Rector on January 12, 1986.
In
1979, a new barrier-free entrance was constructed on the north side, and the grounds
re-landscaped. In 1980, the Women’s
Guild paid for a new kitchen, and in 1981, the Church was structurally rebuilt
and a much needed restoration completed with the help of V.I.M. funds. The Howell Pipe Organ, installed in 1958, was
refurbished in 1982. In 1983-84, a new
Rectory was purchased and restored. The
addition of this land increased the Cherry Street frontage from 75 feet to 180
feet. On the 12th of January,
1986, the mission congregation voted to organize as a Parish Church in the
Diocese of Chicago and a religious corporation in the State of Illinois.
With
this background, it is our primary mission to spread the Holy Gospel of Our
Lord Jesus Christ and His Catholic Faith as our Church has received from Scriptures,
the Sacraments, and the Creeds of Christ’s One, Holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church. It is our goal that in seeking
this Faith as a parish family we will be a mission of God’s love to those
around us. “May the God who gave us this
calling, give us the grace to see it realized.
From small beginnings we hope great things may be accomplished and pray
it may please God to strengthen the hands of those who work, that the
foundations here laid may be built upon and adequate provision be made for the
development of the Church in Morrison.” Quoted from the parish register of
1883.
Adapted and
enlarged by the Rev’d Father J.H. Heschle, Jr., from a history by The Rev’d
Father E.W. Scully entitled: “An Endowed Mission,” 1939.
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